UK TV

Review: Life on Mars 2×1-2×2

Lifeonmars21-1

In the UK: Tuesdays, BBC1, 9pm with the following episode on BBC4, 10pm

In the US: Coming to BBC America later in the year. With edits again, probably.

Characters re-cast: 0

Major characters gotten rid of: 1

Major new characters: 0

Format change percentage: 10%

It’s always a tricky thing reviewing Life on Mars. Can you praise/slag off an hallucination? Is it even an hallucination or is it regular drama with a sci-fi twist? Until the end of the series, we won’t know.

So I’m going to tread my way gingerly, here. First, I’ll lay my cards on the table and say I don’t think the first two episodes were quite as good as last year’s cracking crop. I think it’s now playing to the audience a bit too much and crosses from parody into self-parody a bit too often.

But let’s face it. It’s still bloody good fun.

Continue reading “Review: Life on Mars 2×1-2×2”

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Doctor Who

Film

  • There’s a look at M Night Shyamalan’s new script, The Green Effect. Wonder if there’s a twist at the end…

US TV

  • UK viewers: Haven’t already seen episode one of Heroes and want to see it now? The UK SciFi Channel is streaming it from its web site for free. You’ll need to register though.
  • The US military would like 24 to cut back on the torture.
  • Kevin Sorbo bitch slaps Sam Raimi over Hercules, Xena et al. Bitter? No…
  • Questions that will be answered in Lost this season (warning: spoilers for other shows):
    • Is Claire Jack’s half sister?
    • How’d Locke end up in a wheelchair?
    • What’s the link between the Others and Dharma?
    • What’s the deal with Jack’s tattoos?
    • What’s so special about Claire’s baby?
  • There are going to be video backstories of Lost‘s big four characters on the ABC.com web site, starting today. You’ll probably already have seen them, though.

Canonicity: give up now

Mr Mark Wilkinson tried to goad me recently. He quoted Paul Cornell for one thing. Never a good plan, particularly after he himself had posted a link to this Lawrence Miles interview that ‘confirmed’ everyone’s worst fears about PC (how apt those initials).

Cornell, it seems, wants to talk about canonicity in Doctor Who. The problem with Who is that nothing matches up. Stories contradict each other. Then there are the comics, the audio plays, the novels, fan fic and so on. How to make it all fit together?

Some people care. Some people can be very imaginative with canonicity. How come KITT in Knight Rider exists yet is so clearly impossible with 1980s technology? Because he’s made from the crashed parts of a Cylon raider from Galactica 80, of course. Didn’t the red light at the front give the game away? It did to a whole load of fans which is why this particular theory is now “fan canon” or “fanon”.

Now, if there’s a canonicity problem, I for one simply point in the direction of Toby at Inner Toob and say if anyone can sort out this tangled mess, he can. He, after all, has a grand project to make all TV shows fit together into one canonical whole. So the whole goading thing doesn’t work. My faith in Toby is great. He will sort things out.

I’d also point out that the nature of Doctor Who is such that we could have a story in the next series of the show that said the Tom Baker era never happened and because it’s about time travel, it would be true. That would be that. It happened but it didn’t. It really doesn’t matter if anything contradicts anything else because it can all be rewritten at a moment’s notice. So lie back and enjoy the fun. Read a book, listen to the play. It happened. It didn’t happen. It’s quantum mechanics in merchandising format (do you Copenhagen or do you multi-world at WH Smith’s?).

But I’ve noticed something new is happening that makes canonicity harder and even more brain-warping.

We’re all aware of DVDs that have “deleted scenes” – scenes that never made it to the final episode but were filmed all the same. I imagine working out if they’re canonical or not is a whole load of weirdness. Plus, it’s relatively easy to discount them because they’re optional. You don’t have to watch the deleted scenes. They’re not in the episode itself. Easy.

But what of Battlestar Galactica? For the last two episodes, the producers have included a deleted scene (aka ‘bonus’ scene. You can view them on the web site, too) just before the end titles. Now it’s on television, you have no choice to watch it and it usually directly contradicts what you’ve just seen in the episode itself. How does it all fit in?

My mind hurts. I suspect that canonicity is broken, that the existence of Paul Cornell contradicts itself and he has become a figment of everyone’s imagination. But I might have forgotten to carry the 1.

Toby: save me. Save us all.

US TV

Third-episode verdict: The Dresden Files

The Dresden Files Carusometer3 Minor Caruso

Handily enough for UK viewers, given that the series starts on Sky on Wednesday, it’s time for a third-episode verdict on The Dresden Files.

I decided not to go as far as episode five with the show because, frankly, I’m bored. It’s just so dull. Now it’s a rare sci-fi/fantasy/horror show that’s just plain dull. Even Friday The 13th: The Series was moderately interesting, even if it wasn’t exactly Shakespeare.

But The Dresden Files is dull.

I’m not quite sure why that should be. The scripts are quite imaginative – you can tell they’ve been adapted from books. The acting’s fine for the most part, with both Terrence Mann and Paul Blackthorne doing the best they can with what they’ve got. The creators have a reasonable pedigree, with Deep Space Nine and Andromeda under their collective belts.

It’s just not very interesting. It feels like it’s been through various committees at the SciFi Channel that have removed anything really new and original. The direction’s been bog standard. Character development and indeed characterisation have been pretty non-existent, sacrificed on the great altar of plot developments: I’ve no real feel for who these people are and why I should care about them.

Not wishing to hold up Smallville as a paradigm of well, anything really, but a typical Smallville episode is 40 minutes and only about 30 of that is dedicated to the plot – the rest is ongoing character development (albeit not very consistent character development). As a result, you care about the characters, even when there’s a rubbish plot. Here, 100% of the run-time is plot, with not so much as an errant line of dialogue dedicated to making anyone and their interactions with the other characters three dimensional.

So, for having consistently kept me neither interested nor repulsed, The Medium is Not Enough declares The Dresden Files to be a three or “Minor Caruso” on The Carusometer quality scale. A Minor Caruso corresponds to “a show in which David Caruso might guest star. He will speak each of his seven lines at half the proper speed in order to increase his on-screen time. A runner will have to be sent out halfway through filming to get some more cue cards, since he will have ripped them up prematurely in an effort to prove what a professional he is.”

Tuesday’s worst kept secrets

It’s the news, my friends.

Doctor Who

  • Australia says ‘No’, to Torchwood
  • More on Recovery from the ever-classy Mirror
  • Billie Piper is ‘attached’ to an adaptation of Belle de Jour. The blog/book, that is, not the movie.

Film

  • More details on the Watchmen movie, which is still happening, it seems.
  • Adrien Brody as The Hulk?
  • Tom Cruise and Ben Stiller as The Hardy Men is on.
  • An interview with Ioan Gruffudd, a proper Welsh super-hero. None of that English rubbish.

British TV

German TV

  • ZDF is making a mini-series based on Stanislav Lem short stories

US TV

  • Here’s something you probably never thought you’d hear: Michelle Ryan, aka Zoe Slater from EastEnders, is the new Bionic Woman.
  • The Sarah Silverman Program has already been commissioned for a second season.
  • Former Wonder Woman Lynda Carter is to play Chloe’s mum in Smallville
  • Louise Lombard from CSI has a pilot, as does Sarah Clarke (Nina Myers from 24)
  • Battlestar Galactica has been given a fourth season. Only 13 episodes at the moment, though.
  • Classic TV coming to YouTube?
  • Kristin’s got scoops and spoilers, including the return of a certain character to Supernatural.