US TV

Remakes: any good ones?

Touching Evil

It can’t have escaped anyone’s notice that remakes – aka “format purchasing” – have become all the rage in the US of late (and other countries, too). The forthcoming Fall season has shows like Viva Laughlin (remake of the UK’s Viva Blackpool) and Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares (remake of the UK’s Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares) as well as existing remakes, such as Ugly Betty, The Office and many other minor shows on cable networks (eg Spouse Swap, Faking It, etc).

It’s a good plan. Why bother having to come up with new series when you can buy in existing successful series from other countries? And why risk having the audience being unable to relate to a different country filled with people who have funny accents and maybe even speak a different language when you can buy the format behind a show more cheaply and then make it yourself with your own cast and your own scripts?

However, there’s a realm of possible pain here. As you’ll have noticed from the demise of US versions of Coupling, Absolutely Fabulous and other shows, it’s possible to lose all the things made a show good in its native country when you remake it.

I’m assuming something like this happened when the networks failed to pick up a remake of BBC4’s The Thick of It. As we all know, The Thick of It is rather excellent, so quite why the US networks weren’t interested is unfathomable unless there were some bad cock-ups along the way.

Is it always the case that a remake has to be worse than the original?

Continue reading “Remakes: any good ones?”

News

Tuesday’s news of destiny

David Tennant cardboard cutout

This isn’t the greatest news in the world, no – it’s just a tribute

Doctor Who

  • Now you know where to order life-size David Tennants from
  • Guardian Media 100 [free registration required]: 15 is RTD; 24 is David Tennant, making him the most powerful actor in British television

Film

Theatre

British TV

US TV

Film

‘Standard’ accents in movies

Wimbledon

I watched Wimbledon at the weekend. I should probably say ‘endured’ or ‘was repulsed by’, thanks to the concept of Kirsten Dunst pairing with Paul Bettany – something only slightly less off-putting than Catherine Zeta with Sean Connery in Entrapment. But watched is the word I shall use for the moment.

Only, I’ve see a few Kirsten Dunst movies in my time and for the first time, I noticed something odd about her.

She has an American accent.

When did that happen? Isn’t she English? In fact, I hadn’t noticed her having any kind of accent at all until now.

Anyway, it occurs to me she’s probably always had an American accent and I am merely party to an extremely odd phenomenon, one perhaps you might share, too.

It’s the idea – no, not even idea, but gradual acclimatisation to American accents so that they become the default accents for movies.

Continue reading “‘Standard’ accents in movies”

UK TV

The Thick of It Extra on interactive

The Thick Of It interactive

Did you watch the brilliant The Thick of It special last week (if you didn’t, let Marie explain why you made a mistake)?

Brilliant, wasn’t it?

I taped it – well, got Bastard the PVR to record it, which amounts to the same thing if he’s feeling generous. However, that meant I missed out on pressing the red button at the end to watch the complementary “Opposition viewpoint” bit on interactive.

Fortunately, the lovely Beeb have put it on their broadband site and you can watch it provided you’ve got RealPlayer installed. Hoorah!