Zach Galifianakis interviews Jennifer Lawrence, Naomi Watts, Christoph Waltz, Anne Hathaway and Amy Adams in his own inimitable style. Truth be told, it’ll be the weirdest thing you’ll watch today.
Year: 2013
Tuesday’s “3D Who, nine new BBC shows, Life’s Too Short’s life is short, SyFy’s The Man in The High Castle, and Arrow et al renewed” news
Doctor Who
- 50th anniversary special to be shot in 3D, shown in cinemas
- A returning classic monster [spoilers]
Film
- Jesse Armstrong to write feature version of his Black Mirror episode The Entire History of You for Robert Downey Jr
Comics
- Geoff Johns leaves Green Lantern after 10 years
Internet TV
- Ratings for House of Cards
UK TV
- BBC1 commissions Atlantis, Death Comes to Pemberley, Breakdown, The Interceptor, Jamaica Inn and Remember Me, recommissions Call The Midwife and Death in Paradise; BBC2 commissions Turks and Caicos and Salting The Battlefield; BBC4 commissions Burton and Taylor
- Life’s Too Short to finish with one-hour special featuring Val Kilmer
- YouTube to launch on Freesat
- Trailer for ITV’s Lightfields
- Sunday ratings: Mr Selfridge beats the Baftas
US TV
- The CW renews Supernatural, The Vampire Diaries and Arrow
- G4 to rebrand as The Esquire Network
- Sunday ratings
- Sunday cable ratings: The Walking Dead returns to record-breaking series high
US TV casting
- Lisa Edelstein to guest on Scandal
New US TV shows
- Frank Spotnitz to adapt The Man In The High Castle for SyFy
- Warner to Game of Thrones the Wizard of Oz with Red Brick Road
- Trailer for Ray Donovan with Liev Schreiber
New US TV show casting
- Casting on Chuck Lorre’s CBS pilot Mom
- Andre Braugher to co-star in Fox’s Andy Samberg comedy
- Thomas Kretschmann and Oliver Jackson-Cohen join NBC’s Dracula
- Maggie Lawson to star in ABC’s Cullen Brothers comedy
- Josh Holloway to star in CBS’s Intelligence
Question of the week: is there too much good television on at the moment?
If you’ve been reading my blog since the start of the year – you happy few – you’ll have noticed that I’ve been struggling to watch all the TV that’s been airing. Even putting to one side the rubbish TV that I’ve been contractually obligated to watch because of the blog, it’s still a bit of a struggle to watch just the good stuff. Why, over the weekend alone, there was two hours of Spiral, an hour of Mr Selfridge, an hour of Shameless (US) and, yes, an hour of Top Gear. And I don’t think that’s just because it was the weekend or BBC4’s stupid transmission schedule. Netflix has just pumped out 13 episodes of House of Cards in one go and practically every night of the week has a good couple of hours somewhere.
Now, admittedly I’m an outlier, since I do scour the planet’s TV schedules, looking for stuff to watch. So to work out whether I’m just unrepresentative or not, today’s question is a simple one:
Is there too much good television on at the moment?
As always, answers below or on your own blog?
Monday “NBC’s disasters, returning Alan Partridge favourites, James Lipton’s Arrested Development plus more Mr Selfridge” news
Film
- The return of familiar Alan Partridge characters for the movie
- Tarantino planning Django/Basterds trrilogy
Film casting
- Saoirse Ronan joins How To Catch A Monster
- Ralph Fiennes to star in Sands
- Jessica Alba to star in Weightless
Trailers
- Trailer for Hours, starring Paul Walker
UK TV
- A second series for Mr Selfridge
- Up to 40 hours of content to premiere on the iPlayer this year
- TCM acquires Longmire
- William Gaminara leaves Silent Witness
- Alison Steadman and Larry Lamb reunited for Love And Marriage
- Dougray Scott joins The Wrong Mans
- Thursday ratings
US TV
- NBC’s Do No Harm cancelled…
- …Christina Applegate leaves NBC’s Up All Night…
- …NBC pulls 1600 Penn for a week
- Thursday ratings: Do No Harm drops 22%, Community up
- Friday ratings: Touch down
US TV casting
- Chin Han joins Arrow
- Max Fowler joins The Killing
- Once Upon A Time character returning [spoilers]
- James Lipton returning to Arrested Development
New US TV shows
- NBC’s Wonderland pushed off-cycle
- HBO greenlights: Damon Lindelof’s The Leftovers
- Showtime greenlights: The Affair
New US TV show casting
- Kim Raver, Scott Grimes and Gillian Alexy to star in CBS’s NCIS: LA spin-off
- Christina Ricci to star in NBC’s Girlfriend in a Coma, Parker Posey to star in DJ Nash project
- Neighbours‘ Adelaide Kane to star as Mary Queen of Scots in The CW’s Reign
- Aimee Teegarden to star in The CW’s Oxygen
- Jonathan Banks joins NBC’s Bloodline
- Jonathan Groff to star in HBO gay friends comedy
- Rose McIver to recur on Showtime’s Masters of Sex
- Casting on HBO’s Silicon Valley
What did you watch this week? Including Arrow, 30 Rock, Banshee, Charlie Brooker’s Weekly Wipe and Elementary
It’s “What did you watch this week?”, my chance to tell you what I movies and TV I’ve watched this week that I haven’t already reviewed and your chance to recommend things to everyone else (and me) in case I’ve missed them.
