For Californication star David Duchovny it's goodbye sad sack Hank Moody hell bad-ass Sgt. Sam Hodiak. It was announced by NBC before the first episode of the series final Season 7 aired that the X-Files G-man will be staring in a gritty crime drama Aquarius set in the late 60's--centering around the exploits of crazed cult leader Charles Manson. Heather Graham is happy to be making the move to serious television instead of another sexist movie. Boggy Nights topless skater girl is tired of Hollywood's unrealistic archetypes and wants to see a movie where the female leads care solely about how many orgasms they are going to receive and nothing else. Natascha McElhone shines as a reminder of times past in John Banville's The Sea.
David Duchovny is trading in his Showtime hit Californication for a role in major network NBC's upcoming primetime action thriller Aquarius that premieres later this year.
Jennifer Salke entertainment president at NBC says the network is betting everything it's got that there latest project with Duchovny is going to be a hit (via Deadline):
"Event series are a big priority for us, and the combination of a show that charts the lead-up to the Manson murders, along with a television star of the magnitude of David Duchovny, is the very definition of an event."
In a recent interview with Huffington Post, Hangover star Heather Graham got a little off the subject of Showtime's series and started demanding more orgasms:
"I don't see anything in film about women who want to have sex.
"When do you ever get to see a movie from the point of view of a woman who's more interested in having really great orgasms than finding a husband?
"I would say almost never."
Natascha McElhone new role in the Stephen Brown directed The Sea, will doubtlessly be a little light on the screaming female orgasms for Heather Graham's taste, but the Irish Times reports she did a magnificent job none the less:
"Nice Connie Grace (Natascha McElhone) and mildly crazy Carlos (Rufus Sewell) welcome the young Max into their family as a companion for their own two children.
"McElhone and Sewell capture an ancient class of glamour that didn't survive the 1970s."
Oh, that's sounds lovely...whatever it means.
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