Thursday’s “Hobbit trailer, Royal Pains TV movie and James Gandolfini in HBO Criminal Justice remake” news

Film

Trailers

Theatre

French TV

  • Canal+ gets the go-ahead to acquire Direct 8 and Direct Star

US TV

New US TV shows

  • Ghost Whisperer producers sell dramas to ABC and CBS
  • NBC developing drama based on Midnight, Mass. comics
  • NBC picks up Jerry Bruckheimer comedy At Ease

US TV casting

New US TV show casting

  • James Gandolfini to star in HBO’s adaptation of BBC1’s Criminal Justice
  • Olivia Cooke joins Bates Motel, Rachel Boston joins Witches of East End, Dorian Missick to recur on Paging Dr Freed
  • Harrison Thomas joins Banshee

UK TV

Not review: Doctor Who – 7×3 – A Town Called Mercy

  

In the UK: It was on Saturday. It’s on the iPlayer now
In the US: It was also on Saturday.

Erm, I haven’t watched it yet. Busy, busy, busy. Frank has and so has Stuart, so I’d suggest you read their reviews, which undoubtedly will be better than what I would have thrown together.

But cowboys, filmed in the US, Toby Whithouse, Ben Browder – sounds like it could have been good. Was it? Better than a poke in the eye with a sharp stick – or two Chris Chibnall scripts in a row? What did you think?

The Wednesday Plays: Oedipus the King/Oedipus at Colonus/Antigone (1986)

As you might expect, the US isn’t the only country to adapt classic plays for television. The BBC, ITV and Channel 4 have obviously been putting on adaptions of classic plays almost for as long as they’ve been in existence.

However, unlike Shakespeare, for example, Greek tragedy is one genre that hasn’t seen many adaptations for British television. In June, the BFI gave a good sample of some of those adaptations, including one stage production of Electra for ITV that was broadcast entirely in Greek without subtitles.

However, one of the main catalysts for getting Greek tragedy onto the small screen and also radio was the writer/director Don Taylor. Taylor, whose career in theatre and television spanned decades, was responsible for numerous adaptations, sometimes of his own translations, including Euripides’ Helen for radio and Iphigenia at Aulis for the BBC. However, in 1986, he managed to adapt all three of Sophocles’ Theban plays – Oedipus the King, Oedipus at Colonus and Antigone – for the small screen as (surprisingly enough) The Theban Plays by Sophocles.

Starring the likes of Michael Pennington, Juliet Stevenson, John Gielgud, Anthony Quayle, John Shrapnel and Claire Bloom, all three productions are very theatrical and the translations are somewhat loose, but you’d be hard-pressed to find any better productions on TV anywhere.

Enjoy!

Continue reading “The Wednesday Plays: Oedipus the King/Oedipus at Colonus/Antigone (1986)”

Wednesday’s “Revolution sets a record, The Mob Doctor tanks and McG’s Alice in Wonderland” news

Film

US TV

New US TV shows