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The CW’s upfronts 2012-3 – a rundown and clips from the new shows

Green Arrow

Time for the last of the upfronts. Okay, USA did its first upfronts yesterday, but didn’t really announce anything new, so let’s end with the traditional way to end the upfronts: following on from the main broadcast networks NBC, Fox, ABC and CBS, today we’re going to be looking at the ‘young female adult’-skewed The CW and what it has lined up for us for the 2012 to 2013 season.

The CW didn’t have much success last year with its new scripted shows: only Hart of Dixie survived, while Ringer and The Secret Circle both got cancelled. Meanwhile, some of its older shows are now limping alone, with Gossip Girl nearing the end, Supernatural‘s end date being eyed and Nikita looking as poor as it always did. The experiment of The LA Complex fell apart, leaving just 90210 to keep the network’s scripted dreams alive.

But CW president Mark Pedowitz promised more original programming when he joined the network, so this year, The CW is trying to give itself a shot in the arm with… more of the same. Yes, time to cash in on some past glories as well as emulate some other networks. Lined up for 2012-13 are:

  • Beauty and The Beast: based on the 1980s CBS show with Linda Hamilton, but starring The CW’s Smallville‘s Kristen Kreuk as the beauty in question
  • Arrow: Bourne-esque adaptation of DC’s superhero the Green Arrow, but not starring Justin Hartley who was the Green Arrow in Smallville. But that’s because of…
  • Emily Owen MD: …in which a new doctor discovers that hospital is no different from high school. Co-stars… Justin Hartley
  • Carrie Diaries: HBO’s Sex and the City‘s Carrie, when she was a teenager. Notably features Freema Agyeman from Doctor Who, though.
  • Cult: starring one of the guys from The CW’s Vampire Diaries and one of the girls from The CW’s Melrose Place, and sees the fans of a TV show recreating the on-screen crimes.

After the jump, the run-down, trailers for the Fall shows (Carrie Diaries and Cult are mid-season – sorry) and a schedule.

Continue reading “The CW’s upfronts 2012-3 – a rundown and clips from the new shows”

Friday’s “Partridge flies to Sky, bye bye Breakout Kings, Alex Proyas’s Gods of Egypt and Sean Bean’s 4th Reich” news

Film

Trailers

  • Trailer for The Words with Bradley Cooper
  • Teaser for Slasher with Elijah Wood

UK TV

US TV

  • Trailer for ABC Family’s Bunheads
  • Trailer for Political Animals with Sigourney Weaver
  • A&E cancels Breakout Kings

US TV pilots

  • USA picks up Paging Dr Freed (again) and Sirens, announces development slate
Classic TV

Nostaligia Corner: Arthur C Clarke’s Mysterious World (1980), World of Strange Powers (1985) and Universe (1994)

Arthur C Clarke's Mysterious World

There’s nothing like grainy TV and film footage and an authoritative-sounding narrator to really scare the crap out of people, particularly kids, with the mysterious and unexplained. This truism was very much proved with Arthur C Clarke’s Mysterious World, a 13-part TV series narrated by newsreader Gordon Honeycombe that looked at every bit of weirdness the world seemed to offer in those days: the Loch Ness Monster, the Yeti, Bigfoot, giant figures in the landscape, UFOs, the Tunguska explosion, giant squids, stone circles and more.

Bookended by science-fiction writer Arthur C Clarke, opining from Sri Lanka on how likely any of these things were, each episode went around the world to interview witnesses, take pictures and generally scare the crap out of you with the help of scary music and Honeycombe’s commentary. Not all of it was of the scary variety, however, with episodes looking at the ‘Antikythera mechanism’ (last seen in BBC4’s The 2,000 Year Old Computer a couple of weeks ago) and vitrified hill forts in Scotland, for example. Yet somehow, through the sheer power of suggestion, the creepy crystal skull logo, the equally scary theme tune and Gordon Honeycombe, it all still seemed terrifying, even when Clarke popped up at the end to invariably say he didn’t believe a word of it.

You can watch all of it on YouTube, so take your pick of how you want to frighten yourself with this playlist:

The show hit something of a vein in the public consciousness, with huge numbers of people watching it. It even got satirised by The Goodies in their LWT show.

So popular was Mysterious World that it launched a 13-part sequel show Arthur C Clarke’s World of Strange Powers, which followed in Mysterious World‘s footsteps by examining psychics, stigmata, clairvoyants and others, putting forward the best cases possible for their existence without any real scepticism whatsoever. It’s actually this series that most people remember, thanks to its focus on things that could really terrify, such as ghosts and poltergeists. However, whether it was because Anna Ford was now doing the narration or I was five years older, it all seemed less scary somehow.

Again, it’s all over YouTube, so choose which one you want to scare yourself stupid with from this playlist .

Nearly 10 years later, ITV returned to Clarke for yet more un-mined mysteries of the world, with Arthur C Clarke’s Mysterious Universe, this time narrated by Carol Vorderman. Following the same template as the earlier shows, this looked at everything from the mysteries of the pyramids and zombies through to appearances of the Virgin Mary and crop circles. Whether it was just because the footage was less grainy now, Carol Vorderman is no Gordon Honeycombe or I was 10 years older, it wasn’t scary at all, although you can decide for yourself with this playlist.

The shows didn’t have a huge cultural legacy, although the Divine Comedy did release a song called ‘Arthur C Clarke’s Mysterious World’.

However, once seen, never forgotten…

What’s that behind you, by the way?

The joy of premakes: The Empire Strikes Back, Ghostbusters, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Forrest Gump and Gone With The Wind

We all know abut remakes, right? You take an old movie or TV show and then make it again, updating it for today’s audiences. Think of Battlestar Galactica, Batman, Psycho et al.

So how about premakes? The idea here is to take a modern movie or TV show and then create from it an imagined original version made decades ago to show you how effects, etc, have changed over the years. Here’s what I mean.

Is there anything you’d like to see pre-made?

[via]

The joy of premakes: The Empire Strikes Back, Ghostbusters, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Forrest Gump and Gone With The Wind

We all know abut remakes, right? You take an old movie or TV show and then make it again, updating it for today’s audiences. Think of Battlestar Galactica, Batman, Psycho et al.

So how about premakes? The idea here is to take a modern movie or TV show and then create from it an imagined original version made decades ago to show you how effects, etc, have changed over the years. Here’s what I mean.

Is there anything you’d like to see pre-made?

[via]