First, the usual recommendations: Archer, Arrow, Banshee, Being Human (US), The Daily Show, Cougar Town, Elementary, Go On, Modern Family, Mr Selfridge, Shameless, Spartacus, Suits, Top Gear and Vegas. These are all going to be on in either the UK or the US, perhaps even both, but I can’t be sure which.
Don’t forget, UK readers – season 4 of Spiral aka Engrenages will start tomorrow on BBC4 at 9pm. Two episodes, of course. Anyone want episode-by-episode reviews?
I tried to watch Derek, Ricky Gervais’s new ‘comedy’, but after five minutes of offensive, unwatchable, poorly acted cobblers, we switched off. New Yes Prime Minister got given its notice after two episodes, because despite attempts to update it for modern politics, it still feels like an 80s show with 80s characters, yet at the same time isn’t faithful enough to them to work.
Still in the viewing queue: this week’s episode of The Doctor Blake Mysteries as well as most of House of Cards and The Carrie Diaries, which I suspect might never get watched. But that’s about it. Except for Community, which finally returned last night. Normally I’d just recommend it straight off, but without Dan Harmon as show runner, I’m going to watch the ep then decide, since the signs have not been good.
Now, some thoughts on the regulars.
- 30 Rock: A pretty poor finale, redeemed by about 15 minutes of quality material. But then, that’s pretty much what the first episode was like, so that’s probably appropriate, and it did have some fun things to say about women, work and childcare at the same time. Goodbye Liz Lemon – you were great while you were here.
- The Americans: A really good second episode that had all the good qualities of the first, but with added spy evilness on the part of the KGB/our heroes, as well as guest impersonations of Casper Weinberger and British defence secretary John Nott. The end part really makes you sympathise with the Soviets. Plus we finally have some actual Russians, speaking Russians, which contrasts well with ‘the Americans’ themselves.
- Arrow: On the plus side of Arrow, something I haven’t mentioned is that the producers have absolutely no reverence for the comics: they’ll use what they want and change what doesn’t fit. Case in point: the arrival of (spoiler)Slade Wilson, aka Deathstroke, this week. Now they’ve cast Spartacus‘s Manu Bennett in the role, simply because he’s so cool, and they’ve simply made his character Australian and a member of the Australian SIS as a result. Marvellous.
- Banshee: Unlike Arrow, Banshee wants everyone to be American. So even though they’ve got a New Zealander in the lead role (he was one of the Wests in Outrageous Fortune) and a Dane as the villain, they’re still making them pretend to be Americans. Last week’s episode was a characteristic mix of the ludicrous and the great, so I encourage you all to give it a try.
- Being Human (US): They’re starting to hint at an Aidan and Sally relationship, as per the original, I notice, which is intriguing. I’m also curious about what’s happened to Josh’s family, given he has no reason not to see them any more.
- Charlie Brooker’s Weekly Wipe: Basically, just like all his other Wipes but with less to say, a weird attempt at a collaborative movie review feature and a more inspired “reading out of comments from the Internet”. Not his best, but still watchable.
- Cougar Town: Ooh! The writers remembered that everyone is supposed to have a job.
- Elementary: An odd choice for the post-Superbowl episode, with very little to commend it, but last night’s featuring not just John Hannah in full Scottish mode but also an ex member of The Unit was a big improvement. It was also one of the first episodes that felt like a proper Holmes story, too, with a few references here and there to the originals. It also raised the intriguing suggestion that the reason that Holmes doesn’t feel like Holmes is because he needs drugs and now he’s sober, he’s not the man he used to be as a result. Could be a good narrative direction they’re going to go in there.
- Spartacus: Julius Caesar has arrived! Otherwise, a largely unremarkable episode.
- Suits: Two fabulous episodes made even more fabulous by Wendell Pierce (Bunk from The Wire) and the return of (spoiler alert)Daniel Hardman. Gives House of Cards a run for its money in terms of manipulations.
- Vegas: A bit more for Carrie Anne Moss to do this week, but her character is so lifeless, that’s still not much. But a good episode and I wasn’t expecting many of the twists the show turned up this week, either.
“What did you watch this week?” is your chance to recommend to friends and fellow blog readers the TV and films that they might be missing or should avoid – and for me to do mini-reviews of everything I’ve watched. Since we live in the fabulous world of Internet catch-up services like the iPlayer and Hulu, why not tell your fellow readers what you’ve seen so they can see the good stuff they might have missed?
