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Luck (TV series)
American television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Luck is an American dramatic television series created by David Milch and starring Dustin Hoffman. Set in the world of horse racing, the pilot episode was directed by Michael Mann. The series premiered January 29, 2012. HBO aired the first episode on December 11, 2011, as a preview.[1] It was immediately renewed for a second season of 10 episodes, scheduled to air beginning in January 2013.[2] However, the series was canceled on March 14, 2012, due to animal safety concerns. Three horses died during production of the series. The first season's remaining episodes continued to air.[3] The complete first season was released on DVD and Blu-ray November 27, 2012.[4]
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Cast
- Dustin Hoffman as Chester "Ace" Bernstein
- Dennis Farina as Gus Demitriou
- John Ortiz as Turo Escalante
- Richard Kind as Joey Rathburn
- Kevin Dunn as Marcus Becker
- Ian Hart as Lonnie McHinery
- Ritchie Coster as Renzo Calagari
- Jason Gedrick as Jerry Boyle
- Kerry Condon as Rosie Shanahan
- Gary Stevens as Ronnie Jenkins
- Tom Payne as Leon Micheaux
- Jill Hennessy as Jo Carter
- Nick Nolte as Walter Smith
- Michael Gambon as Michael "Mike" Smythe
- Ted Levine as Isadore Cohen
- Patrick J. Adams as Nathan Israel
- Barry Shabaka Henley as Parole Officer
- Chantal Sutherland as Lizzy (Rosie's friend)
- Weronika Rosati as Naomi
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Episodes
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Production
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I hope it's a love letter. By saying that, I'm not saying it's a story coming through rose-colored glasses. To me, the track is what the river was to Mark Twain. Where you see the most life and interesting people, go there. That's what I've done.[14]
—David Milch, about his love for horse racing.
The pilot is about a bunch of intersecting lives in the world of horse racing ... It's a subject which has engaged and some might say has compelled me for 50 years. I find it as complicated and engaging a special world as any I've ever encountered, not only in what happens in the clubhouse and the grandstand, but also on the backside of the track, where the training is done and where they house the horses.[15]
—Milch, about the series.
Before creating Luck, David Milch had worked in television for three decades. He started as a writer on the series Hill Street Blues before co-creating NYPD Blue with Steven Bochco, and creating the HBO series Deadwood.
Milch had been fascinated by horse racing from an early age because his father would take him to the track. "My dad started taking me to Saratoga at age 5 or 6. You have so many associations from childhood that stay with you."[14] He stated that he had been thinking about creating the series for 25 years, and always pictured that it would be set at Santa Anita Park. "It's the most beautiful setting for horse racing that I've seen, and I'd include Saratoga," he said.[14]
The character of on-the-skids jockey Ronnie is portrayed by racing fixture Gary Stevens, a Hall of Fame jockey who won the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness Stakes and the Belmont Stakes in the course of his career. Stevens portrayed jockey George Woolf in the 2003 film, Seabiscuit.
The series used 50 horses trained by Matt Chew at Santa Anita. Milch stated, "Because it's a natural tendency for horses to want to be a part of a herd, most adapt to it very well. We have a couple individuals that have been taught to be race horses; we're not going to get that out of their system. We'll just have to adapt to it. But of the 50 horses, I'd say 45 of them have adapted to it real well."[16]
Safety concerns and cancellation
The safety of the series's working environment was called into question by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), which criticized Luck over the injury and euthanization of two horses during filming for the pilot and the seventh episode.[17][18] The American Humane Association (AHA) said that both racehorses "stumbled and fell during short racing sequences", and that "the horses were checked immediately afterwards by the onsite veterinarians and in each case a severe fracture deemed the condition inoperable".[19]
HBO pointed out that precautions had been taken; each horse was "limited to three runs per day and was rested in between those runs".[20][21] On March 13, 2012, HBO agreed to suspend all filming involving horses while investigations took place over the death of a third horse.[22] The AHA insisted that the stoppage remain in effect until a comprehensive investigation was completed; it also noted the horse's injury did not occur during filming or racing.[23] The following day, HBO canceled the series, saying that, although it "maintained the highest safety standards throughout production... accidents unfortunately happen and it is impossible to guarantee they won't in the future."[24]
At the time of the series's cancelation, the second episode of the second season was in production.[25] Footage shot for the second season has not been released publicly.
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Reception
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Critical reception
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 82% of 50 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 8.23/10.[26] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the series a score of 75 out of 100, based on 29 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[27]
Linda Stasi from the New York Post said in her review, "With an impossibly good cast, writing so spot-on it's poetic, and slow-build stories, I, for one, was left wanting more—even after watching the entire season."[28]
Alessandra Stanley of The New York Times, on the other hand, found the show "needlessly opaque".[29]
Newsday's Verne Gay praised the talent behind the series: "There are three excellent reasons—Milch, Mann and Hoffman—why your faith will be rewarded."[30]
Alan Sepinwall from HitFix called the series "clear and engaging", and singled out Hoffman's performance. "Hoffman is the big name, and gives an impressively buttoned-down performance."[31]
Andrew Anthony of The Guardian complained about the inaudibility of the dialogue and the delivery of the actors.[32]
Ratings
The December 2011 preview episode garnered a total of 1.14 million viewers on its original airing, with a 0.36 ratings share among adults 18–49.[5] The official series premiere, which aired January 29, 2012, garnered 1.06 million viewers with a 0.3 ratings share.[33] The viewership reached its second lowest mark with the seventh episode, at 474,000 viewers and 0.14 share.[34]
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Music
The theme song for the series is "Splitting the Atom" by Massive Attack.
International distribution
References
External links
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