It is a new series with new events which more dramatic and exciting. In Los Angeles, a man named Mick St., who has supernatural abilities. Mick uses his own abilities to protect people in need, a very difficult task if he wants to have a hidden identity. One of the girls, Beth Turner, is automatically attracted to Mick and feels that Mick is obliged to protect her, but at the same time he will meet another brown woman who resembles his ex-wife Coraline, the woman who turned him into a vampire someday.
Frederick E.O. Toye, Chris Fisher, Paul Holahan, Scott Lautanen, Rod Holcomb, Michael Fields, John T. Kretchmer, Dennis Smith, James Whitmore Jr., David Barrett, Eric Laneuville
The producers are onto a conceit that seems purely accidental. Vampires with a conscience are like cheerleaders in habits: what precisely is the point?
O'Loughlin has the shaggy mane and acting chops... but he's not well served by the show's unimaginative stories and relationships, retreads from better series of the past.
Woeful acting? Check. Cheap effects? Check. Worst writing of the new season? Check. Predictability? Pretensions? Faint imitations of superior shows? Someone at CBS shouldn't just have their neck bitten, but sliced through, for this one.
Moonlight tries to be a cross between Angel and the world of Raymond Chandler, but at least in the first couple of episodes, it's just sort of an underwritten mess.
Moonlight doesn't get any points for originality, but it sure gets some for brazenness. Its elements are so shamelessly copied, the whole show should be sponsored by Xerox.