The Pacific | |
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The Pacific's intertitle |
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Genre | War miniseries |
Directed by | Tim Van Patten David Nutter Jeremy Podeswa Graham Yost Carl Franklin Tony To[1] |
Produced by | Steven Spielberg (executive) Tom Hanks (executive) Gary Goetzman (executive) Tony To (co-executive) Graham Yost (co-executive) Eugene Kelly (co-executive) Bruce McKenna (co-executive) Cherylanne Martin Todd London Steven Shareshian Tim Van Patten (supervising) George Pelecanos (co-producer) Robert Schenkkan (co-producer) |
Written by | Bruce McKenna Robert Schenkkan Graham Yost George Pelecanos Larry Andries Michelle Ashford |
Starring | James Badge Dale Jon Seda Joseph Mazzello |
Music by | Hans Zimmer (main theme) Geoff Zanelli Blake Neely |
Budget | US$ 200 million |
Country | United States |
Language | English/Japanese |
Original channel | HBO (US) Sky Movies Premiere HD (UK) Seven Network (Australia) |
Original run | March 14, 2010 – May 16, 2010 |
Running time | 540 minutes |
No. of episodes | 10 |
Preceded by | Band of Brothers |
Official website |
Primetime Emmy Awards | |
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Outstanding Art Direction For A Miniseries Or Movie | |
Outstanding Casting for a Miniseries, Movie, or a Special | |
Outstanding Make-up For A Miniseries Or Movie (Non-Prosthetic) | |
Outstanding Make-up for a Series, Miniseries, Movie or a Special (Prosthetic) | |
Outstanding Miniseries | |
Outstanding Sound Editing for a Miniseries, Movie or a Special | |
Outstanding Sound Mixing For A Miniseries Or Movie | |
Outstanding Special Visual Effects For A Miniseries, Movie Or A Special |
The Pacific is a 2010 television series produced by HBO, Seven Network Australia, Sky Movies, Playtone and DreamWorks that premiered in the United States on March 14, 2010.[2]
The series is a sister show to the 2001 miniseries Band of Brothers and focuses on the United States Marine Corps' actions in the Pacific Theater of Operations within the wider Pacific War. Whereas Band of Brothers followed one company of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment through the European Theater, The Pacific centers on the experiences of three Marines (Eugene Sledge, Robert Leckie and John Basilone) who were all in different Regiments of the 1st Marine Division.
The Pacific was spearheaded by Bruce McKenna (co-executive producer), one of the main writers on Band of Brothers. Hugh Ambrose, the son of Band of Brothers author Stephen Ambrose, served as a project consultant.[3]
Contents |
The Pacific is based primarily on two memoirs of U.S. Marines, With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa by Eugene Sledge and Helmet for My Pillow by Robert Leckie.[3] The miniseries tells the stories of the two authors and Marine John Basilone, as the war against the Empire of Japan rages. It also draws on Sledge's China Marine[4] and Red Blood, Black Sand,[5] the memoir of Chuck Tatum, a Marine who fought alongside Basilone on Iwo Jima.[6]
The miniseries features well-known battles with Japan involving the 1st Marine Division, such as Guadalcanal, Cape Gloucester, Peleliu, and Okinawa, as well as Basilone's involvement in the Battle of Iwo Jima.
Hugh Ambrose wrote the official tie-in book to the miniseries,[7] which follows the stories of the two of the featured men from the miniseries, Basilone and Sledge, as well as stories of Sledge's close friend Sid Phillips and two men not featured in the series, Marine Corps officer Austin Shofner and Navy pilot Vernon Micheel. The different cast providing a wider view of the Pacific theatre, allowing the book to include the fall of the Philippines, Midway, Philippine Sea and Luzon and expand the narrative to include depictions of life as experienced by prisoners of war, senior officers and the development of naval aviation. It was published in the U.S. and the U.K. in March 2010.[8]
The Pacific was produced by Steven Spielberg, Tom Hanks, and Gary Goetzman in association with HBO Miniseries, Playtone, Dreamworks, Seven Network and Sky Movies.[10] Seven invested in the project for the right to broadcast it in Australia.[11] Nine Network has previously broadcast the HBO productions of Band of Brothers. Nine had a broadcast deal with HBO's parent Warner Bros., but then HBO started to distribute its own productions separately.[12]
In April 2007, the producers set up a production office in Melbourne and began casting.[13]
Filming of the miniseries in Australia started on August 10, 2007,[14] and finished in late May 2008.[15]
The score was written by Hans Zimmer, Geoff Zanelli and Blake Neely and was released on March 9, 2010. The miniseries premiered in the U.S. on March 14, 2010, on HBO.[16]
Originally the project was estimated at $100 million to produce,[12] but ended up costing over $200 million, making The Pacific the most expensive television miniseries ever created by any network.[17][18][19]
