Tag Archives: William Brinkley

#TheLastShip

@TheLastShipTNT @RealEricDane #Chandler @AdamBaldwin @TVdub @tntdrama @MarissaNeitling @tinalorenn @jockosims

John Mayo, of ComicBookPage, and Kay Kellam, of PopArtsPlace, have a spoiler filled discussion about the second season of The Last Ship.  With some discussion of the first season, where things left off, how they picked up in Baltimore, and who had possession of “The Last Ship” moving forward into the conflict with “the immunes,” and closing out with some speculation on where Season 3 will pick up the story.

Links:
Our Last Ship Season 1 Podcast
Last Ship Season 1 on Hulu
Last Ship @ IMDB.com: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2402207/
The Last Ship on TNT Drama Website
Discount Comic Book Service: http://www.DCBService.com
Comics Podcast Network: http://www.comicspodcast.com
League of Comic Book Podcasts:http://www.comicbooknoise.com/league/

Email us at TheGuys@ComicBookPage.com

Join the discussion on our forum at: http://forum.comicbookpage.com

This podcast episode originated on the Comic Book Page website:http://www.ComicBookPage.com

 

The Last Ship – Season 1

The Last Ship on TNT, Summer 2014

The Last Ship, on TNT, Summer 2014

John Mayo, of ComicBookPage, and Kay Kellam, of PopArtsPlace,  have a spoiler filled discuss about the first season of TNT’s The Last Ship.  Talking about the entire first season arc, the strengths of the series, how it holds up for those with some familiarity with military life, and exploring the journey the show has already taken while considering what season 2 of The Last Ship could hold for viewers.

Links:
Last Ship @ IMDB.com: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2402207/
Last Ship @ TNT: http://www.tntdrama.com/shows/the-last-ship.html
William Brinkley Wikipedia Page
The Last Ship (Novel) Wikipedia

Email us at TheGuys@ComicBookPage.com

Join the discussion on our forum at: http://forum.comicbookpage.com

This podcast episode originated on the Comic Book Page feed and website: http://www.ComicBookPage.com

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Go Navy - circa 1970s

Go Navy – circa 1970s

The Last Ship — John Pyper-Ferguson is Tex

John Pyper-FergusonFans of John Pyper-Ferguson know him as an actor with a list of credits a mile long.  Those who can not instantly call his name to mind may take a look at his 140+ acting credits on his IMDB page and suddenly realize they are in fact familiar with his work — so why didn’t his name pop on a light bulb?  He has a knack for slipping into a character in the tradition of the proverbial character actor.

During a brief conversation today Pyper-Ferguson discussed his current television character, Tex, on TNT’s The Last Ship,  confirming what fans and regular viewers of the show already know.  Simply put, we do not yet know a lot about Tex’s past.  Time and again the word Mercenary was used to describe his character who is not a member of the United States Navy like the majority of the characters seen week in, week out, on this summer drama.  He is not a civillian scientist either.  Rather he was a guard at gitmo.  A contractor who is now something else altogether.  The writers have referred to him in a behind the scenes special as a character that represents Freedom and has a “good spirit”.

The first pages with Tex in them that Pyper-Ferguson saw, the scenes with which he read and auditioned, held the flavor of the character and after his first reading “I got it” Pyper-Ferguson said, “I understood he’s a guy who tries to lighten things up when they are dark.”  He said his initial reaction to reading the part was, “this role is mine” and anyone who has seen the show will whole-heartedly agree.

Tex is more than a light-hearted, laid back guy.  He is confident with a gun, trained to have your back and you want him there when the chips are down because you know he will defend it — but that does not quite describe the character either, in part because while we believe this man is on our side and adimires Chandler, as Pyper-Ferguson was quick to point out, “he is a lone wolf,” and as he had said earlier, “we just do not know much about his background.”  When asked right out about Tex’s loyalties, Pyper-Ferguson remarked “he’s a mercenary, he’s a survivalist, this might be the kind of world where he might potentially excel in, and the previous world with a lot more rules and regulations was a place that held him back from his own nature.”  And perhaps, that last bit is part of the charm of Tex, the fact that we are seeing a character come into his own, and rise up in a positive way, because he is using his skills to help the good guys, and in a good way.

At San Diego’s Comic-Con International Rhona Mitra remarked that “everyone needs a champion,” in reference to Eric Dane’s Captain Chandler.  Tex may not be Dr. Scott’s stand out in front of the entire ship of Navy personnel champion, but he serves an equally important and vital role in the character Dr. Scott’s life.  Pyper-Ferguson joked Tex is “hot for teacher” and the show gets a lot of mileage out of that light hearted approach between the two characters, but more than that, the lone wolf is aware of all she is doing ‘for the pack’ and is helping to keep her spirits up, to ecourage her — to brighten her dark moments, and urge her forward when she is at risk of faltering.

