In the age of Peak TV, what does it mean to be a fall series anymore? Are they the best of the best? Not necessarily. But traditions die hard and fall still feels important. Hereâs a look at some of the new shows youâll be tuning into this fall, including network reboots and spin-offs like âStar Trek: Discoveryâ and âYoung Sheldon,â cable originals such as âThe Deuceâ and âWhite Famousâ and auteur-driven streaming series like Steven Soderberghâs âGodlessâ and Spike Leeâs âSheâs Gotta Have It.â Another theme of the season? Military shows like âThe Brave,â âValorâ and more.
These are the new faces to watch out for on TV this fall
While a new season always offers its usual crop of familiar faces in new places such as David Boreanaz in âSEAL Teamâ and Leah Remini reuniting with âKing of Queensâ costar Kevin James on âKevin Can Wait,â hereâs a rundown of some new faces whose profiles stand to raise in the new fall season.
Sarah Gadon
Where you can see her: As Irish immigrant Grace Marks in âAlias Graceâ (Nov. 3), a miniseries written by indie favorite Sarah Polley that adapts Margaret Atwoodâs 1996 historical fiction novel in a co-production of Netflix and Canadaâs CBC.
Where you may have seen her: In addition to 2014âs âDracula Untold,â Gadon appeared opposite James Franco in the Hulu adaptation of Stephen Kingâs â11.22.63.â
Why she matters: The 19th century story of Grace Marks holds a similar place in the Canadian imagination as Lizzy Bordenâs does in the U.S., and Atwood has found renewed topicality of late in the wake of Huluâs celebrated adaptation of her novel, âThe Handmaidâs Tale.â
Edie Falco lays down the law in âLaw & Order True Crime: The Menendez Murdersâ
A few years shy of the crimeâs 30th anniversary, the case has moved to the front-line of Falcoâs character gallery as the acclaimed actress â who scored back-to-back triumphs with her Emmy-winning roles on âThe Sopranosâ and âNurse Jackieâ â stars in NBCâs âLaw & Order True Crime: The Menendez Murders,â premiering Sept. 26.
âThe only thing that comes to mind is gratitude,â she says. âI feel tremendously blessed that I was presented with these two things that kept me busy for 10 years each. It kept me working and living in New York, which is what makes me happiest.â
— Edie Falco
âDynastyâ touted fashion, fights and family -- so donât mess with a good thing in the reboot
Nearly three decades after it went off the air, âDynastyâ is making a television comeback on the youth-skewing network. A modern telling of the long-running series will air Wednesdays at 9 p.m. beginning Oct. 11.
We watched the original pilot with Showrunner Sallie Patrick, who grew up watching the original show with her family, to get her doâs and donâts of rebooting âDynasty.â (Showrunners of fellow 2017 returnees like âWill & Graceâ and âS.W.A.T.,â among others, may want to take heed.)
Do play up the fashion
Ruffles, fur, sparkle, shoulder pads, gold lamĂŠ â the fashion on âDynastyâ was as excessive and outsized as the number of zeroes in the Carrington family bank account.
Donât mess with a good thing.
Bobby Moynihan and âMe, Myself and Iâ have an earnestness that stands out from most TV comedies
My whole life completely changed in a matter of weeks.
— Bobby Moynihan
Itâs the stuff of reaching a new place in his life, canine trespassers and all, and itâs that sense of watching big moments unfold that makes Bobby Moynihan uniquely qualified for âMe, Myself & I.â Created by Dan Kopelman (âMalcolm in the Middleâ), the series explores one manâs life â that of would-be inventor Alex Riley â at age 14, 40 and 65 and plays with the pivotal decisions and coincidences that shape what follows.
Played as a teenager by Jack Dylan Grazer and a wealthy recent retiree by TV veteran John Larroquette, Moynihan â who turned 40 this year â portrays Alex at mid-life: a father whose life has run aground amid a sudden divorce and work struggles. Though Moynihanâs life is considerably more in order, he still felt an immediate kinship to the character.
âThereâs definitely this feeling of âIâm just glad weâre here, we made it, and everyoneâs happy and healthy. This is it, this is a whole new thing now.â Thatâs definitely where Alex is on the show.â
âValor,â âSEAL Teamâ and other militaristic shows offer viewers odd TV-as-comfort-food choices
In unpredictable times, the familiar is a cozy place to be ⌠even if it happens to be in a war zone.