According to The Malaysian Insider the series cost $270 million, with an estimated AUD $134 million of that spent in Australia,[20] The Australian newspaper Herald Sun estimates that it brought 4,000 jobs and generated AUD $180 million for the Australian economy.[21]
From August through November 2007[22] filming took place at locations in and around Port Douglas, Queensland including Mossman, Queensland;[23] Drumsara Plantation, Mowbray National Park[23] and beaches at Rocky Point, Queensland.[23] Production then moved to rural Victoria.[24][25] in the You Yangs near Lara, Victoria (from November–December 2007),[26] then at a sand quarry on Sandy Creek Road near Geelong, Victoria till February 2008.[27]
Melbourne city locations were used in late 2007 and through 2008 including Central City Studios at Melbourne Docklands (March 2008);[28][29] Flinders Street (between Swanston and Elizabeth streets; February 1–4, 2008);[30][31] the intersection of Swanston and Flinders streets (February 2008);[32] Flinders Street Station (February 2–3, 2008).[33]
Other suburban locations included Bundoora, Victoria,[34] specifically the Ernest Jones Hall at the La Trobe University campus, Bundoora (late May 2008);[35] the Railway Hotel, South Melbourne (December 2007);[36] Scotch College, Melbourne (December 2007);[36] Melbourne High School (December 2007);[36][37] Mornington Railway, Melbourne; Rathdowne Street, North Carlton and Victoria Park, Collingwood.
The series premiered in the U.S. and Canada[38] on March 14, 2010. HBO Asia premiered The Pacific at 9 pm on April 3, 2010, with the first 2 episodes being aired back-to-back in the first week. Singapore, Hong Kong, and Indonesia had dual Language available. Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Malaysia, and Philippines broadcasts were available in high-definition on the HBO Asia HD Channel.[39]
The Pacific began broadcast on April 5, 2010 on Sky Movies in the United Kingdom and Ireland.[40] In Portugal, the series was broadcast on April 5, 2010 on AXN and in HD on AXN HD two days after the original broadcast in the U.S. In Denmark, Norway, Finland, France and Sweden the series began broadcasting on Canal+, in Turkey CNBC-e on April 18, 2010, in the Netherlands on April 7, 2010 on Veronica, and in Greece on Nova Cinema on April 10, 2010. In New Zealand the series began broadcasting on April 12, 2010 on TV One. In Italy the miniseries began broadcast on May 9, 2010 on Sky Cinema 1, in Germany on July 15, 2010 on Kabel eins. In Japan the miniseries started July 18, 2010 on WOWOW.[41] In South Africa the miniseries started broadcasting on May 5, 2010 on the Mnet channel. The series premiered in Israel on July 18, 2010 on yes and was shown on yes4 movie channel and yesHD2. It was also available as catch-up service on yesVOD in SD and HD. Estonian ETV aired the miniseries starting on September 10, 2010. In Sweden, the series premiered on December 29, 2010 on SVT and in Norway, the series premiered on January 4, 2011 on NRK1 (Norwegian Broadcasting), and catch-up service in HD on NRK Nett-TV
Channel Seven, as a part of the channel's annual New Year TV preview of the programmes that it would be broadcasting the same corresponding year, released a trailer at 12:06 am, January 1, 2010. This trailer was unapproved by HBO. Ten days after it was released temporarily on the internet, it was promptly removed by HBO and Channel Seven due to copyright infringement.
The brief 1-minute 16-seconds trailer shows the disembarkation of the 5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division on the island of Peleliu on September 15, 1944. It starts off with a platoon of Marines on an amtrac waiting for the ramp on their LST to drop to allow their embarkation towards the beach to commence. The trailer then cuts and shows the Marines in LVT-1s and DUKWs approaching Orange Beach as they take incoming fire from Japanese artillery and machine guns on Peleliu. The trailer then cuts again to the scene on the beachhead where we see the Marines from the earlier waves struggling to establish a foothold on the beach as they encounter heavy machine gun and mortar fire from the defending Japanese garrison. The voice-over of the Channel Seven trailer then erroneously describes the battle being shown as "the battle that saved Australia". The advertising campaign focuses heavily on a perceived emotive connection with the Australian experience of the Second World War, despite the series actually focusing almost entirely on the American experience of the South and Central Pacific Campaign.
The trailer focuses on one Marine in particular named Eugene Sledge (played by Joseph Mazzello), the author of With The Old Breed, one of the sources that the writers and producers of The Pacific have used for the miniseries.
