Thankfully, some refused to move so much as an inch.
Month: September 2014
News: Amanda Pays returns to The Flash, a new Damon/Greengrass Bourne, Scott Glenn is a Stick + more
Film
- Matt Damon and Paul Greengrass to reunite for new Bourne movie?
Film casting
- Leslie Mann to play Audrey Griswold in National Lampoon’s Vacation reboot
Trailers
- New trailer for The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1
Theatre
- James Cromwell to play Rupert Murdoch in Rupert
Internet TV
- Scott Glenn joins Netflix’s Daredevil as Stick
French TV
- TF1 green lights: adaptation of Israel’s Channel 10’s Little Mom comedy
UK TV
- BBC2 renews: W1A
- Derek to finish with a special
US TV
- Trailer for season 2 of Helix
- Sunday ratings
- Friday Syfy ratings
US TV show casting
- Chiké Okonkwo to recur on Banshee
New US TV shows
- HBO developing: adaptation of Factory Man with Tom Hanks
- ABC developing: Jimmy Kimmel, Carson Daly comedy
- CBS developing: comedy Letters to My Daughter’s Future Therapist
New US TV show casting
- Amanda Pays to return as Dr Tina McGee in The CW’s The Flash
What have you been watching? Including Doctor Who, Really, Legends and You’re The Worst
It’s “What have you been watching?”, my chance to tell you what movies and TV I’ve been watching recently that I haven’t already reviewed and your chance to recommend things to everyone else (and me) in case I’ve missed them.
The usual “TMINE recommends” page features links to reviews of all the shows I’ve ever recommended, and there’s also the Reviews A-Z, for when you want to check more or less anything I’ve reviewed ever. And if you want to know when any of these shows are on in your area, there’s Locate TV – they’ll even email you a weekly schedule.
Things are very slowly starting to hot up in terms of new programming this month, although as per usual, I’ve utterly ignored everything new on British TV, including Secrets and Chasing Shadows. Elsewhere, I’ve (p)reviewed the first episodes of:
- Red Band Society (US: Fox)
- Z Nation (US: Syfy)
On top of that, I gave another Amazon Pilot a quick whirl.
Really (Amazon Prime)
Ooh, a relationship comedy that tells you how it really is. Gosh, how exciting. I haven’t seen one of those since Married. Written, directed and starring Jay Chandrasekhar, the big difference here is that it’s set in Chicago, also stars Sarah Chalke and Selma Blair, and in common with virtually every other couples comedy, it also features Mr Ali Larter (aka Hayes MacArthur). Otherwise, about as funny as tooth extraction and as incisive as a cheap fortune cookie.
After the jump, the regulars: Legends, Doctor Who and You’re The Worst.
Review: Z Nation 1×1 (Syfy)

In the US: Fridays, 10/9c, Syfy
When I watched Syfy’s Dominion in June and declared it to be a contender to be the worst TV programme ever made, I assumed that its awfulness was a mistake, the result of some bad creative decisions. Who would deliberately make something so terrible you’d rather sandpaper your own knees for a week than watch another episode?
But having watched Syfy’s Z Nation, I’m going to have to overturn this assumption because it seems that Syfy’s new programming strategy is to develop shows so deliberately bad that people can only watch them ironically. I suspect the root cause of it all was Sharknado, but to be honest, it doesn’t matter, because let’s face it, Syfy hasn’t made a decent original show in years.
Where Dominion tapped into what I assumed was a comparatively small market – people who like to watch angels firing guns at each other in quasi-futuristic settings based on movies that no one watched – Z Nation tries to exploit a much bigger audience: people who love The Walking Dead. This is, of course a show that airs on AMC, a network that normally breaks open the champagne whenever its ratings creep above three million, so The Walking Dead’s 14 million per episode is somewhat akin to having Scarlett Johansson and Chris Evans turn up with vintage Taittinger, a large block of gold and the deeds to a small Caribbean island in AMC’s offices every week.
