French TV

Review: Engrenages (Spiral) 4×7-4×8 (France: Canal+; UK: BBC Four)

In France: Last autumn
In the UK: Saturday 2 March, 9pm, BBC Four

Prepare yourself for much wailing and gnashing of teeth: I’m away for a week, so I won’t be able to review episodes 9 and 10 until next Thursday or so, I suspect. Of course, given these reviews are only getting as many as one comment each, maybe you’ll all live somehow. Let’s see how many comments this gets by the time I return, anyway.

Either way, let’s look at the two episodes that have just aired, in which Gilou proves that yes, he can be very smart, provided it’s criminal activity rather than police work, Karlsson proves that she’s great at defending everyone except herself – at least, when Pierre’s around – and Laure proves that Spiral will remember past continuity references and characters eventually, even if takes a year or two.

Welcome back, Sami!

Continue reading “Review: Engrenages (Spiral) 4×7-4×8 (France: Canal+; UK: BBC Four)”

US TV

Mini-review: Golden Boy 1×1 (CBS)

Golden Boy

In the US: Tuesdays, 10/9c, CBS

Not really worth a full-on review, since it’s so perfectly generic, I could recycle practically any other review I’ve ever written of a CBS cop drama and it would say more or less the same thing.

The basic idea is that the Robert Kennedy-alike Walter William Clark Jr (Theo James, who could see dead people in Sky Living’s horror show Bedlam) will become the youngest police commissioner in New York City history seven years from now, and when he’s interviewed about how he got to the top so quickly, we see in flashback the events that transpired along the way.

And it’s incredibly, incredibly generic. We have the slobby black partner a couple of years from retirement (Chi McBridge) and the ambitious backstabbing detective who’s intent on sabotaging Clark Jr’s obviously inevitable career trajectory (Kevin Alejandro from Southland). We have a token female detective who’s somewhere on the moral spectrum between those two. We have a wayward sister for our hero to look after.

All of which might be excusable if there were decent plots. But for a Golden Boy, he ain’t half stupid. There is literally no obvious insight that he can’t make, no obvious act of backstabbing that he won’t miss. The show should more probably be called Earnest Boy, because this isn’t a political animal like Robert Kennedy in the making (which someone who rose that quickly up the career ladder would really need to be).

So although, as with all CBS dramas, it is competently made, has a decent degree of verisimilitude and looks great, ignore it.

Tuesday’s “Fox renews The Following, New Girl et al, Derek’s 2nd series and Harrison Ford joins Anchorman 2” news

The Daily News will return on Wednesday 13th March. Have fun!

Film casting

UK TV

US TV

  • Fox renews The Following, New Girl, Raising Hope and The Mindy Project
  • Sunday ratings: The Bible gets 13.1m viewers, Vikings gets 6.2m…
  • Red Widow starts low

US TV casting

New US TV shows

  • NBC pushes Seed-alike Donor Party because it can’t find a lead
  • TNT adapting Claire DeWitt book series

New US TV show casting

  • Kyle MacLachlan joins NBC’s Believe
  • James Cromwell joins ABC’s Betrayal remake, Megalyn Echikunwoke and Cedric Sanders join ABC’s Influence, Rick Donald joins Friends With Better Lives
  • Naveen Andrews joins ABC’s Reckless, Alexis Carra joins ABC’s Mixology
  • Samaire Armstrong and Sam Hazeldine join ABC’s The Returned, Lenora Crichlow joins ABC’s Cullen brothers comedy
  • Ryan McPartlin joins TBS’s Do It Yourself, Scoot McNairy joins AMC’s Halt and Catch Fire
  • RZA to co-star in Fox’s Gang Related
  • Megan Dodds to star in NBC’s I Am Victor, Vinette Robinson joins NBC’s Assistance
  • Humphrey Ker joins NBC’s Holding Patterns
  • Emma Booth joins ABC’s Gothica
  • Lucien Laviscount joins The CW’s The Selection, Megan Follows joins Reign
  • Gloria Reuben, Enrico Colantoni and Marsha Mason to co-star in TNT’s Geena Davis pilot
  • Annie Ilonzeh joins NBC’s Hatfields & McCoys

Rant of the week: is there too little television on British TV?

So a few weeks ago, I asked if there was too much good television on at the moment. Today, I’m going to flip that on its head and ask if there is too little television on British TV.

First, note I didn’t say ‘good television’. Just television.

