A group of librarians set off on adventures in an effort to save mysterious, ancient artifacts.A group of librarians set off on adventures in an effort to save mysterious, ancient artifacts.A group of librarians set off on adventures in an effort to save mysterious, ancient artifacts.
- Awards
- 10 nominations
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Did you know
- TriviaJake Stone is an expert Art Historian. Christian Kane majored in Art History in college.
- GoofsAll throughout season 2 the time frame of 500 years and 5 centuries is used, however The Tempest is commonly accepted as being written at the turn of the 17th century and the episodes are set in 2015 (the 21st century), therefore it would be 400 years or 4 centuries.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Worst Special Effects in TV Shows (2018)
Featured review
NATO counter-terrorism Colonel Eve Baird (Rebecca Romijn) is hunting WMDs in Germany when Librarian Flynn Carsen (Noah Wyle) suddenly shows up. It's a world of magic which exists along ley lines across the globe. Magic has been fading away as it gets contained by artifacts. Librarians have been collecting those artifacts and knowledge to keep the world from falling into chaos. The Library sends Baird an invitation to be the new Guardian. They save new librarian candidates from attackers bend on stealing artifacts. The three new librarians are oil rigger Jake Stone (Christian Kane), thief Ezekiel Jones (John Harlan Kim), and janitor Cassandra Cillian (Lindy Booth) who has a brain tumor which gives her visions of knowledge. When the main library is lost in an alternate dimension, Jenkins (John Larroquette) brings them to a satellite branch.
This is perfectly fine silly TV fun. It's enjoyable without being too substantive. I've never seen the preceding movies so I have no connection with Noah Wyle's character. That's probably why I don't see the purpose of Wyle's back and forth. He comes in, he leaves, he comes in, he leaves. I'd rather have him do the pilot and leave the show to the newcomers. The group has fine chemistry but he keeps them in training wheels. This show reminds me of Warehouse 13 and it should be fun for any fans of shows like that.
This is perfectly fine silly TV fun. It's enjoyable without being too substantive. I've never seen the preceding movies so I have no connection with Noah Wyle's character. That's probably why I don't see the purpose of Wyle's back and forth. He comes in, he leaves, he comes in, he leaves. I'd rather have him do the pilot and leave the show to the newcomers. The group has fine chemistry but he keeps them in training wheels. This show reminds me of Warehouse 13 and it should be fun for any fans of shows like that.
- SnoopyStyle
- Mar 12, 2018
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