Sunday, 30 September 2012

Preview:Once Upon a Time Season 2, Episode 1 Broken Free Online


As fairytale characters awaken from Queen Regina's curse, they are not transported back to their home; Prince Phillip and his traveling companion realize they will be facing a deadly foe.Download Video Once Upon a Time Resentment Episode On ABC Family Tv Online Tv Live Streaming Video. Online Watch Once Upon a Time Full Episode Watch Stream HD Video on Internet TV.From the inventive minds of Lost executive producers Adam Horowitz and Edward Kitsis comes a bold new imagining of the world, where fairy tales and the modern-day are about to collide. And they all lived happily ever after - or so everyone was led to believe. Emma Swan knows how to take care of herself. She's a 28-year-old bail bonds collector who's been on her own ever since she was abandoned as a baby. But when the son she gave up years ago finds her, everything starts to change. Henry is now 10 years old and in desperate need of Emma's help. He believes that Emma actually comes from an alternate world and is Snow White and Prince Charming's missing daughter. According to his book of fairytales, they sent her away to protect her from the Evil Queen's curse, which trapped the fairytale world forever, frozen in time, and brought them into our modern world.

Of course Emma doesn't believe a word, but when she brings Henry back to Storybrooke, she finds herself drawn to this unusual boy and his strange New England town. Concerned for Henry, she decides to stay for a while, but she soon suspects that Storybrooke is more than it seems.

It's a place where magic has been forgotten, but is still powerfully close... where fairytale characters are alive, even though they don't remember who they once were. Emma will have to accept her destiny and fight for everything that once was.

Let's hope you didn't have much else planned for this weekend, because there's so much excellent TV on tap it's hard to know where to begin.

Let's start with the winners' circle. You couldn't ask for better timing, or a more satisfying result, than Homeland's sweep of the top drama Emmy prizes last Sunday — exactly one week before Showtime's launch of what's shaping up to be a remarkably taut second season (Sunday, 10/9c).

Expectations couldn't be higher. (If you missed any or all of the first season, with the deservedly Emmy-winning lead performances by Claire Danes and Damian Lewis, Showtime is replaying all 12 episodes in a Saturday marathon starting at noon/11c.)

As the new season begins, you may once again be asking yourself: Has there ever been a scarier loose cannon than mentally unstable spy gamer Carrie Mathison (Danes)? Or a more unnerving secret saboteur than war hero-turned-congressman Nicholas Brody (Lewis)?

The suspense in Homeland goes beyond what will happen next in an international game of high-stakes cat-and-mole, set against a frighteningly timely backdrop of Middle East turmoil. From the edge of your seat, you wonder if they can possibly keep topping themselves.

Based on the first two episodes, the answer is a resounding and brilliant yes. The pressure keeps building, to exquisitely squirm-inducing levels of tension, for both of these deeply conflicted protagonists. The result: a master class in powerhouse performances, as Danes brings all of Carrie's bipolar anxieties and impulses to the surface with explosive intensity as she is returned to the field before she's mentally ready.

Meanwhile, Lewis keeps an impressively tight lid on Brody's inner torment, hidden from Beltway power brokers and his family, as he is reluctantly drawn back into terrorist Abu Nazir's web of violent retribution.

The pace is swift, with potentially game-changing twists introduced before we may be ready for them. If the writers (who must have nerves of steel) are willing to burn through story this quickly, all we can do is hang on and try not to get whiplash as we await the fallout.

With terrific support from Mandy Patinkin — holla! — as Carrie's wary handler and Morena Baccarin as Brody's worried wife, Homeland joins a revitalized Dexter as cable's most thrilling combo of white-knuckle intrigue.

When Emma Swan (Jennifer Morrison) is alone on her birthday she is visited by her son whom she gave up 10 years ago for adoption. While on their way to 'Stroybrooke' the boy tries to convince her that all the residents of the town are fairytale characters and they are not aware of it. This is the core and modern day setting of the story.

The second half of the story runs in flashbacks this the part which you can assume to the be the authentic setting of show white.

So, basically there are two settings which are in different parts of time.

The storyline is good, Jared Gilmore shows some really good acting for his age, other actors have also done a nice job. the cinematography is decent (haven't seen any extraordinary shots or camera angles till now) the sound effects are really great.

If you are looking something as exciting, complex and hardcore as Lost you will be disappointed, come on it's a fairytale but it certainly is enchanting, warm and gripping.