Sitting Tennant

Friday’s Sitting Tennant (week 40, 2012)

Hebbie's Sitting Tennant

Sister Chastity's Sitting Tennant

Toby's Sitting Tennant

Does anyone here understand sign language?

  1. Hebbie: 40
  2. Sister Chastity, Toby: 30

Sitting Board of Winners 2012
January
Hebbie, Sister Chastity

February
Sister Chastity

March
Sister Chastity

April
Sister Chastity, Shilohforever

May
Hebbie, Sister Chastity

June
Hebbie, Sister Chastity

July
Hebbie

August/September
Toby, Sister Chastity

Got a picture of David Tennant sitting, lying down or in some indeterminate state in between? Then leave a link to it below or email me and if it’s judged suitable and doesn’t obviously infringe copyright, it will appear in the “Sitting Tennant” gallery. Don’t forget to include your name in the filename so I don’t get mixed up about who sent it to me.

The best pic in the stash each week will appear on Tuesday and get ten points; the runners up will appear on Friday (one per person who sends one in) and get five points.

Each month, I’ll name the best picture provider and then at the end of the year, the overall champion will be announced for 2012!

US TV

Look! It’s Mads Mikkelsen as Hannibal Lecter!

In case you don’t know, NBC and Bryan Fuller – the man responsible for Pushing Daisies, many of the best episodes of Heroes and the forthcoming failed reboot of The Munsters, Mockingbird Lane – is working on Hannibal, a prequel to both Silence of the Lambs and one of my favourite movies, Manhunter, in which everyone’s favourite cannibal serial killer Hannibal Lecter/Lecktor pals around with his future nemesis, Will Graham, solving crimes for the FBI.

Starring Mads Mikkelsen from Casino Royale as Hannibal Lecter, Hugh Dancy as Will Graham, Laurence Fishburne as Graham’s boss Jack Crawford and Gina Torres as Crawford’s wife, it’s due next year and here are some of the first pictures from it. I’m not sure about Hannibal’s dress sense – maybe it’s set in the 70s? – but it’s exciting to see him all the same.

Mads Mikkelsen as Hannibal Lecter

Mads Mikkelsen as Hannibal Lecter

Laurence Fishburne and Hugh Dancy in Hannibal

James Dancy as Will Graham in Hannbial

[via]

Friday’s “Arnie’s Legend of Conan, Channel 4’s new line-up, more Chicago Fire and Bravo’s cola wars” news

Doctor Who

Films

Trailers

  • Trailer for A Good Day To Die Hard
  • TV spot for Breaking Dawn – Part 2

UK TV

  • ITV3 acquires Global’s Bomb Girls
  • Channel 4‘s autumn and winter line-up
  • June Brown and Dawn French to star in Sue Perkins’ Heading Out
  • Trailer for series 4 of Misfits

US TV

  • Five more scripts for Chicago Fire
  • Wednesday ratings: Chicago Fire up 20%, Nashville steady, Arrow down 15%

US TV casting

New US TV shows

  • USA developing legal drama Shadow Counsel
  • Bravo developing Cola wars drama

New US TV show casting

The BarrometerA Barrometer rating of 1

Third-episode verdict: Arrow (The CW/Sky1)

In the US: Wednesdays, 8/7c, The CW
In the UK: Mondays, 8pm, Sky1
In Canada: Wednesdays, 9pm, CTV2
in Australia: Nine Network. Air date to be confirmed

And we have another winner from the Fall 2012 season. Arrow, somewhat unpromisingly based on a comics strip character virtually no one has ever heard of and who isn’t that much cop anyway, on a network with minimal viewers and that’s been almost exclusively targeting young women with the likes of Gossip Girl and America’s Next Top Model for years, has managed to turn in the closest we’ll probably ever get to Batman Begins: The Series.

As I noted in my review of the first episode, the show has its flaws, not the least of which is its entire premise, for which we can blame the original comic – a millionaire playboy, Oliver Queen, running around town, redistributing wealth and fighting crime after learning survivalist skills on a near-deserted island, with only a bow and arrow as a weapon. It also has an embarrassing voiceover, which ruins from the outset almost any real sense that the show might have some decent writers behind it.

But so far, it’s proven to be a remarkably good and tense watch. Stephen Amell is proving surprisingly charismatic as Oliver Queen, sometimes very Zen, sometimes very party boy, as the role needs it; it has excellent action sequences; the residual Smallville visual resemblance left behind by director David Nutter in the pilot episode has fortunately been exterminated; it has strong characters, both male and female, and it’s doing well at developing its supporting cast; it’s slowly dripping through back story and format, without descending into the formulaic; Dinah Lance, former Arrow girlfriend, and, judging by the third episode, still set to be the future Black Canary is being served well, as is Thea Queen, Oliver’s sister; there are some genuinely exciting cliffhangers; and it’s keeping most of the possible comic book implausibilities to a minimum.

True, some of them are still feeding through. Oliver Queen, stranded on an island for five years, not only has the physique of a protein-shake addict eating five whole chickens a day, but is somehow gifted with a computer hacker’s ability to search police databases and do forensic analysis – yet still needs to go to IT support to recover data from a damaged computer. Comic book villains China White (Martial Law‘s Kelly Hu) and Deadshot (Michael Rowe) turned up in the second and third episodes respectively, with Hu having to endure a white wig while Rowe got wrist guns and a targeting monocle – while that’s nothing compared to what their comic book characters have, it did somewhat ruin the show’s attempts to be gritty and realistic. There’s also the backstory involving Queen’s mother, which is feeling a bit silly already.

We also have Paul Blackthorne, who while a decent enough actor in shows like The River, The Dresden Files and The Gates, here seems to be having trouble believing the whole thing, never quite immersing himself in the role – something Strictly Come Dancing‘s own Colin Salmon is managing to do marvellously as the Green Arrow’s new step-dad.

But despite these failings, the show is just about as good as you’re going to get from a comic book show on The CW, easily trumping Smallville and pulling off the almost unimaginable feat of making Green Arrow look cool.

One to watch, if you like a comic book action show with at least a bit of thought put into it.

Barrometer rating: 1. Of course, the Barrometer might be biased since John Barrowman’s going to be a recurring star, starting from the fifth episode.