‘Gravity’ director turns to TV

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Oscar-winning director Alfonso Cuaron was looking for an anti-“Gravity” follow up to his blockbuster space film, and he found it with a rare excursion into television.

Cuaron and sci-fi auteur J.J. Abrams (“Lost,” the “Star Trek” movies) are executive producers of “Believe,” a drama about a child whose supernatural powers put her and the world at risk.

The premise came to him while he waited during “the endless process of special effects” on “Gravity,” Cuaron said at a media event.

“Well, first of all, I wanted to do something in which people were not floating,” Cuaron said, drawing laughs.

“I wanted to do something more grounded, and we wanted to do it with real people, real locations,” he continued. “I wanted to do something really exciting, but, at the same time, something that would be highly emotional.”

Cuaron and Abrams met more than two decades ago and. “I’ve wanted to work with him desperately ever since. I was a huge fan of every movie that he made, and each one made me more and more desperate to try and figure this out,” Abrams said.

Johnny Sequoyah stars as Bo, a 10-year-old who can levitate, has the power of telekinesis, can control nature and see the future. But she can’t control or understand her powers and is at risk from those who would use them to conquer Earth. Delroy Lindo co-stars as Bo’s protector, with Jack McLaughlin as a wrongfully imprisoned death row inmate enlisted in the effort.

The cast also includes Jamie Chung and Kyle MacLachlan.

Cuaron has dabbled lightly in TV in years past, but big-screen projects like “Gravity,” “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban” and “Children of Men” have been his focus.

He shepherded “Gravity” with Sandra Bullock and George Clooney to a leading seven Oscar trophies March 2. Among them was the best director award for Cuaron, with the Mexican filmmaker becoming the category’s first Latino winner.

Oscar dazzle and box office grosses aside — “Gravity” pulled in more than $500 million internationally in 2013 — cast members said it was Cuaron himself who drew them to “Believe.” He directed the series’ pilot.

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