Pretender
fans hoping Jarod (Michael T. Weiss) and Miss Parker (Andrea
Parker) will stop pretending they don't want each other and
get it on in TNT's reunion telepic, The Pretender 2001
(premiering Monday, 8 pm ET/PT), are bound to be frustrated.
Although the enemies do finally share a liplock — it won't take
place until the follow-up film airs later this year.
"I think it's only natural that
[viewers] want the hero and the villain/heroine to get
together," Parker tells TV Guide Online, hinting that the
groundwork for the long-awaited smooch will be laid in Monday
night's two-hour flick. "The theme for Miss Parker is
loyalty, or lack there of. Her relationship with her father, her
relationship with The Centre, her relationship with Jarod — all
of those relationships are intensely addressed and, in a sense,
transitioned and resolved."
Well, considering it's a small miracle
that The Pretender is alive at all, fans are not likely to
gripe about having to wait a little longer for their favorite
non-couple to hook up. Last season, NBC unexpectedly cancelled the
four-year-old series without giving writers a chance to script a
fitting farewell. Notes Parker: "They were really upset about
having to leave their characters on the subway tracks."
The show's passionate followers were
outraged, and quickly engineered an Internet campaign to save the
program. TNT, clearly feeling their pain (and eyeing a potentially
lucrative franchise), acquired rights to air two — and possibly
more — Pretender TV movies.
"It's the loyalty of the fans who
have given us our success, no doubt," Parker insists
matter-of-factly, adding that the films will focus more on the
show's ongoing mythology as opposed to Jarod's numerous
impersonations. "We're actually going to answer some
questions that we have inspired over the last few seasons. And
even more so in the second film."
What's more, the new Pretender
will showcase more elaborate effects and look more like a feature
film than a TV series. "It's a much bigger, more dynamic feel
to it," Parker explains. "It's actually been shot in
letterbox. Whether or not it will be able to air that way, I don't
know. But the format and the film that we're using to shoot it...
is definitely feature-film-worthy. It's visually going to be a
really beautiful experience."
The entire cast of the original series
returned for the two movies, which were shot back-to-back in
Canada late last year. And although there are no concrete plans to
explore Jarod and Miss Parker's relationship beyond the two
upcoming installments, Parker advises diehards to stay close to
their computers. "The door is left open [for more
movies]," she says, "but that, again, will be left up to
the fans." — Michael Ausiello
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