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Continuum | |
---|---|
![]() Continuum intertitle | |
Genre | |
Created by | Simon Barry |
Starring | |
Music by | Jeff Danna |
Country of origin | Canada |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 3 |
No. of episodes | 36 ( list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
|
Production locations | Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada / Riverview Hospital, Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada |
Cinematography | Joel Ransom |
Running time | 44 minutes [1] |
Production companies |
|
Original release | |
Network | Showcase |
Release | May 27, 2012[2] – October 9, 2015 |
Continuum is a Canadian science fiction series created by Simon Barry and produced by Reunion Pictures Inc., Boy Meets Girl Film Company, and GK-TV.
The series centers on the conflict between a group of rebels from the year 2077 who time-travel to Vancouver, BC, in 2012, and a police officer who accidentally accompanies them. In spite of being many years early, the rebel group decides to continue its violent campaign to stop corporations of the future from replacing governments, while the police officer endeavours to stop them without revealing to anyone that she and the rebels are from the future.
The show premiered on Showcase on May 27, 2012. [2] [3] The first season has 10 episodes. [2] On August 25, 2012, Showcase renewed Continuum for a second season of 13 episodes [4] which premiered on April 21, 2013 (Showcase) in Canada, May 23, 2013 (Syfy) in the UK and on June 7, 2013 (Syfy) in the US. [5] On June 5, 2013, Continuum was officially renewed for a third season also of 13 episodes [6] which premiered on March 16, 2014 on Showcase in Canada and April 4, 2014 on Syfy in the US. [7] During an interview in May 2014, Simon Barry revealed that he has 7 to 10 seasons in mind for Continuum [8] [9] while Rachel Nichols also hinted at a "completely different Kiera" for Season 4. After much deliberation and silence, [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] Showcase announced on December 8, 2014 that Continuum had been renewed for a fourth and final season of six episodes, slated to air in 2015. [8] [18]
Episodes of the first two seasons began with the plot of the show narrated by a voiceover from the point of view of Kiera Cameron ( Rachel Nichols). [19]
2077. My time, my city, my family. When terrorists killed thousands of innocents, they were condemned to die. They had other plans. A time travel device sent us all back 65 years. I want to get home, but I can't be sure what I will return to if history is changed. Their plan: to corrupt and control the present, in order to win the future. What they didn't plan on was me. [19]
Starting with the third season, the narration was replaced by a new sequence that contains a CGI version of the time travel device, scenes from previous seasons, and cast credits, before finishing with Kiera Cameron holding the device, followed by the title card. [20]
City Protective Services (CPS) law enforcement officer Kiera Cameron lives a quiet, normal life with her husband and son in 2077-era Vancouver. Under the corporatocratic and oligarchic dystopia of the North American Union and its "Corporate Congress," life goes on in apparent freedom under a technologically-advanced high-surveillance police state. [21]
When a group of self-proclaimed freedom fighters known as "Liber8" escape execution by fleeing to the year 2012, Kiera is involuntarily transported with them into the past. Joining with Detective Carlos Fonnegra ( Victor Webster) and the Vancouver Police Department, and enlisting the help of teen computer genius Alec Sadler ( Erik Knudsen), Kiera works to track down and thwart Edouard Kagame ( Tony Amendola) and his followers in the present day while concealing her identity as a time-traveler from the future. [21]
Kagame and the members of Liber8 plot to alter the past to avert the rise of what they see as a dictatorial and Orwellian corporate regime to be stopped at all costs. Meanwhile, Kiera knows that Alec Sadler will become the future corporate mogul and head of SadTech, one of the mega-corporations that dominate the world in 2077, [21] and she later discovers that the elderly Alec was responsible for sending her and Liber8 back in time to try and alter his path in life. [22]
In the conclusion of the second season finale, Alec travels back in time a week to rescue Emily, which is what eventually causes the timeline to split and creates an alternative finale. [23] [24] Following these alterations, the future is altered and Brad Tonkin ( Ryan Robbins) [25] is sent back in time from 2039 by an elderly Kellog after the future is altered for the worse. [26]
Season | Episodes | First broadcast | DVD and Blu-ray release date | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Season premiere | Season finale | Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | |||
1 | 10 | May 27, 2012 | August 5, 2012 | March 26, 2013 [27] | January 28, 2013 [28] | April 24, 2013 [29] | |
2 | 13 | April 21, 2013 | August 4, 2013 | March 25, 2014 [30] | April 7, 2014 [31] | July 3, 2014 [32] | |
3 | 13 | March 16, 2014 | June 22, 2014 | — | — | — | |
4 | 6 | September 4, 2015 | October 9, 2015 | — | — | — |
Throughout the series, multiple theories are suggested as to the nature of time travel and its effect on the timeline of events leading from 2012 to 2077.
