![]() ![]() In 2015, she created and executive produced SyFy’s “The Magicians,” which ran for five seasons, and in 2018 she developed “You,” based on Caroline Kepnes’ novels, with Greg Berlanti. After getting her professional start on ABC’s short-lived procedural “Eyes” in 2005, she joined the team at the CW’s “Supernatural,” leaving after its seventh season in 2012. She also acknowledges, with a tone of relief, that the pandemic forced her to change her relationship to work. But there really is so much about the chemistry of people in a room.” “You’re efficient because you have to be because the fatigue is quicker. “It was really hard to break most of a season on Zoom,” Gamble says. Penn is like: ‘How self-aware can you make him?’”Īfter going virtual during the critical stages of the pandemic, the writers room returned to working in person this season. And regularly, they’re like, ‘When are we going to punish this guy?’ Penn too. “Writers in the room all day, every day, talking about Joe - they have some pretty harsh judgments of him. Joe’s unraveling felt inevitable, Gamble says. As we learn in Part 2, now streaming, all is not as it appears: Joe himself, in the midst of a psychological break, is the culprit, and has his former obsession Marienne (Tati Gabrielle), thought safe from harm in Paris, locked in a glass cage. Season 4 - split into two installments, with Part 1 released last month - started off as a whodunit satirizing the British class system, with Joe posing as Jonathan Moore, an American literature professor in London drawn into the mystery of the Eat-the-Rich Killer. “On any given morning, someone will be like, ‘We need to shove him off a building instead of some innocent victim this time.’ And then somebody else would be like, ‘Oh, I feel like he’s been really sweet to Kate this season.’”Īfter escaping death at the hands of his equally murderous wife, Love Quinn (Victoria Pedretti), Joe headed overseas. “It feels like that in the room, too,” says Gamble, the showrunner of the psychological thriller. As the hopeless romantic and serial killer at the center of Netflix’s popular series “You,” Joe, played by Penn Badgley, is a thorny protagonist to follow: You love him! You’re weirded out by him! He’s toxic! Wait, you’re rooting for him to change? Sera Gamble understands your Joe Goldberg conundrum. Warning: The following contains spoilers from “You” Season 4, Part 2.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |