Question of the week: what are the merits of sadness in drama?

As Sally Sparrow once said, “Sad is happy for deep people.” And indeed, there have been a whole load of miserable plays, TV programmes, films et al designed for smart people: I love Se7en (as a quote in the introduction to the BFI book on the movie says – or was it one of the special edition DVD commentaries? – “Of course I love Se7en – I’m an intellectual”), for example, and Callan and The Sandbaggers are so brilliant because they’re so bleak. Think of Turn Left and Midnight in the latest series of Doctor Who, as well as the fate of Donna in Journey’s End: better for bleak, no?

Over the last year, though, there’s been an increase in sad TV programmes on the Beeb: Wallander, The Day of the Triffids, Survivors, Paradox, Criminal Justice et al have all been deeply miserable. As Paradox shows, being miserable doesn’t mean being good, but does it help – the bleaker moments of Paradox were its best bits.

So today’s question (in parts) is:

Does being depressed, sad or miserable increase the chances of a show being good? Is sad happy for deep people? Are TV shows getting more depressing of late (thanks to the recession maybe?) And do you like watching sad shows?

As always, leave a comment with your answer or a link to your answer on your own blog.

OMG – new The Wire clips I haven’t seen – and they’re prequels!

OMG! Actual bits of The Wire I haven’t seen! These are all prequels that I think HBO put on its web site before the fifth season or stuck on a DVD or something, so some of you might have seen them already. But it’s actual The Wire footage I haven’t seen. I’d forgotten how joyous that felt.

Before the jump, when McNulty met Bunk for the first time. After the jump, it’s Young Omar and Prop Joe.

Continue reading “OMG – new The Wire clips I haven’t seen – and they’re prequels!”

Film

The other Sherlock Holmes movie of the year: that one starring Gareth David-Lloyd – you know, Ianto off Torchwood – and Dominic Keating from Enterprise and Desmond’s

Gareth David-Lloyd in Sherlock Holmes

Dominic Keating in copper

Now I’m not saying that Gareth David-Lloyd (Ianto off Torchwood) as Dr Watson, Ben Syder as Sherlock Holmes, and Dominic Keating from Enterprise and Desmond’s in a copper suit as some kind of villain, all against a backdrop of dinosaurs in London, is the worst idea in the world.

But…

Sherlock Holmes

…well would you? Watch it, I mean?

[via]

Matt LeBlanc auditions to play Matt LeBlanc in Showtime/BBC’s Episodes

Imagine you have a hit BBC sitcom and the US want to adapt it. In the UK, it’s Ian McKellen or Derek Jacobi who stars. In the US, it’s… Matt LeBlanc. Ruined huh?

Well that’s what happening with the BBC’s/Showtime’s Episodes. Except this whole process is the comedy, not the TV show. Matt LeBlanc plays Matt LeBlanc in the show, except for the show within the show, he has to audition to play Matt LeBlanc. Confusing, huh? Then watch this:

[via]