WHEDONESQUE.COM mobile (beta)
log in | 08 January 2009


0 Home
1 Archive
2 Post story
3 Recent comments
4 Search

July 12 2006

Odd Couple Breathes Life into "Bones". David Boreanaz and Emily Deschanel share their thoughts on their Bones characters.

Boreanaz called his character "a hardball, out-on-the-street kind of guy" who "loves memorabilia and is mistrustful of science." And because of the characters' contrasting styles, "it makes the two of them like Bonnie and Clyde meets 'The Odd Couple,' " he said.

Boreanaz believes some of the show's appeal comes from the give-and-take between Brennan and Booth, who are at odds professionally but are drawn to each other personally.

The sexual tension is "something you don't want to do too much of," Boreanaz said. "You want to keep it at bay. That will be explored, but to what extent, I'm not sure."


I really love this show. The show and and both actors are always getting great press.

The sexual thing is fun to watch grow and root for. The stories and characters for the second season will be very enjoyable, IMO.

[ edited by Donna Troy on 2006-07-12 13:46 ]

Funny, funny show.

Funny thing arrived in my inbox this morning, but I didn't feel that it would warrant a thread of its own.

Break No Bones: A Temperance Brennan Novel
by Kathy Reichs
The inspiration for the Fox TV series Bones, Kathy Reichs' bestselling novels about the exploits of forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan are gripping, original thrillers. The ninth book in the series finds Tempe teaching at an archaeological field school in South Carolina, where she stumbles upon a fresh skeleton -- and a far-reaching international plot -- among the ancient bones of a Native American burial ground.
List Price: $25.95 | Member Price with Coupon: $16.25 > More Kathy Reichs


The link goes to the B&N page where the novel is for sale. The B&N page for the ninth novel also has information from the publisher that says it was an inspiration for Bones. I haven't heard of these books, has anyone else?

[ edited by Browncoat on 2006-07-12 14:19 ]

Though these books lack the shows version of Booth, they are easy, fun and well read books.

The chem between Tempe and her detective is very sexy. The books are always well written and informative.

I love the books. They are well written and the caracters really appeal to me. Close to the Patricia Cormwells books, but i find Reich's caracters less paranoid and easier to relate to.

And the books are even more intense than the show.

Yep, like the show. The chemistry's nice but I agree with DB in hoping that they don't go overboard with it. It'd be nice to see a man and a woman working together without having to leap into bed too. I also think the secondary characters are almost as big a draw as the leads (especially Hodgins).

By strange synchronicity i'm reading the first book, 'deja dead' at the moment. Picked it up on a whim because I quite like the show (and because it was in Waterstone's 99p range, quite literally as cheap as chips ;) and it's actually not bad. I didn't expect it to be first person but I quite like the voice of novel Temperence Brennan (who's quite a lot older than in the show and has aquired a daughter and -2 missing parents). The major differences actually make it easier to not picture the actors while reading even if I do miss TV-Brennan's amusingly super-rational approach to everything (and Booth of course).

Even stranger, I saw a novel from the show on sale at my local supermarket the other day. So it's a book of a show of a book. Odd.

Just an FYI. The 2 missing parents are part of the show.

Yep, there's a minus before the 2 ('aquired ... - [minus] 2 missing parents') but I think the odd font may have made my odd phrasing seem odder still. Aiming for off-beat, achieved off-good. So it goes ;).

(and reading the paragraph back, could I have squeezed another 'quite' in there somewhere ? Clearly, I just wasn't trying hard enough, deciding to settle at a mere bajillion uses of the word ;)

So you are saying the two missing parents are not in the book? Ok, yeah, I kinda get how the phrasing sorta says that...if you already know what is being said. ;-)

It all makes perfect sense. In my head.

(well, perfect-ish. And when I say sense...)

;-)

And don't forget Booth dancing.....hi-larious!

I agree with Boreanaz that too much sexual tension is probably bad. Some might be interesting but too much and it gets to be a slippery slope to a probable shark-jump.

Browncoat - I've been reading Kathy Reichs books for quite some time. In fact, it was the Kathy Reichs connection that first drew me to the series. This was before DB was even announced as Booth - talk about icing on the cake!

