Everything about Killjoys, eh?

286,000 viewers makes Killjoys the #1 entertainment specialty program Friday

From a media release:

Space has Friday nights locked and served as the series debut of the Space original series KILLJOYS drew an average preliminary overnight audience of 286,000 viewers, making KILLJOYS the #1 entertainment specialty program of the day. During its 9 p.m. ET timeslot, Space was the #1 entertainment specialty network with total viewers, an increase of 133% compared to the timeslot average this broadcast year-to-date. Combined with the encore midnight airing on Space, and the June 20, 10 p.m. encore broadcast on CTV, the series premiere of KILLJOYS saw a total audience of 694,000.

Also on Friday night, new Canadian sci-fi drama DARK MATTER continues to be a hit with Space viewers in its 10 p.m. ET timeslot drawing an audience of 262,000 viewers for its second episode, making Space the #1 entertainment specialty network in the timeslot for total viewers and among adults 25-54. During the back-to-back airing of KILLJOYS and DARK MATTER, Space was the #1 entertainment specialty network overall in the 9p.m.-11p.m. ET timeslot.

Genre fans were also lighting up Twitter as #Killjoys and @Killjoys resulted in 4.5 million impressions from 1,119 tweets in Canada over the weekend, and 21.5 million impressions from 9,493 tweets worldwide. Both #Killjoys and #DarkMatter were a trending topic across the country, with #DarkMatter trending worldwide during its timeslot.

On the next episode of KILLJOYS, “The Sugar Point Run” (Friday, June 26 at 9 p.m. ET), a hostage exchange with a vengeful warlord turns deadly when the Killjoys find themselves stranded in Sugar Point – a restricted, bombed-out city on Westerley overrun with dangerous gangs and scavengers.

In Episode 3 of DARK MATTER, (Friday, June 26 at 10 p.m. ET), when the ship mysteriously drops, suggestions of sabotage abound, fueling the onboard paranoia. A perilous EVA (space walk) is required to bring The Raza’s systems back online. Meanwhile, “5” makes a shocking discovery.

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Link: Killjoys Creator on Avoiding Love Triangles, ‘Aliens’ Influence

From Amber Dowling in the Hollywood Reporter:

‘Killjoys’ Creator on Avoiding Love Triangles, ‘Aliens’ Influence
Lost Girl doesn’t sign off until later this year, but creator Michelle Lovretta has already been hard at work on her next act. Killjoys — a co-production between Syfy and Canada’s Space – centers on Dutch (Hannah John-Kamen), a beautiful but lethal Level 5 bounty hunter in outer space. In the pilot, her partnership with Level 3 hunter John (Aaron Ashmore) is put to the test after a kill warrant shows up for his brother D’Avin (Luke Macfarlane). Continue reading.

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Tonight: Killjoys, Dark Matter, Indspire Awards, Survivorman – Finding Bigfoot

 

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Killjoys, Space – series premiere “Bangarang”
Killjoys Dutch (Hannah John–Kamen, HAPPY VALLEY) and John (Aaron Ashmore, LOST GIRL) are in serious need of R&R after capturing a dangerous smuggler in the badlands of Westerley. But when a death warrant is posted for D’avin (Luke Macfarlane, BROTHERS & SISTERS), John secretly takes the job to save his estranged brother. With a competing Killjoy also on the job, the team is in a race against time to clear D’avin’s name and their own. Check out Greg’s feature on Killjoys.

Dark Matter, Space – Episode 2
As the crew comes to terms with the revelations about their respective pasts, they are faced with a dilemma – help the miners against insurmountable odds, or abandon them to certain death. Look for Greg’s review in the morning.

Indspire Awards, Global
Fourteen outstanding Indigenous achievers will be honoured at the 2015 Indspire Awards gala, recorded live in Calgary, AB. Co-hosted by Lorne Cardinal and Kyle Nobess, the 2015 Indspire Awards gala features performances by Indigenous talent from across Canada, as well as a special appearance by New Zealand’s Kahurangi Maori Dance Theatre. Indspire is an Indigenous-led registered charity that invests in the education of Indigenous people for the long-term benefit of these individuals, their families and communities, and Canada.

Survivorman: Finding Bigfoot, City – “Tennessee”
Hiking far off the beaten path, Les searches remote forested land deep in the heart of the Great Smoky Mountains of Tennessee with Scott Carpenter, a local researcher claiming to have interactions with Bigfoot in the area. Battling his own psyche, Les enters the Bigfoot hot spot, planting hidden cameras and scent traps in an effort to elicit an interaction – but the longer Les hunts for Sasquatch, the stranger things get.