In discussion with Kiera, Alec posits that his future self recalled his interactions with Kiera in the past, potentially inspiring the creation of his own cybernetic technology from her futuristic implants and equipment and leading to a " time loop" whereby conditions in 2077 cannot be altered. Otherwise, Alec and Kiera consider that Kiera and Liber8's presence in the past may have already altered the timeline and created a separate chain of events, and thus the state of the world in 2077 is no longer certain. [21]
Evidence for each possibility is presented over the course of the series. Ultimately, the first season finale, "Endtimes", reveals that the elderly Alec Sadler orchestrated the time jump that sent Kiera and the members of Liber8 back in time and that he knew precisely what was to occur in 2012. [33] At the start of the second season, the contents of a message sent from the 2077-era Alec to his younger self reveal that his apparent goal is to avert the corporate-dominated future that his actions and inventions created. [22]
Following the second season finale where Alec traveled back in time a week to rescue Emily, a secondary timeline was produced while the original one ceased to exist. [23] [24] Following these alterations, more time travellers, this time from 2039 travelled back due to stop the modelings of Alec and Liber8 as the future had been altered for the worse. [26]
Series creator and executive producer Simon Barry has confirmed that the creative staff have established a set of "rules" for the version of time travel depicted, which will be further explored as the series progresses. [34]
Kiera came through the portal with her standard City Protection Service equipment: Suit, enabling enhanced strength, bulletproof protection, [35] complete invisibility with color-changing camouflage, [35] an electric taser system, [35] [36] capable of emitting an energy shield bubble [37] and advanced computer processing capabilities with built-in screens for data access in her wrists. [36] Kiera is cybernetically enhanced with Cybernetic visual implants [37] with functions that include biorhythm detection, heat detection [35] and vision, [38] night vision [39] and telescopic vision. [37] When Kiera's suit is in proximity, she gains additional functionality, including complete personnel information on targets [35] as well as vitals, [39] and forensic data processing and computing. [40] [41] Kiera also has an electronic Multi-tool: a hand-held device that features wireless frequency generation [36] (capable of matching current model wireless car door locks and other devices), a fingerprint duster that is electronically linked to her visual implants, [42] a magnetic field generator, [37] and a medical injector for various drugs from truth serum to stimulants. Kiera's neural implants also offer an onboard psychoanalyst during times where she lets her emotions get the best of her. [43] Kiera also has a fold-away gun [36] that travelled back with her which also houses a biometric scanner that causes the gun to lashout against anyone but its registered user. [39]
Her eyes have cybernetic implants as well which passively record everything she sees, this allows her to pause, rewind and apply various filters to see previously unseen details or use heat vision to locate hidden targets. [39]
Character | Portrayed by | Seasons | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | ||
Kiera Cameron | Rachel Nichols [3] [8] [9] [44] | Main | |||
Carlos Fonnegra | Victor Webster [3] [44] | Main | TBA | ||
Alec Sadler | Erik Knudsen [3] [44] | Main | TBA | ||
Matthew Kellog | Stephen Lobo [3] [44] | Main | TBA | ||
Travis Verta | Roger Cross [3] [44] | Main | TBA | ||
Sonya Valentine | Lexa Doig [3] [44] | Main [note 1] | TBA | ||
Edouard Kagame | Tony Amendola [3] [44] | Main | Recurring | TBA | |
Lucas Ingram | Omari Newton [3] [44] | Main | TBA | ||
Jasmine Garza | Luvia Petersen [3] [44] | Main | TBA | ||
