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'Gilmore Girls' Is Coming Back for a Limited Run on Netflix
By Crissy Milazzo 10/20/2015
If your 'Netflix n chill' sessions are lacking in romantic comedy spark, you're in for a treat. The juggernaut of all streaming, Netflix themselves, is bringing back Gilmore Girls, with creator Amy Sherman-Palladino. It sounds like they plan to have all of the original cast members on board, but there's no official word yet. It is official, though, that Lauren Graham, Alexis Bledel, Kelly Bishop, and Scott Patterson are “expected back for the continuation."
According to TV Line, it will be done as four 90-minute episodes or “mini movies.” Word has it that this will give Sherman-Palladino the opportunity to end the series the way she wanted, since she left the show before its seventh season over a contract dispute. There's no word on plot yet, so there are a lot of questions to go over. The cult favorite podcast Gilmore Guys is recording a special emergency episode tonight, so hopefully they'll have plenty of wacky-yet-heartwarming ideas for possible future plotlines.
Link: complex.com/pop-culture/2015/10/gilmore-girls-is-coming-back-limited-run-netflix
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Original article:
Gilmore Girls Limited-Series Revival Set at Netflix — This Is Not a Drill
By Michael Ausiello / October 19 2015, 2:30 PM PDT
THIS JUST IN: We’re getting those final four words!
Sources confirm that Netflix has closed a deal with Warner Bros. for a limited-series revival of Gilmore Girls penned by series creator Amy Sherman-Palladino and exec producer Daniel Palladino.
Although negotiations with the cast are only now beginning, I’m told all of the major players — most notably Lauren Graham, Alexis Bledel, Kelly Bishop and Scott Patterson — are expected back for the continuation. Additionally, per multiple insiders, the revival will consist of four 90-minute episodes/mini-movies.
Reps for Warner Bros. and Netflix declined to comment for this story.
And I repeat: This is not a drill.
The deal allows Sherman-Palladino — who left the original series prior to the final season amid a contract dispute with Warner Bros. — to conclude Gilmore Girls as she always intended, right through to those elusive final four words.
AS-P addressed the possibility of a revival over the summer when she reunited with the show’s cast at the ATX TV Festival. “It would have to be the right everything — the right format, the right timing,” she said. “If it ever happened, I promise we’ll do it correctly.”
When I interviewed AS-P in 2009 at Entertainment Weekly, she conceded that the events of the show’s final seventh season didn’t match up with the end game she envisioned for Lorelai, Rory & Co. “I haven’t [actually] seen the last season,” she said at the time, “but I heard about it from other people.”
Even back then, AS-P remained hopeful that she would get to conclude the Gilmore story on her terms, via a limited series or movie. “The beauty of Gilmore, and the beauty of family-relationship shows, is you never really run out of story,” she said. “You’re going to battle your family until you’re all in the ground. Those things never resolve, doesn’t matter how much therapy you get. Ten years later, there’s still going to be [material] there to mine and to delve into.”
Gilmore Girls premiered on the now-defunct WB network in 2000, before transferring to spinoff net The CW in 2006 for its final season.
Did I mention that this isn’t a drill?
Gilmore Girls Limited-Series Revival Set at Netflix — This Is Not a Drill