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Day Break is an American crime drama television series for which one 13-episode season was produced. The series starred Taye Diggs as Detective Brett Hopper, who is framed for the murder of Assistant District Attorney Alberto Garza. Due to a time loop, Hopper lives the same day over and over. The series revolves around his attempt to solve the mystery of the murder and find out who is behind the conspiracy to frame him.
Day Break | |
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Genre | Action Thriller Crime drama Fantasy |
Created by | Paul Zbyszewski |
Starring | |
Theme music composer | Mark Kilian Christophe Beck |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 (7 unaired) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producers |
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Editors |
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Running time | 40 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | November 15 – December 13, 2006 |
Network | TV One |
Release | April 20 – June 8, 2008 |
The series aired on the ABC network and premiered on November 15, 2006. It was cancelled on December 15 after only six episodes had aired.[1] The remaining episodes were subsequently made available online at ABC.com. Viewers for the show averaged 6.5 million.[2]
On March 16, 2008, the TV One cable network began airing the six previously broadcast episodes.[3] On April 20, the network began Sunday evening broadcasts of the remaining seven episodes, which had never been seen on television.[4]
Los Angeles Detective Brett Hopper is inexplicably repeating the same day, on which he is framed for the murder of the Assistant District Attorney, Alberto Garza. Hopper attempts to clear his name and uncover the truth, in the process discovering a conspiracy with ties to those close to him. He also struggles to understand what is happening to him, and learns that at least one other person may be repeating the same day. With every reset of the loop, Hopper wakes at his girlfriend Rita's home as the clock turns from 6:17 to 6:18 a.m.[5] He retains his memories, as well as his physical body and any injuries. Anyone outside of the loop has no awareness or memory of the repeating day, nor do they retain injuries from previous iterations. However, after Hopper experiences profound changes in his relationships with his partner Andrea and with Rita, respectively, their behaviors are altered going forward in the loop.
Actor | Character | Role |
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Mitch Pileggi | Armen D. Spivak | Detective, robbery/homicide |
Ian Anthony Dale | Christopher Choi | Detective, robbery/homicide |
Joe Nieves | Fencik | "Shadow Agent" |
Michael McGrady | Buchalter | "Shadow Agent" |
Jim Beaver | Nick Vukovic | Retired cop, former partner of Brett's father |
Don Franklin | Randall Mathis | School principal, Jennifer's husband |
Michael B. Silver | Nathan Baxter | U.S. Attorney |
Bahar Soomekh | Margot Clarke | Coffee shop/bus Woman/Judge Nitzberg's secretary |
Jonathan Banks | Conrad Detweiler | "Shadow Man" |
Nestor Carbonell | Eddie Reyes | Andrea's lover, former cop |
John Getz | Tobias Booth | City Councilman |
Raymond Cruz | Luis Torres | Booth's righthand man, former criminal |
Eric Steinberg | Danny Yan/"Slim" | Drug dealer |
John Rubinstein | Barry Colburn | Defense attorney |
Clayton Rohner | Jared Pryor | Man who appears to be experiencing the time loop |
Marlene Forte (as Marlene Forté) | Mrs. Garza | Alberto Garza's widow |
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Pilot" | Rob Bowman | Paul Zbyszewski | November 15, 2006 | 10.16[7] | |
Detective Brett Hopper wakes up at his girlfriend, Rita Shelten's place. He saves a woman from getting hit by a bus, but when he returns to his own apartment, police break in, and arrest him for the murder of Assistant District Attorney, Alberto Garza. Shadowy figures break him out of jail, and tell him to confess, and show him Rita getting killed. He wakes up, only to find Rita alive, and he gets to relive the same day. (10.6 million viewers[8]) | ||||||
2 | "What If They Run" | Rob Bowman | Paul Zbyszewski | November 15, 2006 | 10.16[7] | |
Brett makes the decision to take Rita and try to make a run for it by getting out of town, in an attempt to escape the day. But he soon discovers the disastrous consequences of his rash actions on others. (8.6 million viewers[8]) | ||||||
3 | "What If He Lets Her Go" | Rob Bowman | Steven Maeda | November 22, 2006 | 5.10[9] | |
4 | "What If He Can Change the Day" | Frederick King Keller | Henry Alonso Myers | November 29, 2006 | 4.72[12] | |
While trying to find out who framed him, Hopper is starting to figure out what his partner, Andrea, did that caused her disagreement with Internal Affairs. (4.73 million viewers[13]) | ||||||
5 | "What If They're Stuck" | Dwight H. Little | David Graziano | December 6, 2006 | 4.46[14] | |
To prove his innocence, Brett visits the Internal Affairs office, twice, in search of the murder book. During his first visit, things aren't going like he planned but his second time isn't better when he doesn't have any other choice than taking someone hostage. (4.5 million viewers[15]) | ||||||