Betty Robertson | Jennifer Spence [3] [44] | Main [note 2] | TBA | ||
Jack Dillon | Brian Markinson [3] [44] | Main | TBA |
Series creator Simon Barry explains how the show was picked up by Showcase:
I had developed the idea for US networks (where I had been selling for several years, but not getting picked up) and before I got a chance to take Continuum out and pitch it, I was hired by CBS to write a different pilot. In the middle of that job, my director friend Pat Williams took a meeting at Showcase Network in Canada and called me in a panic because he didn't have anything to pitch. I gave him the idea for Continuum to pass on to the executives there. They immediately saw the potential and hired me to write a pilot script. Because it was first set up with Showcase, there was much more of an appetite for Sci-Fi and genre bending concepts. Showcase really understood what the show could be from day one. [48]
The series premiered in the U.S. on January 14, 2013 on Syfy, [49] [50] with season 2 returning June 7, 2013, [51] and season 3 on April 4, 2014. [52]
The series premiered in the UK on September 27, 2012 on Syfy, [53] [54] with season 2 returning on May 23, 2013. [55]
The series premiered in Australia on SF on February 21, 2013, [56] and returned for season 2 on October 3, 2013. [57] Season 3 premiered on Syfy (Australia) (the replacement to the now defunct SF) on May 5, 2014. [58]
In Canada, the series debut in Canadian French on addikTV on November 6, 2013 [59] with season 2 airing on September 12, 2014. [60]
Reviewer Neil Genzlinger of The New York Times described the series as "slick" and highlighted its attention to detail. [61] Reviewer David Hinckley of the New York Daily News compared Continuum positively to Life on Mars, another series with a time travelling police officer, and gave the show three stars out of five. [62] According to Hinckley, the series has potential to do well, and if it "doesn't aim to soar, it executes the basics well".
Zeros 2 Heroes Media Inc. has created an alternate reality game website, Continuum The Game. [63]
The game site also includes a Comics section, featuring Continuum: The War Files, which is an eight part graphic novel that tells of the war going on in 2065, between the Corporations and Liber8. For now, the comic is available only in Canada. [64]
Rittenhouse released a trading card set based on the show in June 2014. [65]
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![]() | This is not a Wikipedia article: It is an individual user's work-in-progress page, and may be incomplete and/or unreliable. For guidance on developing this draft, see
Wikipedia:So you made a userspace draft. Find sources:
Google (
books ·
news ·
scholar ·
free images ·
WP refs) ·
FENS ·
JSTOR ·
TWL |
Continuum | |
---|---|
![]() Continuum intertitle | |
Genre | |
Created by | Simon Barry |
Starring | |
Music by | Jeff Danna |
Country of origin | Canada |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 3 |
No. of episodes | 36 ( list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
|
Production locations | Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada / Riverview Hospital, Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada |
Cinematography | Joel Ransom |
Running time | 44 minutes [1] |
Production companies |
|
Original release | |
Network | Showcase |
Release | May 27, 2012[2] – October 9, 2015 |
Continuum is a Canadian science fiction series created by Simon Barry and produced by Reunion Pictures Inc., Boy Meets Girl Film Company, and GK-TV.
The series centers on the conflict between a group of rebels from the year 2077 who time-travel to Vancouver, BC, in 2012, and a police officer who accidentally accompanies them. In spite of being many years early, the rebel group decides to continue its violent campaign to stop corporations of the future from replacing governments, while the police officer endeavours to stop them without revealing to anyone that she and the rebels are from the future.
