Wednesday’s “Trailer for The Butler with Oprah Winfrey, Maison close to close, and The Last Ship to sail” news

Film

Film casting

Trailers

  • Trailer for Lee Daniels’ The Butler with Oprah Winfrey, Jane Fonda and Forrest Whitaker
  • Trailer for Ender’s Game with Harrison Ford, Ben Kingsley et al

French TV

UK TV

US TV

US TV casting

  • Annet Mahendru and Alison Wright promoted to regulars on The Americans
  • Ioan Gruffudd and Raphael Sbarge to guest on Necessary Roughness

New US TV shows

UK TV

Mini-review: Doctor Who – 7×11 – The Crimson Horror

In the UK: Saturday, 6.15pm, 4th May 2013, BBC1/BBC1 HD. Available on the iPlayer

In the US: Saturday, 8pm/7c, 4th May 2013, BBC America

Not worth a full review, more a mini-review this, I think, since despite the presence of Diana Rigg (and daughter) in the cast, a reference to Tegan and a nice joke about Tom Tom (the sat nav, not the fourth Doctor), this was a pretty meh episode. It started off well enough, going for northern comedy and Victoriana, which are writer Mark Gatiss’s real strengths. Rigg was good, everyone was acting fine, and despite being Doctor-and-Clara-lite, it was engrossing, right down to Murray Gold’s Sherlock-riffs in the soundtrack.

But then it just sort of carried on, progressively becoming thinner, more predictable and less interesting as it tried to deport itself not as merely a comedy, but as a proper Doctor Who story, complete with evil, incredibly shit-looking beastie (we’re talking Invisible Enemy shit, here). Not even an Avengers joke, more references to Clara’s significance and a certain Sontaran getting to shoot people for a change could lift it from the “When’s this going to end, again?” Which is a shame, because as a comedy, it would have been a really good episode, I reckon.

Oh well, it’s Neil Gaiman doing Cybermen next week, albeit with the addition of a couple of kids to the companion line-up. Fingers crossed, it should be better.

Charley says: beware of electricity sub-stations

Inspired by Scarfolk, the English town that still lives in the 1970s, we’re continuing with this ‘ere blog’s latest feature: Charley says.

The 1970s was a terrible time, of course, where the risks to people from everything from electricity cables to water to other people could not be overstated. It was horrifying. Particularly the rabies.

To save the public from these threats – and themselves – the British government authorised a series of public information films designed to scare the living daylights out of anyone who watched them. And each week, I intend to scare the living daylights out of you with a public information film or two – watch them, as they might just save your life.

This week: electricity sub-stations. Don’t even think of playing frisbee near one, Jimmy.

Tuesday’s “Luke Evans is The Crow, an Ice Station Zebra remake and Sophia Myles transforms” news

Film

Film casting

UK TV

  • Casting on Page Eight sequels, including Christopher Walken and Winona Ryder
  • Casting on The Guilty, The 7.39 and Stella
  • Friday ratings: The Ice Cream Girls finishes with 4.23m viewers
  • Sunday ratings: Endeavour concludes with 4.89m viewers

US TV

New US TV show casting