6 | "What If They Find Him" | Rob Bowman | Charles Murray | December 13, 2006 | 3.94[16] | |
Hopper tracks down a major player in the conspiracy to frame him for Garza's murder. He also discovers that he must continue to heed the warning of the consequences of his decisions when his actions turn out to affect the day in the worst possible ways imaginable. (3.1 million viewers[17] or 3.94 million per Nielsen Media Research[18]) | ||||||
7 | "What If He's Not Alone" | Andy Wolk | Jeffrey Bell & Steven Maeda | January 29, 2007 * April 20, 2008 ^ | TBA | |
Hopper believes he may have found someone who is inadvertently involved in his never-ending day—and may also be caught in the same, repetitive loop. | ||||||
8 | "What If She's Lying" | Bryan Spicer | Paul Zbyszewski & Henry Alonso Myers | January 29, 2007 * April 27, 2008 ^ | TBA | |
Hopper believes that Jennifer is somehow involved in his hellacious day and hiding something from him. In order to find out what she's afraid to admit, he pays a visit to his estranged mother to go through his father's old police files to find a connection. | ||||||
9 | "What If They're Connected" | Rob Bowman | Angela Russo & John Hlavin | January 29, 2007 * May 4, 2008 ^ | TBA | |
Hopper discovers that a possible war between two rival gangs may be linked to his framing for the murder of Garza. Meanwhile, he pays a visit to Garza's murder scene and begins to piece together who may have really killed the Assistant District Attorney. | ||||||
10 | "What If He's Free" | Elodie Keene | David Graziano & Charles Murray | January 29, 2007 * May 11, 2008 ^ | TBA | |
After coming face to face with Garza's murderer, Hopper wonders whether his never-ending day will finally end. | ||||||
11 | "What If He Walks Away" | Bryan Spicer | Jenny Lynn | February 4, 2007 * May 18, 2008 ^ | TBA | |
Hopper tries walking away from the day with Rita, but his actions have decidedly negative consequences. Meanwhile, he discovers that someone he thought he could trust has betrayed him. | ||||||
12 | "What If She's the Key" | David Von Ancken | Jeffrey Bell & Paul Zbyszewski | February 12, 2007 * June 1, 2008 ^ | TBA | |
Hopper discovers that Rita is hiding a secret from him that may play a pivotal role in his repeating day. | ||||||
13 | "What If It's Him" | Rob Bowman | Paul Zbyszewski & Jeffrey Bell | March 2, 2007 * June 8, 2008 ^ | TBA | |
Hopper's day of reckoning finally is in sight and the answers to his questions are within his reach—but will he live to see the end of his repeating day? |
* = World premiere on ABC.com
^ = Television premiere on TV One
Viewers for the series on television averaged 6.5 million.[19]
About the cancelation, Taye Diggs: "We didn’t get enough viewers. The network gave us a shot, and that’s what happened. I had a really great time on the show. It was one of the best scripts out there. It was the timing. Who knows why people tune in to what they do, but apparently they were not watching us."[20]
Moon Bloodgood gave a similar statement about the cancellation: “I thought Day Break and Journeyman were great shows. Sometimes people want to say, “Oh, they’re too intelligent.” I give audiences way more credit. I don’t think it was that we weren’t good. I think it’s timing. I think sometimes things just don’t catch fire. Maybe it wasn’t good? But I know that I thought it was good and I, to this day, think they were good. I wouldn’t have done them if I didn’t think they were good.“[21]
Adam Baldwin was also proud of the show: “I'll tell you, Day Break holds up if you watch it. If it was on a Netflix-type format where you could just sit down and watch it chronologically, it would really hold up. I think it had a big challenge being on commercial television and having the breaks in between. It's not a linear show. Like Memento: you wouldn't want to watch that if you had to have wait a week to see the second half or whatever. But I really enjoyed that.“[22]
Mitch Pileggi thought the show was “pretty good“: “I wish that we had been able to hang in a little bit longer with that show. It was a good role, and it was a lot of fun, and I was interested in seeing where they were going to take that character.“[23]
ABC had previously said that there were problems that kept the rest of the episodes from being shown online, calling them "unforeseen music clearance issues."[24] On January 14, 2007, the network announced that the remaining episodes would be made available by the end of February.[25] The first six episodes which had aired on television were posted on January 29, 2007, along with the first four unaired episodes.[26]
The thirteenth and final episode, which was originally scheduled to be available on February 19, was delayed multiple times. After a nearly three-week wait, the finale premiered late on March 2. It was reported that the reasons for this delay concerned copyrighting issues with some of the original soundtrack from the final cut of the episode.[27]
On March 25, 2008, Day Break: The Complete Series was released on DVD in Region 1 by BCI Eclipse as a 4-disc set.[28]
Mill Creek Entertainment subsequently re-released Day Break on September 29, 2009 as a 2-disc set.[29]
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