Naturally, Syfy would try to tap into that audience with something that’s almost exactly the same, just cheaper and, given its new programming strategy, colossally stupid. Eschewing all that annoying characterisation and plotting that The Walking Dead’s showrunners mistakenly think people care about, Z Nation instead gets down to recreating the aesthetics of a low-budget Sega Megadrive first-person shooter from the 90s, with a motley bunch of highly untrained actors being given weapons and told to pretend to be Delta Force (sic) soldiers, prisoners, survivalists et al in a post-apocalyptic world where most people have been turned by a virus into zombies. Their prime directive? Hit things in the head a lot so that blood goes everywhere.
In common with the infinitely superior and thankfully zombie-free The Last Ship, there’s a last best chance for a cure who needs to be shepherded somewhere; there’s also a lone soldier at an HQ somewhere trying to rally the world together using the NSA’s communications systems, a Good Morning Vietnam microphone and, improbably for a a high-tech communications centre, a record player and some LPs.
But although there are one or two good ideas in there, everything about Z Nation’s execution is appalling. While there’s a certain element of irony in the show, which knows it’s not brilliant and wants to have a little fun at least, the dialogue is on a par with ‘All Your Base Are Belong To Us’, the plot utterly generic, the characters nicked wholesale from The Walking Dead’s supporting cast, the characterisation so perfunctory that you’d be hard-pressed even to remember any of the characters’ names, the acting sub-Wing Commander and the action so badly choreographed, you’ll assume that everyone’s under some form of remote control run using a 33.3k modem.
There are perhaps four surprises in the utterly generic first episode. One of these is that the show is co-created by Karl Schaefer, who co-created the deeply fun and interesting Eerie, Indiana back in the 1990s. You seriously would never have guessed from the drekfest on display. The second is that innovatively (spoiler alert) the show kills off the cast’s biggest name – Harold Perrineau from Lost – before the end, which means also that there’s one fewer reason to watch the show as a result.
And of the remaining surprises, the underlying hint of irony means that they end up having all the impact and drama of discovering that one crisp you were saving at the bottom of your pack of Golden Wonders is actually a little smaller than you were expecting. And most of the time, you’ll be laughing when you should be hiding behind the sofa.
If you make it through even the first 10 minutes, I really will be surprised. If you make it through to the end, I’ll assume it’s because you’re obligated to because of your job, you’re being blackmailed or you’ve undergone some kind of traumatic head wound. But even if you intend to watch it ironically, laughing at how bad it is, it’s worth remembering that The Strain at least has some qualities that will make watching it bearable; Z Nation just hopes that by being rubbish, you’ll watch it. Don’t waste your time.
News: National Lampoon reunion TV, Sky Living’s Stalker, Murder In The First renewed + more
Film casting
- Alec Baldwin and Danny Glover to star in Antron
Trailers
- Trailer for John Wick with Keanu Reeves
- Trailer for Serena with Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence
- Trailer for Playing It Cool with Chris Evans and Michelle Monaghan
Australian TV
- Season 2 of Danger 5 delayed by ISIS
UK TV
- Sky Living acquires: CBS’s Stalker
- Saturday ratings
New UK TV shows
- BBC1 to air Lenny Henry’s Rudy’s Rare Records pilot
US TV
- TNT renews: Murder In The First
- Friday ratings
US TV casting
- Owain Yeoman to play Benedict Arnold in Turn
- Mykelti Williamson joins Nashville
- Greg Ellis to recur on Hawaii Five-O
New US TV shows
- ABC green lights: Chevy Chase-Beverly D’Angelo comedy…
- …developing female buddy comedy I Love Your Ex
- AMC picks up: sci-fi drama Humans
- Fox developing: mob comedy 100 Grand
- NBC developing: comedy with Kevin Nealon and Susan Yeagley
New US TV show casting
- Luke Perry to recur on CBS’s CSI: Cyber
- Mandy Moore to recur on Fox’s Red Band Society