A good show has unique characters that serve different and necessary roles.  Characters who each have different responses to a situation, and different perspectives on problems.  Those are among the reasons I come back to The Last Ship week after week… TNT is providing good entertainment, exciting action, and a good show, with characters I look forward to seeing in a second season — even bearing in mind Pyper-Ferguson’s warning “all the characters get in a lot of jeopardy, and there are cassualties of war, and there has to be in a show like this.”

The official description of The Last Ship is:

TNT’s action-packed drama The Last Ship, stars Eric Dane (Grey’s Anatomy) and is executive-produced by blockbuster filmmaker Michael Bay (Transformers). The Last Ship opens with a global catastrophe that nearly decimates the world’s population. Because of its positioning, the Navy destroyer U.S.S. Nathan James avoids falling victim to the devastating tragedy. But now, Captain Tom Chandler (Dane) and his crew must confront the reality of their new existence in a world where they may be among the few remaining survivors. Rhona Mitra (Strike Back) plays Rachel Scott, a strong-willed, intelligent and fearless paleomicrobiologist assigned to the ship. Adam Baldwin (FireflyChuck) is XO Mike Slattery, a former homicide detective and Chandler’s second-in-command. Also starring in The Last Ship are Travis Van Winkle (Heart of Dixie), Charles Parnell (Pariah), Christina Elmore (Fruitvale Station), Sam Spruell (Snow White and The Huntsman) and Marissa Neitling (Leverage). Based on William Brinkley’s popular novel, The Last Ship comes to TNT from Bay’s Platinum Dunes and its partners, Brad Fuller and Andrew Form, whose credits include the upcoming Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Bay, Fuller and Form have served as executive producers, along with series co-creators Hank Steinberg (Without a Trace, The Nine) and Steven Kane (The Closer), and director Jack Bender (Lost).

Watch episodes on The TNT Website to catch up, and tune in Sunday’s at 9 PM ET/PT for new episodes on TNT.

Go Navy - circa 1970s

Go Navy – circa 1970s

The Last Ship – TNT

The Last Ship on TNT, Summer 2014

The Last Ship, on TNT, Summer 2014

The Last Ship on TNT is one of those shows where I watched the trailer and thought, hmm, this could be interesting… if they get the Navy part right.  I’m the child of a Naval officer, and while there are a lot of things that a show about the Navy can get wrong and I won’t notice it, there are many things that I want them to get right.  Some I might even go so far as to say I need for them to get right.  And that’s as someone who did not serve in the military.

After watching the first episode I reached out to a retired officer who had served for more than a decade as a Public Affairs Officer and casually asked, “are you or any of your retired Navy buddies watching The Last Ship?”  I got a shake of the head and a basic, “haven’t heard much.”    I’ll admit I was disappointed.  I had hoped it would be the beginning of a conversation about a show that had intrigued me.  I let the topic drop, for the moment, but not die.

The Last Ship - William Brinkley NovelInstead, I found the wikipedia page for William Brinkley who wrote the novel the show is based on (perhaps more accurately said inspired by given the novel was written in 1988 and much has changed in the way of both technology and politics since then) and again brought up the topic when I saw the same retired officer days later.  This time by handing him a print-out of the wikipedia page and saying point blank, “I thought the Naval Service section might catch your eye.”  It turns out William Brinkley had served in the Navy in World War II, as a Public Affairs Officer.

For those with no Navy ties, perhaps I should note that the duties of a Public Affairs Officer range from dealing with the press, helping with the making of training videos, to reading scripts from television shows and movies and deciding if the Navy will cooperate with the filming.

Ever noticed that tag line in the end credits, we’d like to Thank The US Navy, or we would like to thank specific officers?  Or wondered how movies were able to get active duty military personnel to be extras on camera?  A Public Affairs Officer was contacted, read the script, and after a protocol was followed and approval was granted it all made it to the screen, but had that PAO (Public Affairs Officer) said “No,” extras would have been hired instead of active duty personnel.

Now, what answer did I get to the Wikipedia page about William Brinkley?  Turns out he was a bit of a legend among the PAOs when this officer was a PAO in the late 60s and throughout the 70s.  In fact, he recalls reading one of Brinkley’s books, Don’t Go Near The Water when he was in ROTC in College preparing to become an Officer in the Navy.