I’ll tell you why this is important. At first sight, it might appear that the simple answer – once we get over having a quality threshold – is that there is simply too much television at the moment. Channels and channels and channels of the stuff, day and night. No one can possibly watch it all.

Which is true. Of course, once you get rid of reality shows and repeats, and focus on new, scripted programming, suddenly there’s a whole lot less television to watch.

Now, I’ll tell you why I’m not so fussed about good. In this day and age, when there are so many channels, people and money are spread thinly. It’s not like in the good old days when there was only two places to go to if you wanted to work in TV – BBC and ITV – that meant there was a critical number of locations for talent to congregate and learn from one another the art and craft of script-writing.

And once upon a time, TV shows lasted for a long time. Go back to the 70s and 80s and the average BBC TV series was 13 episodes long. Doctor Who started out in the 60s running 52 weeks of the year. Eventually, it dropped down to 26 episodes a year, before heading to 14 in the 80s. When it returned, it stayed at 13-14 episodes, before coming down to the current total of about seven or so episodes a year. Sherlock, of course, is only three episodes at a time, as is Black Mirror and many other British shows hover at the three-six episode mark.

Okay, some might argue, that’s creatively all they need to be. Why prolong them to any more than that?

The short answer is because now there’s no longer anywhere for people train in and get practical experience of script-writing. The golden age of British TV that was the 60s, 70s and even the 80s threw up countless script-writing legends because there were so many long-running shows for them to train on.

Look over to the US and you’ll the same is still true. The average network TV show is either 13 or 24 episodes long. Some shows get even longer runs. Cable tends more towards 10 episodes and some shows are even shorter. But the average drama clocks in at that kind of count. And that’s important, because to produce that many number of episodes per year for that many shows on that many networks, you need a lot of writers. You need writers rooms, you need assistants, and a whole support network to come up with and produce those scripts. And once you’ve started off as an assistant and become a writer, over time, you can progress up the production ladder, becoming producer, executive producer and eventually a show runner.

Now, your first work isn’t going to be good. It’s probably going to be rubbish, in fact. But there’ll be people there to make it better. And the next time, what you write will be better, too. And no one will notice that your first bit of work wasn’t very good, because in a run of 13 episodes, who can remember who wrote the duff eighth episode that season?

Now look over here. Look at the UK short season run and you’ll soon discover that we’re in the thrall of the writer – of the few who can produce a limited number of good scripts when needed. Only a very few people get to write dramas and comedies in the UK, and when they’re given the opportunity, because of that shortage of writers, they invariably end up writing all the episodes in that season by themselves, with almost no one to help them.

The result is that not only do you quickly have a tailing off in quality from the first episode and into later episodes, everybody remembers who wrote that entire series and if it doesn’t get a good reaction, that writer never gets to work again or they’re too traumatised by the experience to want to.

The result again is too few writers, and nowhere for anyone to improve their craft. Which means that the likes of Steven Moffat (who honed his skills in long-running children’s TV show Press Gang) is asked to showrun both Doctor Who and Sherlock. He’s also pitching a new comedy, even though he’s not able to produce his current load of 13 episodes of Doctor Who and 3 episodes of Sherlock per year.

But it’s not his fault, is it? What other showrunners are there whom he could bring in, who aren’t already swamped? Andrew Davies? He has Mr Selfridge and the whole of War and Peace to adapt now. Mark Gatiss is already showrunning Sherlock with Moffat. Toby Whithouse, maybe, but we’ve had to wait until Being Human was cancelled to make that happen. Howard Overton is doing Misfits and Atlantis now. Of course, there’s the likes of Paul Abbott and Russell T Davies out there, too. I think it’s notable that both of them got their start in soap operas, shows that have exactly the set-up I’ve described, with writers rooms, producers, career progression and more. But the list is perishingly small and is like a never-ending game of musical chairs that has more seats than participants.

So I’m calling for more television on British TV. Not necessarily better TV, just more scripted TV, preferably with 10- or 13-episode runs, so that the UK can start to create a writing infrastructure for the TV industry, with people learning to write TV shows, often in collaboration with others. And then once that’s in place, when we no longer have the same 10 or 12 ‘name’ writers and show runners orbiting between primetime shows on all the channels, maybe the quality will come with it.

Monday’s “Zero Hour cancelled, Spy cancelled, Drop Dread Diva uncancelled and more Father Brown” news

Film casting

  • Omar Sy joins X-Men: Days of Future Past

Trailers

  • Trailer for Disconnect, with Jason Bateman, Hope Davis, Andrea Riseborough et al

UK TV

US TV

US TV casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting