Glory Days (TV series)

For the 2010 comedy-drama television series, see Glory Daze (TV series).
For the 1990 television series, see Glory Days (1990 TV series).
Glory Days

Promotional photograph
Also known as ''Demontown''
Genre Drama
Created by Kevin Williamson
Written by Adam Armus
Andi Bushell
Elizabeth Craft and Sarah Fain
Nora Kay Foster
Jim Praytor
Kevin Williamson
Directed by Jean de Segonzac
Dennie Gordon
Perry Lang
Randall Zisk
Starring Eddie Cahill
Poppy Montgomery
Jay R. Ferguson
Emily VanCamp
Ben Crowley
Amy Stewart
Theresa Russell
Frances Fisher
Opening theme "Excess" by Tricky
Composer(s) Marco Beltrami
Tom Hiel
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 9 (plus 4 unaired)
Production
Executive producer(s) Billy Campbell
Bob Weinstein
Harvey Weinstein
Kevin Williamson
Producer(s) Gina Fortunato
Cinematography John S. Bartley
Editor(s) Allan Lee
John Showalter
Erik Whitmyre
Camera setup Single-camera
Running time 4548 minutes
Production company(s) Outerbanks Entertainment
Dimension Television
Distributor Buena Vista Television
Release
Original network The WB
Original release January 16 (2002-01-16) – March 25, 2002 (2002-03-25)

Glory Days (also titled Demontown) is an American horror/mystery-based television series broadcast from January to March 2002 on The WB Television Network. The series was created by Kevin Williamson, and stars Eddie Cahill and Poppy Montgomery.

Synopsis

The series involves novelist Mike Dolan (Cahill) returning to his hometown, where various odd and unpleasant occurrences are happening.[1]

Cast

Episode information

Episode Title Airdate
1 "Grim Ferrytale" January 16, 2002
2 "The Devil Made Me Do It" January 23, 2002
3 "Miss Fortune Teller" January 30, 2002
4 "Death, Lies and Videotape" February 6, 2002
5 "The Lost Girls" February 13, 2002
6 "Everybody Loves Rudy" February 20, 2002
7 "There Goes the Neighborhood" March 11, 2002
8 "No Guts, No Glory" March 18, 2002
9 "Clowning Glory" March 25, 2002

Production notes

The series was produced by Dimension Television and Outerbanks Entertainment, and filmed at The Bridge Studios in Vancouver, B.C., Canada.

Unaired pilot

Kevin Williamson originally conceived Glory Days as a drama in the same vein as his first series, Dawson's Creek, and a pilot was produced using this format. After picking up the series, The WB asked Williamson to retool the show and turn it into a mystery series instead. The characters and relationships remained the same but a whodunit spin was added.[2]

DVD releases

To date, Glory Days has not yet been released on DVD in the United States. It is, however, available on Region 2/PAL DVDs in Europe.

In most European countries (including the United Kingdom and Ireland) it is released under the DVD title Demontown with seven episodes edited into three feature-length parts: Demontown (episodes 1, 2 & 3), Demontown II (episodes 4 & 5), and Demontown III (episodes 6 & 7). Each part is available as three separate straight-to-DVD ‘movies’.[3]

In the Netherlands, the series is available as a 2-disc DVD set with all three parts included (Demontown and Demontown II on disc one, and Demontown III on disc two).

References

  1. Rosenberg, Howard (January 16, 2002). "WB Adds a Good Mystery With Glory Days". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 1, 2013.
  2. Rice, Lynette Rice (January 16, 2002). "Hope and Glory". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 1, 2013.
  3. "Demontown (DVD)". Amazon.com. Retrieved April 17, 2013.
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