The Librarians (2014 TV series)


The Librarians is an American fantasy-adventure television series developed by John Rogers and broadcast on TNT, which premiered on December 7, 2014. It is a direct spin-off of The Librarian film series, sharing continuity with the films. TNT cancelled the series in March 2018.

Plot

The series follows four people newly recruited by The Library: Colonel Eve Baird, of the NATO Anti-Terrorist Unit, destined to be the new Guardian; Ezekiel Jones, a consummate thief who can hack an NSA computer as easily as he can steal a Faberge egg; Cassandra Cillian, a brilliant scientist and mathematician who possesses a trace of magic; and Jacob Stone, polymath, linguist, expert in architecture, art, art history, archaeology and world cultures of the past and present, including Native American cultures, and other fields too numerous to mention, including bar fighting. The latter three received invitations from the Library at the same time as the current Librarian, Flynn Carsen, but for various reasons didn't show up for their interviews. Their lives are threatened in the first episode in the series. At the end of the second episode the Library reissues their invitations.
In a break with the concept established in the films that there can be only one Librarian at a time, the first episodes reveal that the state of the world is so dire that it needs a team of Librarians, with Baird serving as Guardian of all four. With the help of Jenkins/Galahad, immortal manager of the Library’s Annex, they solve impossible mysteries, recover powerful magical artifacts, fight against supernatural threats—and learn important things about themselves and each other. In the first season, they battle the forces of the Serpent Brotherhood, led by the mysterious immortal Dulaque. Carsen, who spends the first season searching for the main Library appears in some episodes.
The second season offers up a pair of new villains, both from fiction: Prospero, from Shakespeare's The Tempest, and Moriarty, Sherlock Holmes' chief nemesis. The former is positioned as the greater evil, attempting to use magic to destroy the world in order to remake it more to his liking. Moriarty is more of a gray villain—generally aligned with Prospero but willing to side with the Librarians when it suits his own interests.
The third season introduces a new adversary, Apep, the Egyptian God of Chaos. Defeated centuries before by the first Librarian, Judson and his Guardian, Charlene, he is resurrected when his sarcophagus is opened and embarks on a mission to release pure evil into the world, possessing many different people along the way. While they are trying to stop Apep, the Librarians' actions are closely monitored by General Cynthia Rockwell from a new secret government agency, called D.O.S.A..
The fourth season does away with season-long story arcs in favor of stand-alone episodes, with three ongoing issues: Before the vernal equinox, Flynn and Eve must undertake a ceremony that will bind them to each other and to the Library, as Charlene and Judson did before them. They will become immortal and bind the Library to Earth, giving it a human connection and a human heart rather than the cold, implacable and dangerously self-centered attitude that would characterize it without that bond. The return of Nicole Noone, Flynn's first Guardian, believed dead and now immortal, raises many questions. And conflict arises between the Librarians over former Librarian Darrington Dare's assertion that there can only be one Librarian at a time, or the result will be disastrous. These three stories are not resolved until the last episode.

Episodes

On February 12, 2015, TNT renewed the series for a 10 episode second season, which aired from November 1 to December 27, 2015. On December 15, 2015, TNT renewed the series for a 10-episode third season, which aired from November 20, 2016 to January 22, 2017. On January 24, 2017, TNT renewed the series for a fourth season, which premiered on December 13, 2017.

Cast

Main

TNT ordered a ten-episode weekly series version of The Librarians, following the original cast that includes Noah Wyle, Bob Newhart, and Jane Curtin, as well as five new characters who work for The Library. The series films in Portland, Oregon. Some scenes were filmed at the Oregon State Capitol in Salem. A teaser trailer aired right after the Falling Skies season finale.
On March 8, 2018, Dean Devlin announced that TNT had cancelled the series and that he was in the process of shopping the series to other networks; however, in June, Devlin announced that negotiations were unsuccessful.

Broadcast

The series premiered in over 100 countries on Universal Channel within 24 hours of its premiere in the United States. In Canada, the series premiered December 7, 2014, on Space. In the United Kingdom, the series was originally set to premiere on Universal Channel, however, it was announced it would instead air on Syfy, premiering December 8, 2014. In Australia, the series premiered on Universal Channel on December 9, 2014, and returned for season 2 on November 5, 2015. The series premiered in New Zealand on The Zone on February 17, 2015.

Home Media

In Australia, Region 4, the entire series has been released on DVD individually and as a complete series box set.
The first two episodes also appeared as a feature film on December 12, 2014 on The CW. The show was acquired by UPtv and premiered on March 13, 2019.

Novels

Three tie-in novels have been published, all written by Greg Cox: The Librarians and the Lost Lamp follows the characters of the television series as they attempt to find Aladdin's lamp, in both the past and the future. In The Librarians and the Mother Goose Chase the characters attempt to find various sections of the original Mother Goose story book before a descendant of the original Mother Goose is able to recombine the parts and use its power. In The Librarians and the Pot of Gold, the Serpent Brotherhood have returned, and the Librarians learn the truth behind the story of St. Patrick driving the “snakes” out of Éire, with the help of a Librarian.

Critical reception

The Librarians scored 63 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 11 "generally favorable" reviews. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 70% critics rating with an average rating of 6.7 out of 10 based on 14 reviews. The website consensus reads: "It's familiar stuff, but The Librarians offers family-friendly fun with a mixture of silliness and adventure".

Accolades