As onenailshort said, they are similar to books by Patricia Cornwell. But, after I read my first Reichs - I've never read another Cornwell. So. Much. Better.

The series is based - sorta - on a combo of the books and Reichs actual life (which is what the books are), but sexed up by making the character younger.

To complicate matters further, there is a novel, with the possibility of more, based on the TV series Bones, written by Max Collins (Road to Perdition).

I agree that the show took some LARGE strides in its first season, and think, with some minor tweaks, could set itself up for a 100 ep run with no problem. I'm PARTICULARLY fond of Michaela Condin, who plays Angela Montenegro...she is the true heart of the show, I think...very flirty, funny, and devoted to Tempe. Never seen the actress before, but she's a real find. Looks like the authoritarian Institute administrator is on his way out, to be replaced by Tamora Taylor, who, in true Whedonesque roundabout fashion, is well-known in some circles for speaking the opening lines from that big John Sweden movie from last summer, serenidipity or something like that......

The link goes to the B&N page where the novel is for sale. The B&N page for the ninth novel also has information from the publisher that says it was an inspiration for Bones. I haven't heard of these books, has anyone else?
Yep - I've read them all. I'm a pretty big fan; quite like them. There are major differences, some of which have made their way into injokes in the show, for fans of the books - something I always like. (One, for example: BookTempe travels between Montreal and the University she teaches at, in North Carolina. ShowBrennan made a crack in the very beginning about the next closest certified forensic anthropologist working in Montreal.) The books and show are different enough that though I can pick up plot points and such in the show, there's very little mental overlap for me, if that makes sense.

And yes, Saje - Bones the show was based on a series of books, and has now spawned a series of books. I picked the Bones-series book up out of some desperation for summer reading last week, and read it in an afternoon. It was somewhat awkward and ungainly - sort of newborn foal-ish - but the writer did manage to capture a lot of Booth and Brennan. Unfortunately, there was a bit more focus on the sexual tension than in the show, which I didn't like. Although I do like that tension between the two of them, and I'd actually like to see eventual acting upon it, just because I'd like to see the amusement that would stem from clinical-about-sex Brennan and romantic Booth (I do so love the gender stereotype flips in the characters), I only want to see it if they can do it in a mature, adult, no-drama way - ie, in a healthy manner. Since it's TV...

Anyhow. Reichs books? Thumbs up! Bones-series book? Eeeeh... if you really need a Bones fix and have nothing else to read, and can buy it used or on serious sale...

;)

[edited to add: "Looks like the authoritarian Institute administrator is on his way out," - really, VerseRoamer? Oh, I find that disappointing... I liked his character! Sigh.]

[edited again to correct VerseRoamers name - who probably doesn't wanna be VerseRunner. Okay. Right. Coffee. Need my coffee...]

[ edited by Loiosh on 2006-07-12 19:07 ]

[ edited by Loiosh on 2006-07-12 19:08 ]

The mythology of show is very intresting. I am very curious to see how dad is further brought in and what other mysterious he brings up.

I look forward to seeing DB laugh, joke and dance again. Plus love anything with Booth and his son Parker.

Another fun trivia bit:

TV Brennan's fictional heroine is called Kathy Reichs (but this has never been revealed in the series to date).

Couldn't agree more re: male-female working relationships on TV, Saje. Much more realistic, and more interesting, to show people who work together yet somehow bravely manage NOT to sleep together! Too many series absolutely jumped the shark when they jumped into bed; hope "Bones" avoids that trap.

OTOH, "Standoff" puts the illicit relationship at the center of the plot, or at least of the pilot. It looks like that series will (also realistically) focus on how wildly awkward that makes things for everyone now that the relationship has been discovered, as in the previews where Gina Torres' boss character is confronting the co-workers/lovers. That seems worth watching to see how they develop the sitch. (Plus, the abovementioned Gina Torres -- always worth watching!)


You need to log in to be able to post comments.
About membership.



0 Home
1 Archive
2 Post story
3 Recent comments
4 Search