Created by Snowpiercer developer Josh Friedman, the Fox series picked up where Terminator 2: Judgment Day left off—as, once upon a time, the third Terminator film did, though we were asked to forget all ensuing action when 2019's Terminator: Dark Fate (also written by Friedman) came out.
Anyway, starring Lena Headey as the waitress turned warrior and mother of resistance leader John Connor, supposedly 15 and played pretty convincingly by 20-year-old Thomas Dekker, and Summer Glau as the Terminator who protected John in the future (none of it ever makes any sense unless you're watching it), the sci-fi drama was Fox's highest-rated new scripted series in 2007-08 and fans were all in, but it didn't get renewed for a third season.
All the people who didn't go see Dark Fate would have probably preferred another three or four years of The Sarah Connor Chronicles instead.
Lest we forget that HBO's mindf--k of a drama about humans and robots who tend to have more humanity than they do was first a 1973 B-movie written and directed by Michael Crichton, who gets the "Based on a story by" credit in Lisa Joy and Jonathan Nolan's creation. It's been nominated for 43 Emmys, but has only won in technical categories so far.
The third season, which transplanted the action to Los Angeles, just concluded on May 3, 2020, and HBO has renewed it for a fourth season.
This snappy adaptation of the Mel Gibson-Danny Glover buddy cop franchise starring Clayne Crawford as loose cannon Martin Riggs and Damon Wayans as solid family man Roger Murtaugh lasted three seasons.
The Fox show managed to get through Riggs getting killed off because Crawford was fired (he later acknowledged losing his temper and becoming belligerent on set). They replaced him with a new talkative cop, played by Seann William Scott. But they couldn't overcome Wayans deciding to leave the show at the end of season three, citing health reasons, saying in an interview he was "a 58-year-old diabetic and I'm working 16-hour days...I'm done. Like Murtaugh said, I'm too old for this."
Originally a 1965 book, then the 1967 film classic starring Sidney Poitier and Rod Steiger about a racially charged murder investigation in the Deep South, it became a "loosely inspired by" NBC procedural drama in 1988 starring All in the Family icon Carroll O'Connor as Police Chief Gillespie and Howard Rollins as Virgil Tibbs. It ran for eight seasons, though O'Conner and Rollins left after six.
The movie won five Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Actor for Steiger, and O'Connor won an Emmy in 1989.
May any sitcom have a level of success that loosely resembles the success of this classic CBS comedy created by Larry Gelbart and Gene Reynolds, which followed the also-classic 1970 Robert Altman film (based on a 1968 novel) about the Mobile Army Surgical Hospital unit stationed in Uijeongbu, South Korea, during the Korean War.
The show ran for 11 seasons starting in 1972, winning 14 Emmys, including one for Outstanding Comedy Series, two for Lead Actor for Alan Alda, who also won one for writing and another for directing; two for Supporting Actress for Loretta Switt; and a Supporting Actor win for Harry Morgan.
What? Cartoons are shows, too. And this one, which first aired on ABC before being produced in syndication, lasted for seven seasons and so far is the best offshoot of the 1984 original written by Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis and starring the two of them, Bill Murray and Ernie Hudson.
Tim Burton, the director of the 1988 film himself, developed and executive-produced this animated adaptation for TV, and Danny Elfman rearranged his score for the film to suit the show. Beetlejuice was basically already a walking cartoon, so it totally worked.
A perfectly good movie about the religion of high school football in small-town Texas starring Billy Bob Thornton was adapted by Peter Berg, who directed the film, into one of the all-time great, woefully under-watched TV dramas. But at least Kyle Chandler won an Emmy, as did showrunner Jason Katims for writing.
A show featuring the multigenerational Buckman family, only with different actors (including Leonardo DiCaprio in the Joaquin Phoenix role of Gary) didn't work when attempted in 1990, coming right on the heels of the Ron Howard-directed movie that came out in 1989, even though Howard was listed as an executive producer.
But when the multigenerational Braverman family showed up in 2010, created by Jason Katims (he strikes again!) and with Howard and his Imagine Entertainment partner Brian Grazer as executive producers, they had a grab-at-your-dangling-heartstrings-and-yank beloved drama on their hands.
Joss Whedon wrote a movie that was almost so bad it was good, but then created a TV series that was so good it hurts to think about it sometimes.
The plots have changed to protect the innocent, but Noah Hawley's FX series capably replicates the absurdity, dark humor, violence, accents, beautifully bleak landscapes and the presence of at least a few honest-to-goodness people of upright character amid the morally bankrupt types to be found in Joel and Ethan Coen's 1996 Oscar winner and wraps it all up in a twisted new package. The premiere of season four has been delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but winter is coming.