Book:Twilight Canyons: Difference between revisions

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==[[TV and Film:The Watch|The Watch TV Series]]==
==[[TV and Film:The Watch|The Watch TV Series]]==
The fourth episode of the 2021 TV series ''The Watch'', based very loosely on the [[:Category:Watch Series|City-Watch series]] of novels, is named "Twilight Canyons". Simon Allen, the showrunner of the series, was apparently present at the convention where a snippet of the book was read out to the attendees. Due the rather drastic amount that The Watch series differs from the source material of the novels it is uncertain how much this depiction of Twilight Canyons resembles the original.
The fourth episode of the 2021 TV series ''The Watch'', based very loosely on the [[:Category:Watch Series|City-Watch series]] of novels, is named "Twilight Canyons". Simon Allen, the showrunner of the series, was apparently present at the convention where a snippet of the book was read out to the attendees, though given how loose an adaptation ''The Watch'' is, it's uncertain how much this depiction of Twilight Canyons resembles the original.


In the show, Twilight Canyons is a retirement home located in [[Ankh-Morpork]]. Some of the residents of the home seem to suffer from memory loss or dementia to varying degrees, referring to all visitors as "Michelle". There is also a "Displacement Spell" over the home which prevents violence within the walls; if anyone in the building should try to fight this triggers the spell which forces the fighters to dance together whilst music plays.
In the show, Twilight Canyons is a retirement home located in [[Ankh-Morpork]]. Some of the residents of the home seem to suffer from memory loss or dementia to varying degrees, referring to all visitors as "Michelle". There is also a "Displacement Spell" over the home which prevents violence within its walls. If anyone in the building intends to fight, the spell is triggered: the ambience changes to mirror balls and disco lighting, music plays, and combatants are magically compelled to dance together instead of fighting.


Residents:
Residents:
*Wynona Crowsnatcher
*Wynona Crowsnatcher
*Contessa
*The Contessa (heavily implied to be a [[vampire]])
*[[Jocasta Wiggs]]
*[[Jocasta Wiggs]]
*[[Buggy Swires|Sergeant Swires]]
*[[Buggy Swires|Sergeant Swires]]

Latest revision as of 03:09, 11 April 2023

Twilight Canyons is the possible name for an unfinished novel by Terry Pratchett. The only mention of this book that can be found in the Discworld novels is in the afterword to The Shepherd's Crown that was written by Rob Wilkins:

'We will now not know how the old folk of Twilight Canyons solve the mystery of a missing treasure and defeat the rise of a Dark Lord despite their failing memories,'

The story was one of several that were in various stages of planning by Terry Pratchett; two years after his death in 2015 one of his final wishes was to have the hard-drive of his computer crushed by a steamroller and this was carried out, rendering the remnants of his works permanently unreadable.

Allegedly a sample of what was written by Terry Pratchett for this story was read out by Rob Wilkins at a 2016 Discworld Convention and then promptly shredded after he had finished.

The Watch TV Series

The fourth episode of the 2021 TV series The Watch, based very loosely on the City-Watch series of novels, is named "Twilight Canyons". Simon Allen, the showrunner of the series, was apparently present at the convention where a snippet of the book was read out to the attendees, though given how loose an adaptation The Watch is, it's uncertain how much this depiction of Twilight Canyons resembles the original.

In the show, Twilight Canyons is a retirement home located in Ankh-Morpork. Some of the residents of the home seem to suffer from memory loss or dementia to varying degrees, referring to all visitors as "Michelle". There is also a "Displacement Spell" over the home which prevents violence within its walls. If anyone in the building intends to fight, the spell is triggered: the ambience changes to mirror balls and disco lighting, music plays, and combatants are magically compelled to dance together instead of fighting.

Residents: