The Weekly Play

The Wednesday Play: Anton Chekhov’s The Three Sisters (1970)

Anthony Hopkins in The Three Sisters

Although Chekhov’s slightly fallen out of favour these days, his work has featured in several TV productions over the years. One of the most notable versions of the 1900 play The Three Sisters was the BBC Play of the Month videotaped television production of 1970, directed by Cedric Messina.

The Three Sisters describes the lives and aspirations of the Prozorov family: sisters Olga (Eileen Atkins), Masha (Janet Suzman) and Irina (Michele Dotrice), and their brother Andrei (Anthony Hopkins). Brought up in Moscow but living in a provincial town for the past 11 years, the sisters dream of returning to the big city. However, the move never happens and the sisters are forced to find meaning in their current home.

Also starring Joss Ackland, the play is available on DVD but you can watch it below as it’s this week’s Wednesday Play.

News

News: The Code and Jack Irish renewed, Nicole Kidman and Reese Witherspoon tell Big Little Lies + more

Victorian Sherlock

Film casting

  • Matthew McConaughey to play Randall Flagg in Josh Boone’s adaptation of Stephen King’s The Stand

Trailers

Australian TV

UK TV

UK TV show casting

US TV

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

  • Regina King to star in FX’s Comedy, Daisy Betts joins Syfy’s Childhood’s End
  • Nicole Kidman and Reese Witherspoon to star in David E Kelley adaptation of Big Little Lies
  • Jeffrey Dean Morgan to play Joe DiMaggio in Lifetime’s Marilyn
  • Parminder Nagra and Jessalyn Gilsig join CBS’s Evil Men
  • Matt Barr joins TNT’s Jerry Bruckheimer drugs drama
Weekly Wonder Woman

Weekly Wonder Woman: Wonder Woman #36, Superman/Wonder Woman #13, Sensation Comics #15, Justice League #36

Wonder Woman #36

As usual, we can rely on DC Comics to time its releases of comics with impeccable precision. So, after weeks of a couple of guest appearances here and there by Diana in various comics, finally, we have all the usual main Wonder Woman titles out in the same week.

When last we left both Wonder Woman and Superman/Wonder Woman, we were waving goodbye to two A-teams: Brian Azzarello and Cliff Chiang were departing Wonder Woman, having concluded their three-year reboot of the character; meanwhile, Charles Soule and (predominantly) Tony Daniel were bidding both Superman and Wonder Woman adieu over on Superman/Wonder Woman.

Joining the fold last week, we had Meredith Finch and Brian Finch on Wonder Woman #36 and Peter J Tomasi and Doug Mahnke over on Superman/Wonder Woman #13. After the jump, I’ll be looking at both issues and wondering if we’ve got two new A-teams, two new B-teams or some other alphabetical combinations.

But we’re not done. Because on top of those two, we have the conclusion of Gilbert Hernandez’s two-parter in Sensation Comics Featuring Wonder Woman #15 and in Justice League #36, we have the arrival of Wonder Woman’s movie costume in the comic book world.

Continue reading “Weekly Wonder Woman: Wonder Woman #36, Superman/Wonder Woman #13, Sensation Comics #15, Justice League #36”

News: Rutger Hauer is a viking, ITV ‘updates’ Jekyll & Hyde, George Eads to leave CSI + more

Film

Trailers

Film casting

International TV

Internet TV

UK TV

New UK TV shows

New UK TV show casting

  • Rutger Hauer, Alexander Dreymon et al join the BBC’s The Last Kingdom

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

Yes, there’s even more to David Lynch’s Dune than you first thought – here’s 21 deleted scenes

So I’ll come clean and admit that David Lynch’s Dune is one of my favourite movies. It’s also one of the ones I can quote from the most, but I won’t subject you to that – I think you’d rather endure the Box than that.

As you might expect from such a huge book, it is also a long movie, very long for 1984 when it was released, coming in at 2h11. It could have been even longer, though, but producer Raffaella de Laurentiis had a clear strategy for stopping David Lynch from going too long: “For every day you run over budget, she told Lynch, a page will be ripped from the script. At random.”

Even so, Lynch filmed a lot more Dune than went into his first cut. Much of that extra material then got saved up and restored, complete with additional narration, for an extended Sci-fi channel version – which Lynch asked be credited to someone other than him, as he didn’t approve.

But that still wasn’t all the footage that Lynch filmed. Oh no. There was plenty, plenty more. And for fans of the book, some of those deleted scenes were actually very important moments: everything from Paul marrying Irulan and the death of Thufir Hawat through the funeral of Jamis all the way to the creation of the Water of Life by a baby sand worm.

But life is good. YouTube is kind. And you can watch all 21 additional scenes in the play list below*.

The spice must flow.

* Some of them you can see in the Extended version.