— Lorraine Ali
Navy SEALs, elite air squadrons and camo-clad foot soldiers combat a variety of enemies in several new military-themed series that include NBCâs âThe Brave,â NatGeoâs âThe Long Road Home,â the CWâs âValorâ and CBSâ âSEAL Team.â
The invasion of military programming stands out among the other offerings of TV-as-comfort-food that arrive this season.
On one level or another, all the shows question the U.S. governmentâs competence and motives in running military operations. Sometimes Uncle Samâs intentions can be just as shady and dangerous as those of the enemy.
How HBOâs âThe Deuceâ brings the female perspective to 1970s porn and prostitution
Before Maggie Gyllenhaal agreed to play Candy, a Times Square prostitute in the 1970s-set HBO series âThe Deuce,â she had one condition: She needed to be a producer on the series too.
While Gyllenhaal was excited to work with co-creators David Simon and George Pelecanos, sheâd only seen scripts for three of the eight episodes and felt she had to have some formalized creative input â particularly given the provocative subject matter and inherent potential for exploitation.
Her agents, managers and friends told her it would never happen. But HBO said yes.
I knew that my body would be required, and I wanted to make sure that they also wanted my mind. And they did.
— Maggie Gyllenhaal
Ken Burns and Lynn Novick discuss the âvery organic, fluid processâ of making the 18-hour âVietnam Warâ
Ken Burnsâ latest labor of love with longtime collaborator Lynn Novick manages the impossible: Clocking in at 18 hours starting Sept. 17, âThe Vietnam Warâ untangles one of the most complicated narratives in American history.
Watching the first few episodes, I found myself wishing the miniseries had come out at a less politically-divisive time. Yet, as the episodes continued, I found it more resonant now than ever. Was that a feeling you experienced at all?
Burns: The miniseries has been more than 10 years in the making, and all of those things that resonated with this moment were resonant in 2006, only more so now. Weâre not putting arrows towards this. In fact, at one configuration before we went to 10 episodes, we were going to be out in the fall of â16 and we really didnât want to be. We realized we donât want to be interrupted by scandals and âAccess Hollywoodâ tapes and things like that. Weâre happy to be drafting in the ârelative quietâ of the Trump administration.
All the new television shows to check out this fall
As they say of Southern California, television seems to have become a place without seasons. Autumn used to bring in the TV harvest; now, new fruit drops on-screen the year âround. What does it mean to be a fall series anymore? Are they the best of the best? Not necessarily! (Indeed, networks seem to hold some better ones back for when their first line of new offerings is shot down.)
But traditions die hard. Fall, in its profusion, still feels important. Hereâs a list of some of whatâs coming, whether to ripen into maturity or to rot on the ground. (As always times and dates subject to change.)
âYoung Sheldonâ star Iain Armitage works hard, but he plays hard, too
Despite his high-profile extracurricular activities, âYoung Sheldonâsâ Iain Armitage says he is a normal kid â though he has willingly been on a sugar detox for months. He notes that he has a pact with his parents, actor Euan Morton (Broadwayâs âTabooâ) and theater producer Lee Armitage, about this whole acting thing.
As long as I stay the kind of boy that I am and keep my end of the bargain, I can do it. We do have talks sometimes. I have a great mother, sheâs good at reminding me how to be a good person.
— Iain Armitage
Lee, who was present for the interview and is with Iain when heâs on set, says the idea of her son headlining a TV series was an overwhelming thought initially.
âThat amount of time is so much of his life,â she says. âBut he was so excited about it. So we made a pact that as long as he likes doing it â and as long as we see itâs not negatively affecting him â he can do it. If it doesnât work for our family, weâll talk.â
Overrated/Underrated: Fall TVâs ongoing revivals and âBaroness Von Sketch Showâ
Series revivals: Letâs see what happens when âWill & Graceâ reemerges as if sealed in amber for 11 years once its second life begins on Sept. 28, followed by âRoseanneâ in 2018. But with the genie out of the bottle this long, âconversationsâ are also happening to resuscitate âFrasierâ and âThe Office,â the latter of which ended way back in 2013. For all the clean-burning fuel generated by nostalgia, isnât pulling up a streaming service and rewatching the originals a purer form of comfort food? Nobody gets old, we all know how it ends and unlike, say, âThe X-Filesâ (and so many others), the show never gets worse.