From a creative standpoint, you want that kind of excitement. From a standpoint of a war show, it made sense to have a different area of operation each season. Visually, I just found it very exciting. Let's do a jungle, let's do a desert, let's do an ice planet. Let's really explore those environments, and unlike Spartacus, we're actually going to go these locations. So, it won't be on green screen. We'll find a jungle, we'll find a desert, we'll find and ice flow…"

I doubt I'm alone in hoping for good news for Steven S. DeKnight's sci-fi project. Withwrapped up, those of us who enjoyed DeKnight's creative and dramatic take on the gladiator's story are surely eager to see what the writer does next. We learned last year thatwas in the works, and the latest update is that the writers room is closing up shop on the project, but from the sound of it, that's not actually bad news.It's not really good news either. It's just an update. Deadline says the writers room forhas started to ramp down because there are enough scripts written to fit a full series order, should it get one at Starz. The premium cable network tends to send their developing projects straight to series once the decision is made to move forward with them, so if Starz does decide they like what's been written, it'll hopefully mean the full green light for the series. Starz is reportedly currently evaluating it now.DeKnight has gone from the past withto the distant future for, which would be a sci-fi action thriller about a squad of solders fighting in a war against a hostile alien race. It would be set up so that each season, the battle would be fought on a different planet, allowing for some drastically different environments. We talked to Steven DeKnight about the project at Comic Con last year and he told us they'd be aiming to film in different locations rather than using green screen.Here's hoping things work out for. It sounds very different from Spartacus , but DeKnight has proven he knows how to run a series - and a good one. He also has plenty of writing experience on great shows. Prior to, his writing credits includeand