Friday, June 8, 2012

Saving hope

  • Medical procedurals usually deal with the hospital staff, the patients and their friends, enemies and relatives. The one group that has always been left out is the dead and dying -- until now.
  • (Zap2it.com)
  • The latest Canadian import -- along the lines of Rookie Blue and Flashpoint -- brings yet another twist to the hospital drama.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • UNDATED (NBC) -- A car accident leaves Chief Surgeon Charlie Harris in a coma just days before his wedding to fellow surgeon Alex Reed in the new NBC Thursday night drama Saving Hope.
  • (WHDH.com)
  • I decided that the answer is yes, but it's a close call. "Saving Hope" shares the penny-pinching production values and claustrophobic direction that characterizes other recent Canadian shows like "Rookie Blue" and "Flashpoint.
  • (New York Times)
  • The new television series Saving Hope takes a new interpretation on the typical medical drama by intertwining the realms of life and death.
  • (ETOnline.com)
  • Well, I love TV, and I love a good script. I had been given a bunch of different choices, and I kept coming back to this one because of the heart that's in it and because of the love story.
  • (Examiner)
  • I recently participated in a press conference with Erica Durance for a brief introduction and overview into NBC's newly-announced medical drama Saving Hope. As the first scenes of the NBC series unfold, Durance's character, Dr.
  • (Suite101.com)
  • Tornotos Hope-Zion Hospital is haunted, but not by a vengeful spirit. Ordinary-looking ghosts: Forget Jacob Marley or Casper. There are no chains, paleness or transparency to separate these spirits from the living.
  • (YAHOO!)
  • Tonight is the series premiere of Saving Hope, a one-hour original drama that follows the events at Hope-Zion Hospital. When Chief of Surgery Charlie Harris falls into a coma, the hospital is left in chaos and it is up to a new star surgeon to save him.
  • (Canton Repository)

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