Pretty Little Liars 4 ever
sexta-feira, 2 de setembro de 2011
sábado, 23 de julho de 2011
sexta-feira, 15 de julho de 2011
Maya return
quarta-feira, 13 de julho de 2011
Fifth episode of Pretty Little Liars
quarta-feira, 6 de julho de 2011
4 episodie
sábado, 2 de julho de 2011
www.prettylittleliarsbrasil.com/?cat-19 www.filmesfree.tv/pretty-little-liars.html
bjs
quarta-feira, 29 de junho de 2011
segunda-feira, 27 de junho de 2011
Enjoy...
quinta-feira, 23 de junho de 2011
Pretty Little Liars is an American mystery teen drama television series created by Marlene King. Based on the popular series of novels written by Sara Shepard, the show premiered on June 8, 2010 on ABC Family.[1] The series follows the lives of Aria Montgomery (Lucy Hale), Spencer Hastings (Troian Bellisario), Hanna Marin(Ashley Benson) and Emily Fields (Shay Mitchell), four girls whose clique falls apart after the disappearance of their queen bee, Alison DiLaurentis (Sasha Pieterse). One year later, they begin receiving messages from a mysterious figure using the name "A" who threatens to expose their secrets. At first they think it's Alison herself, but after she is found dead, the girls realize that someone else knows their secrets, — including long-hidden ones they thought only Alison knew.[2]
After an initial order of 10 episodes, on June 28, 2010, ABC Family ordered an additional 12 episodes for season one.[3] These episodes began airing on January 3 and ended on March 21, 2011.[4] The ratings success of the first 10 episodes prompted the book series to be extended beyond the initial eight novels.[5] On January 10, 2011 ABC Family renewed the series for a second season.[6] The second season premiered on June 14, 2011, and after an initial order of 24 episodes, an additional was added as a part of ABC Family's 13 Nights of Halloween.[7]
Series overview
The series follows the lives of four teenage girls -- Aria Montgomery, Emily Fields, Hanna Marin, and Spencer Hastings -- whose clique falls apart after the disappearance of their leader, Alison DiLaurentis. One year later, after the discovery of Ali's body, they begin receiving text messages from an anonymous source , "A", who threatens to expose their secrets -- including long-hidden ones they thought only their close friend Alison knew.
Cast and characters
- Troian Bellisario portrays Spencer Hastings, whose newly engaged and condescending sister, Melissa, moves into the guest house which Spencer had been fixing up for herself. Spencer is portrayed as an overachiever from a wealthy family. She has also stolen her sister's boyfriends on various occasions, including Ian Thomas and her ex fiancee Wren Kim.
- Ashley Benson portrays Hanna Marin, who has taken Alison's place as the most popular girl at Rosewood after Alison's disappearance. Previously chubby, Hanna became slimmer after Alison's disappearance, and now shoplifts for attention from her absent father. As the series progresses, she becomes less interested in being popular and eventually reunites with her old friends. She enters a couple romances, with Sean, a complicated relationship with Caleb, the rebel of the school, and Lucas the school nerd who develops strong feelings for Hanna.
- Lucy Hale portrays Aria Montgomery, who moves back to Rosewood with her mother, Ella, father, Byron, and younger brother, Mike after a year's absence in Iceland. She knows that her father is having an affair, but keeps it from her mother and brother. She becomes romantically involved with the new Rosewood English teacher, Ezra Fitz. As of the final episode of season 1, their relationship is strained.
- Shay Mitchell portrays Emily Fields, a competitive swimmer who soon befriends Maya St. Germain, the new resident of Alison's former home. After a lot of confusion, Emily comes to the realization that she is a lesbian. She is currently facing moving to Texas to live with her father.
- Sasha Pieterse portrays Alison DiLaurentis, the former leader of Rosewood's premiere clique. Ruling the group with an iron fist, the vicious but charismatic Alison had gone missing during a slumber party; 1 year later, her disappearance is still unsolved, but her body was found.
Production
Originally developed as a television series by book packaging company Alloy Entertainment, the idea was described as "Desperate Housewives for teens."[8] Alloy met with author Shepard, and gave her the property to develop into a book series.[8] With Alloy and Warner Horizon interested in producing a Pretty Little Liars television series for years, it was first planned for The WB in 2005 with a different writer until the network shutdown in early 2006.[9] The first novel was published by HarperTeen in October 2006.[10] In June 2008, Alloy noted that it was developing a Pretty Little Liarstelevision pilot for ABC Family,[8] with the novels adapted for television.[9]
Casting
ABC Family began casting for a Pretty Little Liars television pilot in October 2009.[9] Lucy Hale was cast as Aria Montgomery in the project,[9] followed by Troian Bellisario and Ian Harding (as Spencer Hastings and Ezra Fitz, respectively) in November 2009.[11] In December 2009 The Futon Critic confirmed the casting of Ashley Benson as Hanna Marin and Shay Mitchell as Emily Fields, as well as the addition of Laura Leighton as Ashley Marin, Alexis Denisof as Byron Montgomery, and Bianca Lawson as Maya.[12][13] The Hollywood Reporter also noted that Torrey DeVitto and Sasha Pieterse landed recurring roles in the pilot.[13] The Alloy website later confirmed that Pieterse would be playing Alison DiLaurentis and DeVitto would be Melissa Hastings, also mentioning the casting of Janel Parrish as Mona Vanderwaal.[14] On January 27, 2010, ABC Family picked up the series for 10 episodes, set to premiere in June 2010.[2] In April 2010, the role of Aria's father Byron was recast with Chad Lowe,[15] and Holly Marie Combs was cast as Aria's mother Ella.[16]
On January 13, 2011 Tilky Jones was cast playing the role as Logan Reed,[17] another mysterious guy that will appear in the season finale where he apparently knows about Allison. His presence is said to shock, devastate and bewilder the girls. On April 8, 2011 Annabeth Gish was cast for the role of Anne Sullivan, a mysterious therapist who tries to find out the characters' secrets.[18] On May 23 2011, Andrea Parkersigned up to appear as Jessica DiLaurentis, Alison's mother, who returns to Rosewood to help out with a fashion show being held in Alison's honour.[19]
Promotion
Pretty Little Liars was called one of the most anticipated new shows of summer 2010 thanks to heavy promotion by ABC Family, including "spicy promos and hot posters."[20] ABC Family encouraged fans to host a "Pretty Little Premiere Party" for the show by sending the first respondents a fan kit,[21] and selected applicants to become part of an interactive "Secret Keeper Game" played with iPhones provided by the network.[22] The show's official Facebook and Twitter accounts also promoted special fan features, including a "Pretty Little Lie Detector.[23] Los Angeles clothier Kitson showcased the show in their shop window.[24]
A tie-in edition of the 2006 first novel in the Pretty Little Liars series was released on the date of the show's premiere,[25] as was the final book of the original book series, "Wanted".[26] Wanted later decidedly became the 8th book of the series, as Shepard later confirmed she would extend the series.
