Let the fake advert speak for itself: Brontë Sister power dolls!
[via chunkyangel1]
Let the fake advert speak for itself: Brontë Sister power dolls!
[via chunkyangel1]
PLEASE WATCH THIS SHOW.
Is six years too soon for something to be a Lost Gem? Whatever the haggling on that one, it’s a moot point now, since a Lost Gem is about to be recovered (briefly).
PLEASE WATCH THIS SHOW.
The world is occasionally filled with small miracles. Tonight, starting at 2.45am, ITV1 in the UK has decided to reshow the US version of Touching Evil, one of the TV shows regularly flagged up in Top Ten Lists of “shows that should never have been cancelled”. Now you can take a trip back in time to 2005 and my fifth ever blog entry for a very exciting brief essay on why you should all watch it (and an exhortation that you should all watch season two of The Wire on FX, proof if any be needed that I’m right before everyone else, including Charlie Brooker, and you should all listen to me) or you can stick with me here for a few seconds for some updated reasons.
PLEASE WATCH THIS SHOW.
If you’re unfamiliar with both the UK version (which starred Robson Green, was created by Paul Abbott with occasional scripts from the likes of Russell T Davies) and the US version, the more literal plot is that it’s about a police detective who gets shot – in the head – and who comes back to work brain damaged, his life a mess and his personality altered. However, that brain damage also gives him certain insights and skills (nothing supernatural, unlike the UK version) that enable him to catch criminals better, even if it does make him obsessive and cross lines he genuinely shouldn’t cross.
The less literal theme of the show, as the title suggests, is the corrosive nature of evil – how it affects those who do it, those around them and above all the people who have to stop them. And it’s brilliant. It’s dark, it’s brilliant, and it isn’t afraid to go to places US TV almost never goes. And happy endings in it are very, very rare, which isn’t to say it isn’t also very funny at times.
Why’s it so good? Mainly, because of the writing. It has scripts from the likes of Bruno Heller (Rome, The Mentalist), Ronald D Moore (Battlestar Galactica), Anna Fricke (Everwood, Men in Trees, the forthcoming US version of Being Human) and Michael Angeli (Battlestar Galactica).
But it’s also exec-produced and occasionally directed by the Hughes Brothers (Dead Presidents, From Hell), who give the show a distinct air of unreality. You’re never quite sure if the whole thing is some near-death experience of the lead character’s; whether it is or it isn’t, it’s certainly beautiful to look at.
As if all that weren’t reason enough, there’s the cast. It stars Jeffrey Donovan from Burn Notice and the Oscar/BAFTA-nominated Vera Farmiga (Up in the Air), and co-stars Bradley Cooper (The Hangover, The A-Team) and Kevin Durand (Lost). They weren’t such big names back then so now you get to see them c2004, stretching their acting muscles.
It also features guest appearances by actors including Peter Wingfield (Highlander, Caprica), David Eigenberg (Sex and the City), Andrea Thompson (Babylon 5), Pruitt Taylor Vince (Deadwood) and the mighty Željko Ivanek (Damages, Heroes), who manages to out-do Ian McDiarmid, who played the same role in the UK original.
To whet your appetite and to show you what kind of series it is, here’s the first three minutes or so, followed the wonderfully dark title sequence and excellent theme tune (episode two onwards), and a clip of some of the series highlights, should you want to spoil it for yourself.
But whatever you do, do yourself a favour and watch it. It’s not out on DVD and it only gets repeated every five years (although you can scour YouTube for the eps if you miss one).
Film
Theatre
British TV
US TV

Busy, busy, busy, our Ali. Not only has she been to another book launch (Derek Blasberg’s Classy – Exceptional Advice for the Extremely Modern Lady) wearing denim – ooh, radical – not only has she been off helping the Relational Center, she’s just been nominated at the MTV Awards for best fight scene and declared 91st sexiest woman in the world by FHM.
And she’s off to the Monte Carlo Television Festival on behalf of Heroes. I’d be knackered if I were her.

Have you seen Ali Larter acting randomly? If so, let us know and we’ll tell everyone about it in “Random Acts of Ali Larter“
TheOctograms are a bunch of people who have re-created all sorts of Doctor Who, Sarah Jane etc scenes in Lego. They’re really very good at it. Here are the trailers for Flesh and Stone and The Time of Angels, for example. Not bad huh?
(via @jonnelledge)
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