What have you been watching this week? (w/e December 4)

I’m finally catching up after my time away

  • Dexter – Not sure about Sunday’s ep. It felt like it ignored the usual ground rules of Dexter and expected us to swallow a whole load of things that just weren’t plausible. For example, doesn’t Dexter have voicemail? Why would he have given his number to Arthur?
  • Misfits – I haven’t seen last night’s episode yet, but the first three have been very good. I think I actually prefer it to Being Human now – the characters feel a little more real, if you know what I mean.
  • Gavin & Stacey – the rap was a bit painful and watching Sheridan Smith and James Corden doing it as brother and sister got a bit creepy at times. Overall, though, I liked it – it didn’t feel like they were retreading old material more continuing previous themes. Also lost track of the number of times Stacey would do/say something and I thought to myself “That sounds very familiar.” That’s well-observed comedy for you.
  • Cast Offs – been catching up with this since I’m writing an article on it. I probably wouldn’t have watched it normally (six disabled characters are put on an island by Channel 4 and we get flashbacks to their lives) and Channel 4 are burning it off as quickly as they can. But I’m quite enjoying it. It’s very different from the usual TV dramas out there. Slowly paced and it’s obviously mostly intended to be educational, but it’s actually pretty good.
  • The Thick Of It – caught up with the last two episodes. Not as fun as the previous two series, primarily because you can’t help feel sorry for everyone, rather than laugh at them. But good moments in both.
  • Paradox – It has dialogue that makes your ears bleed with its awfulness. It has characters that are beyond stupid. People do moronic things for no good reason (eg We must never tell the disbelieving cop whose life we have just saved that his life was at risk. In fact, let’s not do the very very easy things when harder is much better). But it’s oddly compelling – kind of what FlashForward should have been in some ways. My theory (and probably everyone’s theory): sinister mad scientist bloke is sending the messages from the future back to himself.
  • The Increasingly Poor Decisions of Todd Margaret: One of Channel 4’s comedy pilots (available to view on YouTube). I tittered a little, although usually from the performances rather than the script, which was a bit poor. Miraculously, though, since David Cross (Arrested Development) was the co-writer/star, they managed to get cameos from Spike Jonze, Will Arnett and Kristen Schaal. Also featured Russell Tovey. Will Arnett had the best moment though.

What have you been watching though?

As always, no spoilers unless you’re going to use the <spoiler> </spoiler> tags, please. If you’ve reviewed something on your blog, you can put a link to it here rather than repeat yourself (although too many links and you might get killed by the spam filter).

Friday’s competing terrorists news

Doctor Who

Film

British TV

  • Five to put programmes on YouTube
  • Big Top gets 3.3m
  • Channel 4 to show HBO’s animated version of Ricky Gervais’s podcast
  • Shameless gets an eighth series
  • InBetweenersSimon Bird joins C4 comedy pilot Friday Night Dinner

US TV

Audio and radio play reviews

Review: Doctor Who – The Lost Stories – 01 – The Nightmare Fair

The Nightmare FairOver the years, there’s been a surprising amount of Doctor Who scripts that were never made: stories that fell afoul of budgetary and logistical issues; stories that were too similar to others; stories that were too awful for human consumption – the list of reasons for their non-existence goes on.

However, the biggest one-off clump of unmade Doctor Who stories came after the end of Colin Baker’s first full season, when Michael Grade decided to ‘rest’ the show. Eighteen months later, it returned with the 14-part The Trial of a Time Lord and the original ‘season 23’, upon which production had already begun, never saw the light of day.

At least not on tele. Some of them were novelised by Target back in the 80s/90s, but now Big Finish has taken it upon itself to adapt some of these missing season 23 stories as full cast audios; it’s also having a go at some other ‘lost stories’ from previous seasons in a new range of plays collectively called… well, have a guess.

The first of the range is The Nightmare Fair, former producer Graham Williams’ first solo script. He was given the task of writing a story that reintroduced the First Doctor’s whacky enemy, the Celestial Toymaker from (who’d have guessed it?) The Celestial Toymaker. To make things even easier, the story also had to be set in Blackpool.

Are you feeling the thrill yet?

Continue reading “Review: Doctor Who – The Lost Stories – 01 – The Nightmare Fair”

Thursday’s not-Scientology news

Film

British TV

US TV