In the dark6/11/2023 It felt like this meta reflection of this transition for Murphy too. There were sunsets the grass was growing. But we filmed this cabin episode in one cabin on this ranch, and it was finally spring. The whole show, over four seasons, takes place in winter. When we filmed the finale, it had just started to turn into spring. That final episode - there so many ways that the show, as we were filming, became meta to the ending of Murphy's journey. What was it like tapping into that side of Murphy, and what were the technical aspects of getting that right? The finale is almost set up like a "cabin in the woods" horror movie. That was cool that I actually got to operate the camera. Not only is that her physical state, her emotional - she's completely lost. I loved that they shot a lot of the ending in what would be Murphy's point of view, which is that very blurred, disorienting state. It was really emotional, the way that our directors shot all those scenes. I don't know how fans would've done if we did another season without him.īut we did a pretty beautiful job of expressing that devastation on camera. I feel like because the show ends an episode later, it's okay. At the end, it's ultimately the love of her life. Jess eventually got ripped away from her. But even since the beginning, the writers have made such brilliant choices of testing Murphy and her strength and pulling her apart and back together again with the people most important to her. I knew that was going to be devastating for everybody. I mostly was worried about everyone else who was going to watch it. How did you react to Max's death when you first read the script, and what was it like filming those intense scenes with Casey? Ultimately, what I'm seeing fans respond to so much is them finally admitting how much they love each other and have fought it for so long and deserve to be in love and be together. Obviously, we're not comparing ourselves to "Marriage Story," in a way, that same beginning, middle, and end of a very tumultuous and toxic at times relationship. Our writers did such an incredible job of giving their story a beginning and middle and end and breaking down their whole relationship in that one episode - talking about everything and screaming at each other, and then crying together and then holding each other. Luckily, because we've worked together for so long, we're comfortable together and push each other so much. It was also challenging because it was just Casey and I in a motel room for six days to shoot all of that. This will be the ending they use in September, and Kingsbury promises that " fans will be happy with our ending.I think the episode you're talking about specifically is Episode 9, with Max and Murphy in the motel room - the engagement. Just in case their season finale turned out to be their series finale, they filmed an alternate ending that avoided cliffhangers. She revealed that, even though the series hadn't been canceled when they shot the finale, they also hadn't been renewed. TVLine had the opportunity to sit down with In the Dark creator Corinne Kingsbury to discuss the impending series finale. Related: Superman & Lois Season 2 Repeats The Worst The CW Mistake In the Dark was also canceled ahead of the season 4 finale, which is set to air on September 5, 2022. After an unusually long waiting period, a huge swath of shows got the ax, including three shows from their widely popular Arrowverse franchise - Batwoman, Naomi, and DC's Legends of Tomorrow - and spin-off or reboot series like Dynasty, Charmed, Legacies, and Roswell, New Mexico. It was rumored that the network was going to be sold after its parent companies WarnerMedia and ViacomCBS claimed it had never made a profit since its inception in the mid-2000s, and during that period none of the series that were on the bubble got renewal announcements. The CW network has had a tumultuous beginning of the year.
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