The show premiered on Showcase on May 27, 2012. [2] [3] The first season has 10 episodes. [2] On August 25, 2012, Showcase renewed Continuum for a second season of 13 episodes [4] which premiered on April 21, 2013 (Showcase) in Canada, May 23, 2013 (Syfy) in the UK and on June 7, 2013 (Syfy) in the US. [5] On June 5, 2013, Continuum was officially renewed for a third season also of 13 episodes [6] which premiered on March 16, 2014 on Showcase in Canada and April 4, 2014 on Syfy in the US. [7] During an interview in May 2014, Simon Barry revealed that he has 7 to 10 seasons in mind for Continuum [8] [9] while Rachel Nichols also hinted at a "completely different Kiera" for Season 4. After much deliberation and silence, [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] Showcase announced on December 8, 2014 that Continuum had been renewed for a fourth and final season of six episodes, slated to air in 2015. [8] [18]
Episodes of the first two seasons began with the plot of the show narrated by a voiceover from the point of view of Kiera Cameron ( Rachel Nichols). [19]
2077. My time, my city, my family. When terrorists killed thousands of innocents, they were condemned to die. They had other plans. A time travel device sent us all back 65 years. I want to get home, but I can't be sure what I will return to if history is changed. Their plan: to corrupt and control the present, in order to win the future. What they didn't plan on was me. [19]
Starting with the third season, the narration was replaced by a new sequence that contains a CGI version of the time travel device, scenes from previous seasons, and cast credits, before finishing with Kiera Cameron holding the device, followed by the title card. [20]
City Protective Services (CPS) law enforcement officer Kiera Cameron lives a quiet, normal life with her husband and son in 2077-era Vancouver. Under the corporatocratic and oligarchic dystopia of the North American Union and its "Corporate Congress," life goes on in apparent freedom under a technologically-advanced high-surveillance police state. [21]
When a group of self-proclaimed freedom fighters known as "Liber8" escape execution by fleeing to the year 2012, Kiera is involuntarily transported with them into the past. Joining with Detective Carlos Fonnegra ( Victor Webster) and the Vancouver Police Department, and enlisting the help of teen computer genius Alec Sadler ( Erik Knudsen), Kiera works to track down and thwart Edouard Kagame ( Tony Amendola) and his followers in the present day while concealing her identity as a time-traveler from the future. [21]
Kagame and the members of Liber8 plot to alter the past to avert the rise of what they see as a dictatorial and Orwellian corporate regime to be stopped at all costs. Meanwhile, Kiera knows that Alec Sadler will become the future corporate mogul and head of SadTech, one of the mega-corporations that dominate the world in 2077, [21] and she later discovers that the elderly Alec was responsible for sending her and Liber8 back in time to try and alter his path in life. [22]
In the conclusion of the second season finale, Alec travels back in time a week to rescue Emily, which is what eventually causes the timeline to split and creates an alternative finale. [23] [24] Following these alterations, the future is altered and Brad Tonkin ( Ryan Robbins) [25] is sent back in time from 2039 by an elderly Kellog after the future is altered for the worse. [26]
Season | Episodes | First broadcast | DVD and Blu-ray release date | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Season premiere | Season finale | Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | |||
1 | 10 | May 27, 2012 | August 5, 2012 | March 26, 2013 [27] | January 28, 2013 [28] | April 24, 2013 [29] | |
2 | 13 | April 21, 2013 | August 4, 2013 | March 25, 2014 [30] | April 7, 2014 [31] | July 3, 2014 [32] | |
3 | 13 | March 16, 2014 | June 22, 2014 | — | — | — | |
4 | 6 | September 4, 2015 | October 9, 2015 | — | — | — |
Throughout the series, multiple theories are suggested as to the nature of time travel and its effect on the timeline of events leading from 2012 to 2077.
In discussion with Kiera, Alec posits that his future self recalled his interactions with Kiera in the past, potentially inspiring the creation of his own cybernetic technology from her futuristic implants and equipment and leading to a " time loop" whereby conditions in 2077 cannot be altered. Otherwise, Alec and Kiera consider that Kiera and Liber8's presence in the past may have already altered the timeline and created a separate chain of events, and thus the state of the world in 2077 is no longer certain. [21]
Evidence for each possibility is presented over the course of the series. Ultimately, the first season finale, "Endtimes", reveals that the elderly Alec Sadler orchestrated the time jump that sent Kiera and the members of Liber8 back in time and that he knew precisely what was to occur in 2012. [33] At the start of the second season, the contents of a message sent from the 2077-era Alec to his younger self reveal that his apparent goal is to avert the corporate-dominated future that his actions and inventions created. [22]
Following the second season finale where Alec traveled back in time a week to rescue Emily, a secondary timeline was produced while the original one ceased to exist. [23] [24] Following these alterations, more time travellers, this time from 2039 travelled back due to stop the modelings of Alec and Liber8 as the future had been altered for the worse. [26]
Series creator and executive producer Simon Barry has confirmed that the creative staff have established a set of "rules" for the version of time travel depicted, which will be further explored as the series progresses. [34]