It felt as though I was seeing a very real attitude shift before my very eyes.  From doubt that the Navy was being portrayed as accurately as possible, to disappointment that he hadn’t known sooner he might have enjoyed tuning in.  He remarked that from the first time he had seen a commercial for The Last Ship he had been reminded of On The Beach, a book, and movie he fondly recalled from his youth, which from his Navy days felt particularly well titled.

Like the Last Ship, On The Beach was about coming ashore to realize what you’ve left behind is gone, though for very different reasons.  On The Beach gained it’s title from the fact the men at sea are forever reminiscing about what is going on, in the real world, On The Beach.  Where The Last Ship gains it’s title from the feeling that, to their knowledge, they are the last ship, in the U.S. Navy, afloat with a full healthy compliment of officers still on mission.

With this new information in hand I hit the internet again, and found myself chuckling that according to the wikipedia page for the novel The Last Ship, the Wall Street Journal favorably compared the book, when it was first released, to On The Beach.   It would appear my former PAO knew what he was talking about.

After reading about William Brinkley, and fondly recalling his reputation among the PAOs, derived in large part because of his books published after his naval service, the PAO was now interested in talking about the show and deciding if he would like to, at some point, watch it.  He was not ready to commit, he was not sure he could set apart that portion of his brain that likes to see the chain of command properly represented, the uniforms properly costume designed etc… but he wanted to hear more.  (It can be hard, when you lived and breathed it for over 20 years, to overlook the details and accept the world being created as “close enough”.)

So I told him about the three episodes I had watched.  Part of what fascinates me is the casting of Eric Dane as Commander Thomas Chandler.   (Yes, since childhood I have loved that the Captain of the ship is a Commander, and most of the officers I knew were NOT Captaining a ship when they attained the rank of Captain.  I always found that funny as a kid.)   Fans of Grey’s Anatomy will remember Eric Dane as Dr. “McSteamy” Mark Sloane, with a wink for every woman, and a flirtatious moment for every episode, this man earned his McSteamy moniker.  But a Navy Captain can not be McSteamy.  It simply can not be.  Eric Dane as Commander Thomas Chandler

The Captain of a Navy ship does not hang out with the majority of his crew, he is not buddies with each and every individual, though he knows who is who on his ship.  He stands apart.  He makes the tough calls.  He is responsible for every life on that ship.  It is a tough position when everything goes wrong.  He is a man who knows he may have to give some very tough orders, but his crew respects him (if he is a good Captain) because he is the kind of man who would never give an order he himself would not take/obey.

The Captain has the respect of his crew, he needs to have earned the respect of his crew, and he needs to be someone who the crew wants to earn the respect of.  This is a tough role, and it is not a role for McSteamy.  It is however a role Eric Dane is excelling in.  With a more stoic approach, playing a character with a wife and kids at home, this character has his eye firmly on the mission, on the goal of saving humanity and taking each step forward as it comes.

Rhona Mitra - Dr ScottRhona Mitra is Doctor Rachel Scott, a virologist who may be one of the few people, perhaps the only person, who can figure out a cure for the plague ravaging humankind.  She has made mistakes since coming on board the Nathan James 6 months ago, and yet, because she alone has the skills needed to save us all, Captain Chandler at one point tells her in no uncertain terms “You have nothing to prove.”

This is a show with a lot of supporting characters, the pilot has some scene stealing moments by Frankie (Played by Kevin Phillips), who gives hints of just how emotional and deep these scripts have the potential to go, if they choose.

In the first three episodes they deal with the realities of life aboard ship.  They touch on the experience of living in a community of a thousand people, the importance of standing united in the face of trying times, and intrigued me enough to want to keep coming back for more.

As for how accurately and realistically they are portraying the Navy… when I gave the retired PAO an example of one scene that really caught my eye, that made me stop and smile with a yup, that would happen, he had the same reaction.  He nodded and while he did not promise to tune in to future episodes, when I offered to record them and he could watch some with me, he sounded interested.  I’m enjoying the show, I’m coming back week after week… and I’m not seeing anything that’s jarring my awareness and throwing me out of the experience, rather I’m caught up in the action, wanting to see how the story unfolds, wanting to see where the plot goes next, and hoping to find out more about these people and how they will survive in this new era.

Go Navy - circa 1970s

Go Navy – circa 1970s

Fans may recognize Rhona Mitra from Boston Legal, The Practice, The Gates, or the Life of David Gale and Eric Dane from Grey’s Anatomy.  The Last Ship also stars Adam Baldwin of Firelfy, Serenity, Daybreak and Chuck,

William Brinkley Wikipedia Page
The Last Ship (Novel) Wikipedia
 On  The Beach (Novel) – Wikipedia
Amazon.com The Last Ship Novel (eBook or Paperback) 2014 re-release