The series broadcast commenced in Australia on Channel 7 on Wednesday, April 14, 2010, at 8:30 pm.[42]
The first official U.S. trailer for The Pacific aired on HBO prior to the season 2 premiere of True Blood on June 14, 2009. It showed footage of the three main characters, including a conversation between Leckie and Sledge, Basilone's marriage and numerous combat scenes. The trailer concluded with "2010" displayed on-screen -alluding to and confirming the series release date. A second trailer was released on the HBO website after which the date "March 2010" is displayed, giving a more specific series release date. On January 14, 2010, Comcast added on-demand content from the series, including a scene from The Pacific, interviews with the producers and character profiles.[43]
Another trailer was shown in February 2010 during Super Bowl XLIV, depicting several combat scenes.
An extended trailer (3:47) to the miniseries can be viewed on the series' official website. See external links below.
The Pacific was very well received by critics, receiving an average score of 87% at review aggregator Metacritic.[44] Time magazine's James Poniewozik named it one of the Top 10 TV Series of 2010.[45]
Category | Nominee | Episode | Outcome |
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Outstanding Art Direction For A Miniseries Or Movie | Anthony Pratt, Dominic Hyman, Richard Hobbs, Scott Bird, Jim Millet, Rolland Pike, Lisa Thompson | N/A | Won |
Outstanding Casting For A Miniseries, Movie Or A Special | Meg Liberman, Camille H. Patton, Christine King, Jennifer Euston, Suzanne M. Smith | N/A | Won |
Outstanding Cinematography For A Miniseries Or Movie | Remi Adefarasin | Part Five | Nominated |
Outstanding Cinematography For A Miniseries Or Movie | Stephen F. Windon | Part Nine | Nominated |
Outstanding Costumes For A Miniseries, Movie Or A Special | Penny Rose, Ken Crouch | Part Three | Nominated |
Outstanding Directing For A Miniseries, Movie Or A Dramatic Special | David Nutter, Jeremy Podeswa | Part Eight | Nominated |
Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing For A Miniseries Or Movie | Edward A. Warschilka | Part Five | Nominated |
Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing For A Miniseries Or Movie | Alan Cody | Part Eight | Nominated |
Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing For A Miniseries Or Movie | Alan Cody, Marta Évry | Part Nine | Nominated |
Outstanding Main-Title Design | Steve Fuller, Ahmet Ahmet, Peter Frankfurt, Lauren Hartstone | N/A | Nominated |
Outstanding Make-up For A Miniseries Or Movie (Non-Prosthetic) | Chiara Tripodi, Toni French | N/A | Won |
Outstanding Prosthetic Make-up For A Miniseries, Movie Or A Special | Jason Baird, Sean Genders, Gregory Nicotero, Jac Charlton, Chad Atkinson, Ben Rittenhouse | N/A | Won |
Outstanding Music Composition For A Miniseries, Movie Or A Special (Original Dramatic Score) | Blake Neely, Geoff Zanelli, Hans Zimmer | Part Ten | Nominated |
Outstanding Miniseries | N/A | N/A | Won |
Outstanding Sound Editing For A Miniseries, Movie Or A Special | Tom Bellfort, Benjamin L. Cook, Daniel S. Irwin, Hector C. Gika, Charles Maynes, Paul Aulicino, John C. Stuver, David Williams, Michelle Pazer, John Finklea, Jody Thomas, Katie Rose | Part Five | Won |
Outstanding Sound Mixing For A Miniseries Or Movie | Andrew Ramage, Michael Minkler, Daniel Leahy | Part Two | Won |
Outstanding Sound Mixing For A Miniseries Or Movie | Andrew Ramage, Michael Minkler, Daniel Leahy, Craig Mann | Part Five | Nominated |
Outstanding Sound Mixing For A Miniseries Or Movie | Gary Wilkins, Michael Minkler, Daniel Leahy, Marc Fishman | Part Eight | Nominated |
Outstanding Sound Mixing For A Miniseries Or Movie | Gary Wilkins, Michael Minkler, Daniel Leahy | Part Nine | Nominated |
Outstanding Special Visual Effects For A Miniseries, Movie Or A Special | John E. Sullivan, Joss Williams, David Taritero, Peter Webb, Dion Hatch, John P. Mesa, Jerry Pooler, Paul Graff | Part One | Nominated |
Outstanding Special Visual Effects For A Miniseries, Movie Or A Special | John E. Sullivan, Joss Williams, David Taritero, David Goldberg, Angelo Sahin, Marco Recuay, William Mesa, Chris Bremble, Jerry Pooler | Part Five | Won |
Outstanding Writing For A Miniseries, Movie Or A Dramatic Special | Robert Schenkkan, Michelle Ashford | Part Eight | Nominated |
Outstanding Writing For A Miniseries, Movie Or A Dramatic Special | Bruce C. McKenna, Robert Schenkkan | Part Ten | Nominated |
Category | Outcome |
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Best Miniseries or Television Film | Nominated |
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