Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA con man lives a double life: he is married to two different women in two different Texas towns.A con man lives a double life: he is married to two different women in two different Texas towns.A con man lives a double life: he is married to two different women in two different Texas towns.
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If Lone Star can avoid becoming repetitive and soapy then it might be on to something good. Like The Riches last year it has the simple idea of a con man, Robert Allen (Played with charm to the fore by James Wolk), who discovers life is richer without crime when offered an executive job in a Texas mega-oil industry.
Not only is he a con man, his father is too, then to sweeten the plot there's there's the two women in Drew's life.
All in all, this was pretty good stuff: but the question is, is there is enough here to make you wonder how it's going to work out? I think so - and more than that I want to see how it's going to work out - can he be the executive or will he opt for the simple life in Midland, r will his father tire of it all, and there's bound to be other spanners in the works - it's good stuff, folks.
Anyways, we did really enjoy the first episode, but the viewing figures of 4.1 million don't bode well. It is a lot more interesting than just junk TV and if you like drama I'd definitely say it's worth catching an episode....
Not only is he a con man, his father is too, then to sweeten the plot there's there's the two women in Drew's life.
All in all, this was pretty good stuff: but the question is, is there is enough here to make you wonder how it's going to work out? I think so - and more than that I want to see how it's going to work out - can he be the executive or will he opt for the simple life in Midland, r will his father tire of it all, and there's bound to be other spanners in the works - it's good stuff, folks.
Anyways, we did really enjoy the first episode, but the viewing figures of 4.1 million don't bode well. It is a lot more interesting than just junk TV and if you like drama I'd definitely say it's worth catching an episode....
I don't know how this even got on air. "Lone Star" is a big, dumb mess that in my opinion failed miserably. The acting is horribly bad, the script is dumb and does nothing to keep my interest, and the plot is overdone and uninteresting. Chalk up another failed fall show.
James Wolk plays a Texas con man who leads a double life - meaning he has one wife and one girlfriend, and he's two people. I forgot the names and confused the characters for most of the episode so pardon me for not giving you the whole scoop.
Wolk is awful, he seems to think that a wink and a charm will stand for anything. His character is the absolutely typical con man; suave, dry, careless, smart. He's the boring stereotype. The women who play his wife/girlfriend are just as bad. Even Jon Voight shows his declining quality as an actor. David Keith seems to be the only one who cares in this series, he makes do with what he has.
Don't expect to get anything out of "Lone Star".
James Wolk plays a Texas con man who leads a double life - meaning he has one wife and one girlfriend, and he's two people. I forgot the names and confused the characters for most of the episode so pardon me for not giving you the whole scoop.
Wolk is awful, he seems to think that a wink and a charm will stand for anything. His character is the absolutely typical con man; suave, dry, careless, smart. He's the boring stereotype. The women who play his wife/girlfriend are just as bad. Even Jon Voight shows his declining quality as an actor. David Keith seems to be the only one who cares in this series, he makes do with what he has.
Don't expect to get anything out of "Lone Star".
This show is about a low-grade narcissistic sociopath with obvious daddy issues. The premise is that this man is leading multiple lives and how he is "juggling" them, but he sounds like a whiny child always wanting more and will do anything to get his own way.
When it would take 3 people's worth of hands to count the number of good shows Fox cancels, all I can think is that the Fox exec's thought that this was a relatable character.
The only extra star for this show is that as abhorrent as his character is, the main character plays it well.
Hopefully this will be moved off onto the garbage pile of much better shows and they can do something worthwhile with the air time, like re-runs of Happy Days or blissful static.
When it would take 3 people's worth of hands to count the number of good shows Fox cancels, all I can think is that the Fox exec's thought that this was a relatable character.
The only extra star for this show is that as abhorrent as his character is, the main character plays it well.
Hopefully this will be moved off onto the garbage pile of much better shows and they can do something worthwhile with the air time, like re-runs of Happy Days or blissful static.
Bob Allen (James Wolk) is a con man who learned from his father John Allen (David Keith). He is married to Cat Thatcher (Adrianne Palicki) and gaining the trust of her oil tycoon father Clint Thatcher (Jon Voight). He is starting to have doubts. He has to walk away from his girlfriend Lindsay Holloway (Eloise Mumford) as his victim closes in on him.
I remember this show. I may have seen the first episode or even both before it got canceled after only two episodes. This Fox show gained some critical support, but no public support. The audience is simply not there. Why? I can see critics liking this for being different. They watch so much TV that sometimes they appreciate a different type of show. For me, I could not root for Bob Allen. I don't like his personality or his thinking. I don't see a way out for him. Imagine ten years from now. I don't see it happening. It's most likely that his father steal a bunch of money. Father and son have a fight. The son would probably end up in prison for polygamy. I simply don't understand his thinking or lack of thinking.
I remember this show. I may have seen the first episode or even both before it got canceled after only two episodes. This Fox show gained some critical support, but no public support. The audience is simply not there. Why? I can see critics liking this for being different. They watch so much TV that sometimes they appreciate a different type of show. For me, I could not root for Bob Allen. I don't like his personality or his thinking. I don't see a way out for him. Imagine ten years from now. I don't see it happening. It's most likely that his father steal a bunch of money. Father and son have a fight. The son would probably end up in prison for polygamy. I simply don't understand his thinking or lack of thinking.
This show made me a little ticked off at first, because it was going to make me like a guy who was a con artist with two wives... well, I did! I loved the main character, a man struggling to get away from the insane values his father taught him. I was just beginning to really look forward to watching this show when it was taken off the air. I wish the network had given the show more than 2 episodes to catch on, though I know statistics show that ratings don't usually grow over time. I think in this case, the show could have caught on and been something. The premise was definitely different - the actors were likable and believable, and something about it just left me awaiting the next scene at all times. It's too bad the network took all available shows off their site, because those of us who liked it would've liked to have seen what had been filmed.
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- WissenswertesSix episodes were produced. Only two aired before the show was cancelled.
- VerbindungenReferenced in Starting Point: Folge vom 14. Dezember 2012 (2012)
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