Kiera came through the portal with her standard City Protection Service equipment: Suit, enabling enhanced strength, bulletproof protection, [35] complete invisibility with color-changing camouflage, [35] an electric taser system, [35] [36] capable of emitting an energy shield bubble [37] and advanced computer processing capabilities with built-in screens for data access in her wrists. [36] Kiera is cybernetically enhanced with Cybernetic visual implants [37] with functions that include biorhythm detection, heat detection [35] and vision, [38] night vision [39] and telescopic vision. [37] When Kiera's suit is in proximity, she gains additional functionality, including complete personnel information on targets [35] as well as vitals, [39] and forensic data processing and computing. [40] [41] Kiera also has an electronic Multi-tool: a hand-held device that features wireless frequency generation [36] (capable of matching current model wireless car door locks and other devices), a fingerprint duster that is electronically linked to her visual implants, [42] a magnetic field generator, [37] and a medical injector for various drugs from truth serum to stimulants. Kiera's neural implants also offer an onboard psychoanalyst during times where she lets her emotions get the best of her. [43] Kiera also has a fold-away gun [36] that travelled back with her which also houses a biometric scanner that causes the gun to lashout against anyone but its registered user. [39]
Her eyes have cybernetic implants as well which passively record everything she sees, this allows her to pause, rewind and apply various filters to see previously unseen details or use heat vision to locate hidden targets. [39]
Character | Portrayed by | Seasons | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | ||
Kiera Cameron | Rachel Nichols [3] [8] [9] [44] | Main | |||
Carlos Fonnegra | Victor Webster [3] [44] | Main | TBA | ||
Alec Sadler | Erik Knudsen [3] [44] | Main | TBA | ||
Matthew Kellog | Stephen Lobo [3] [44] | Main | TBA | ||
Travis Verta | Roger Cross [3] [44] | Main | TBA | ||
Sonya Valentine | Lexa Doig [3] [44] | Main [note 1] | TBA | ||
Edouard Kagame | Tony Amendola [3] [44] | Main | Recurring | TBA | |
Lucas Ingram | Omari Newton [3] [44] | Main | TBA | ||
Jasmine Garza | Luvia Petersen [3] [44] | Main | TBA | ||
Betty Robertson | Jennifer Spence [3] [44] | Main [note 2] | TBA | ||
Jack Dillon | Brian Markinson [3] [44] | Main | TBA |
Series creator Simon Barry explains how the show was picked up by Showcase:
I had developed the idea for US networks (where I had been selling for several years, but not getting picked up) and before I got a chance to take Continuum out and pitch it, I was hired by CBS to write a different pilot. In the middle of that job, my director friend Pat Williams took a meeting at Showcase Network in Canada and called me in a panic because he didn't have anything to pitch. I gave him the idea for Continuum to pass on to the executives there. They immediately saw the potential and hired me to write a pilot script. Because it was first set up with Showcase, there was much more of an appetite for Sci-Fi and genre bending concepts. Showcase really understood what the show could be from day one. [48]
The series premiered in the U.S. on January 14, 2013 on Syfy, [49] [50] with season 2 returning June 7, 2013, [51] and season 3 on April 4, 2014. [52]
The series premiered in the UK on September 27, 2012 on Syfy, [53] [54] with season 2 returning on May 23, 2013. [55]
The series premiered in Australia on SF on February 21, 2013, [56] and returned for season 2 on October 3, 2013. [57] Season 3 premiered on Syfy (Australia) (the replacement to the now defunct SF) on May 5, 2014. [58]
In Canada, the series debut in Canadian French on addikTV on November 6, 2013 [59] with season 2 airing on September 12, 2014. [60]
Reviewer Neil Genzlinger of The New York Times described the series as "slick" and highlighted its attention to detail. [61] Reviewer David Hinckley of the New York Daily News compared Continuum positively to Life on Mars, another series with a time travelling police officer, and gave the show three stars out of five. [62] According to Hinckley, the series has potential to do well, and if it "doesn't aim to soar, it executes the basics well".
Zeros 2 Heroes Media Inc. has created an alternate reality game website, Continuum The Game. [63]
The game site also includes a Comics section, featuring Continuum: The War Files, which is an eight part graphic novel that tells of the war going on in 2065, between the Corporations and Liber8. For now, the comic is available only in Canada. [64]
Rittenhouse released a trading card set based on the show in June 2014. [65]
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timestamp mismatch; October 29, 2013 suggested (
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timestamp mismatch; October 5, 2013 suggested (
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timestamp mismatch; October 29, 2013 suggested (
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timestamp mismatch; November 6, 2013 suggested (
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timestamp mismatch; December 15, 2013 suggested (
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timestamp mismatch; December 25, 2013 suggested (
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timestamp mismatch; December 21, 2013 suggested (
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timestamp mismatch; March 11, 2013 suggested (
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timestamp mismatch; March 9, 2013 suggested (
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