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Killjoys stars live the dream playing intergalactic bounty hunters

Luke Macfarlane and Aaron Ashmore are living the dream. The pair, along with Hannah John-Kamen, play a trio of bounty hunters in Space’s newest series Killjoys, zipping around a small star system grabbing those wanted by the law and claiming the monetary spoils. To star in a sci-fi series is cool enough, but one thing took it over the top: carrying intergalactic weaponry.

“At the beginning, the crew would take my gun after a take, but after awhile I was like, ‘No, this is my gun!’ It’s part of my tool kit as a Killjoy,” Ashmore says with a laugh.

Debuting Friday on Space, Killjoys is a rollicking thrill ride, full of fist fights, gun battles and an overall feeling of the not-so-serious. Dutch (John-Kamen) is a tough-as-nails Reclamation Agent—nicknamed Killjoy—with Johnny Jacobis (Ashmore) as her long-time partner. The first instalment, “Bangarang,” introduces a third member to the team: Johnny’s brother D’avin (Macfarlane), an expert at hand-to-hand combat thanks to time in the military. The trio uses Lucy (Tamsen McDonough) as their mode of transport, a space ship with its own voice and distinct personality. Created by Michelle Lovretta (Lost Girl), Killjoys looks and feels a little 1970s cheese, hearkening back to Star Wars in the fact some settings look dusty and dirty, and outfits look worn. There’s a nostalgia to Killjoys that longtime fans of the genre will recognize and embrace.

But beside the fisticuffs and phasers, Killjoys is also about family. Johnny and D’avin are estranged, and Friday’s early peek into Dutch’s backstory reveals a mysterious man whose influence reaches back to her childhood.

“As the season goes on, we learn more about Johnny and D’avin’s childhood,” Macfarlane hints. “We learn how you can address something in two totally different ways and as a result become very different people. These two brothers could not be more different even though they both grew up with the same crappy dad.” Questions about what family is and what it means to be in a family are addressed too.

“These characters are so out there in the world and what draws them together is that they don’t have anything else,” Ashmore says. “This world and this lifestyle that they are is incredibly unstable and they’re drawn together—and sometimes torn apart—by that.”

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Killjoys primer
Here’s a quick peek into the world viewers step into on Friday night.

Reclamation Agents: A.k.a. Killjoys, these folks a licensed by the Reclamation Apprehension Coalition (RAC) to pursue warrants throughout the galaxy.

Warrants: There are five levels—Reclamation (recovering lost of stolen goods), Transfer (someone is being transported somewhere and needs protection), Live (a warrant must be captured still breathing), Living or Dead (breathing isn’t necessary) and Death (assassinations).

The Quad: The four-worlds the Killjoys inhabit, made up by a planet called Qresh and its three moons.

Qresh: On the brink of destroying its ecosystem, politicians and companies looked to its moons to get rid of trash and mine more resources. Qresh is home to The Quad’s elite and most powerful.

Westerley: Dutch and Johnny have lived on Westerley for the last two years. The moon is owned by The Company.

Arkyn: No one goes to this mysterious world.

Leith: The farmers and blue collar folks live on Leith, a lush moon where prostitution, drug use are illegal and guns are frowned upon.

Killjoys airs Fridays at 9 p.m. ET on Space.

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Links: Killjoys reviews

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From Whitney Matheson of the Hollywood Reporter:

‘Killjoys’: TV Review
Tell sci-fi fans there’s a TV series about intergalactic bounty hunters, and chances are they’ll leap for the remote. Despite its tantalizing premise, however, Killjoys isn’t the space drama we’ve been looking for. Continue reading.

From Merrill Barr of Forbes:

‘Killjoys’ Review: Sci-Fi Fun With Nothing Else To Offer
All of that description is essentially the problem with a show like Killjoys. Its pilot has to take so much time setting up and explaining the rules of its world that very little’s actually devoted to diving into the characters themselves, and their dynamics. Continue reading.

From Tony Wong of the Toronto Star:

What if Boba Fett had a TV show? Killjoys is the answer
As pure escapism, it works. The action scenes are muscular, and the dynamic between the characters played by Canadians Aaron Ashmore (Smallville) and Luke Macfarlane (Brothers & Sisters) with the show’s star Hannah John-Kamen (Viva Forever) makes you think the Millennium Falcon never left orbit. Continue reading.

From Bill Harris of Postmedia Network:

‘Killjoys’ star Hannah John-Kamen serves up outer space justice
Nothing feels alien about Killjoys. And star Hannah John-Kamen likes it that way. She thinks focusing exclusively on human beings in the future actually makes Killjoys more frightening. Continue reading.

From Toni Ruberto of the Buffalo News:

Syfy’s Killjoys: Fun in a new world
The Syfy channel’s original programming – scripted series, creative reality competitions and those crazy movies – have never been known for their restraint. The network’s newest original series, “Killjoys,” premiering at 9 p.m. Friday, never got that memo and in this case, it’s a good thing. Continue reading.

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