Music
The theme song for Pretty Little Liars is "Secret" by The Pierces, which was suggested by one of the show's stars, Ashley Benson.[27] The pilot episode made use of music from artists such as The Fray, Ben's Brother, MoZella, and Colbie Caillat.[28] It has also used music from Selena Gomez & The Scene and Mcfly. Music from Katie Herzig can be heard multiple times throughout the show. A few songs being "Hey Na Na" and "Where the Road Meets the Sun". Madi Diaz has been heard on the show with her song "Heavy Heart", as well as Joy Williams with "Charmed Life". The last episode of season one featured a song byAlexz Johnson that she originally record for the soundtrack of the canadian hit TV show Instant Star. On June 14, 2011, "Jar of Hearts" by Christina Perri was featured in the first episode of the second season.
Broadcast
Pretty Little Liars premiered on June 8, 2010 in the United States, and became ABC Family's highest-rated series debut on record across the network's target demographics.[1] It ranked number one in key 12-34 demos and teens, becoming the number one scripted show in Women 18-34, and Women 18-49. The premiere was number two in the hour for total viewers, which generated 2.47 million unique viewers, and was ABC Family's best delivery in the timeslot since the premiere of The Secret Life of the American Teenager.
The second episode retained 100% of its premiere audience with a 2.48 rating, despite the usual downward trend following a premiere of a show, and built on its premiere audience. It was the dominant number one of its time slot in Adults 18-49, and the number one show in female teens.[29] Subsequent episodes fluctuated between 2.09 and 2.74.[30][31] The August 10, 2010 "Summer Finale" episode won the series a 3.07 rating.
On June 28, 2010, ABC Family ordered 12 more episodes of the show, bringing its total first-season episodes to 22.[3]
On January 10, 2011, ABC Family picked the show up for a second season to premiere on June 14, 2011
Internationally, the show premiered in the United Kingdom on October 21, 2010 at 8pm on Viva, in the Philippines on November 22, 2010 at 8pm on ETC, in Spain on January 17, 2011 at 8:20pm on MTV Spain, inAustralia on Channel Go! at 8:30pm Mondays, in Croatia on February 3, 2011 at 8:45pm on Doma TVand has just finished it's first season in New Zealand which was aired on TV 2 at 5:30 on Sundays.
In October 2010, Pretty Little Liars began to air in the UK and Ireland on Viva. It aired ten episodes then had its mid-season break, then, due to popularity it was moved to MTV. On March 24, 2011 Pretty Little Liarspremiered on MTV from the beginning at 8pm every Thursday.
Critical reception
Pretty Little Liars opened with initially mixed critical reviews. Metacritic gave the pilot episode 53 out of 100, based upon 13 critical reviews.[32] The New York Daily News gave the show its highest score, with 80/100, commenting that "A new ABC Family series built around four teenage friends and an ominous hint of supernatural forces that mean no good, makes most popular vampire romances look anemic ... Pretty Little Liars could go in several directions, including mundane teen clichés. It's got an equally good shot at making us care about these imperfect pretty girls."[33] The New York Post gave the show 3 out of 4 stars, stating "OK, so we've established that there is no socially redeeming value in this series and that your kids shouldn't watch it if they are too young and impressionable. But if you can distract them enough to miss the first 15 minutes, the show isn't half-bad. Actually, it is half-good, if that makes sense."[34] The Los Angeles Times said about the series, "Pretty Little Liars is one of those shows that manages to mildly, and perhaps unintentionally, spoof its genre while fully participating in it, and that's not a bad thing at all." [35]
Entertainment Weekly had a less favorable review, giving the show its lowest score of 16 out of 100, saying "Imagine the pitch for Liars: It's I Know What You Did Last Summer meets Gossip Girl, but like not so subtle. The new ABC Family drama, based on the popular young-adult book series about a high school clique whose missing leader continuously causes problems and she ends up dead comes back to haunt them via locker-room notes, IMs, and text messages, hits every racy teentertainment mark so hard (everyone's hair is so full — of secrets!) that it feels like the only thing missing is a visit from the ghosts of Jennifer Love Hewitt and Freddie Prinze, Jr."[36] The Hollywood Reporter noted, "Sure, there's a lot here that sustains more eye-rolling than interested stares, but a little patience might be warranted."[37]