Year: 2013
More US previews: Star-Crossed, The Tomorrow People and Camp
You’d think that the networks would want to hand their homework in on time, particularly when advertising dollars depend on it. But t no, ever since upfronts week a fortnight ago, NBC, CBS, The CW and others have slowly been finding trailers for shows that were eaten by the dog, hidden behind the sofa and the like. The latest arrivals are from The CW and NBC and include The Tomorrow People, Star-Crossed and Camp, which is going to air this July, for heaven’s sake. Watch them after the jump.
Continue reading “More US previews: Star-Crossed, The Tomorrow People and Camp”
Monday’s “Bye, bye Matt Smith, Karen Gillan: movie villain, more Hannibal and more Dan Harmon” news
Doctor Who
- Matt Smith definitely leaving Doctor Who
Film casting
- Leven Rambin joins Seven Minutes and Walter
- Melissa Leo joins The Equalizer
- Michael C Hall to star in Cold In July
- Karen Gillan to be a villain in Guardians of the Galaxy
- Rex Linn joins A Million Ways To Die in The West
- Tom Wilkinson joins Good People
Trailers
- Trailer for Prisoners with Hugh Jackman and Jack Gyllenhaal
- Trailer for Machete Kills with Danny Trejo, Sofia Vergara, Amber Heard et al
- 13-minute Man of Steel featurette
- 3-minute clip from Hammer of the Gods
Theatre
- Stephen Mangan and Matthew Macfadyen to play Jeeves and Wooster
Canadian TV
- Jessica Pare, Jerry O’Connell and Tommy Chong to guest on Satisfaction
UK TV
- Up The Women gets a second series
- Olivia Colman, Sophie Turner, Robert Pugh and Antonia Clarke join BBC2’s The Thirteenth Tale
- Citizen Khan gets a Christmas special
- BBC2 green lights: In and Out of the Kitchen adaptation
- Channel 4 to air entire ad break in French
- Thursday ratings: Up The Women starts okay
- Saturday ratings
US TV
- Dan Harmon coming back to Community
- Hannibal gets a second season
- Wednesday ratings
- Thursday ratings: Hannibal flat, Mike and Molly low
US TV casting
- Ashley Madekwe out of Revenge
- Alan Tudyk and Rex Lee out of Suburgatory
- Marisa Ramirez promoted to regular on Blue Bloods
- Sam Page and Molly Parker join House of Cards
New US TV shows
- Starz green lights: Ronald D Moore’s Outlander
- FX green lights: Death Pact with Tracy Morgan
New US TV show casting
- Judy Greer to star in FX comedy
- Agnes Bruckner to co-star in A&E’s Occult
What did you watch this week? Including Continuum, Arrested Development, The Fall, The Goodwin Games and The Black Dahlia
A little earlier than normal since I’m away tomorrow, 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, which are somewhat dwindling now ‘summer’ has arrived:
- Continuum (Showcase/SyFy)
- The Daily Show (Comedy Central)
- Don’t Trust The B—- (ABC)
- The Fall (BBC2/Netflix)
- Hannibal (NBC/Sky Living)
These are all going to be on in either the UK or the US, perhaps even both, but I can’t be sure which.
Now, some thoughts on some of the regulars and some of the shows I’m still trying:
- Arrested Development (Netflix): Well, I watched most of the first episode of the new Netflix series and laughed a couple of times, but that was about it. I wasn’t even sure at first I was watching the right episode. But I was. I hear, however, it gets better with episode three.
- Continuum (Showcase/SyFy): Shaping up to be quite a disappointing second season this, after the strong and clever narrative of the first season, but the arrival of Alessandro Juliani as a psychiatrist from the future was an intriguing twist, at least, and the final revelation was unexpected, too.
- The Fall (BBC2/Netflix): A meditation on modern misogyny, with Anderson’s cop staying calm under pressure from above and below for the terrible crime of having sex. It’s all handled very well, with the media’s participation in misogyny flagged up, and the parallels with the misogyny of the serial killer make it an inditement of patriarchy rather than just particular institutions.
- The Goodwin Games (Fox): Gave up in the middle of the second episode. Just not funny.
And in movies:
The Black Dahlia
Ah, the irony – a Brian De Palma film about misogyny! Based on a James McEllroy novel, it’s a fictional investigation into the real-life Black Dahlia murder, starring Josh Hartnett and Aaron Eckhart as boxing rivals-cum-police partners. However, most of the interest is in the female cast, with Scarlett Johansson as Eckhart’s ex-prostitute girlfriend, Hillary Swank superb as a rich girl Hartnett takes up with and the likes of Mia Kirshner as the murder victim and Fiona Shaw as Swank’s mother, with KD Lang, Jemima Rooper and Rose McGowan in bit parts. For the turgid first half it tries to have its cake and eat it, concerning itself with the fates of the women involved. But De Palma can’t avoid his exploitative tendencies and the second half is mostly distasteful misogyny, some of it admittedly in keeping with the 1950s time period. But it’s in the last 15 minutes that the whole thing falls apart in quite the most insane way – I have literally no idea what Shaw in particular is up to in one particular scene and it consequently veers into unplanned comedy. Steer well clear.
“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?
Thursday’s “Glenn Close joins Guardians of the Galaxy, Two And A Half Men to add a girl and Amazon’s Alpha House and Betas” news
The Daily News will return on Monday
Film casting
- Glenn Close joins Guardians of the Galaxy
Trailers
- Trailer for Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters
- Trailer for This Is The End, with Seth Rogen, James Franco and Emma Watson [NSFW]
UK TV
- Gordon Winter joins BBC2’s The Thirteenth Tale
- Tuesday’s ratings: final Shameless gets 1.3m
US TV
US TV casting
- Two And A Half Men to add a girl
- Tracy Letts to be a regular on Homeland
New US TV shows
- Amazon green lights: Alpha House and Betas
- Showtime developing Arnold Schwarzenegger‘s Pump
New US TV show casting
- Two roles on NBC’s Undateable to be recast
- Noah Taylor joins Cinemax’s Quarry
