Mork and Mindy reunited, Sofie Gråbøl and Stanley Tucci have Fortitude, and Rob Lowe’s a Pro

Film

  • Gal Gadot contracted for Justice League and Wonder Woman movies
  • Mike Newell to direct Day of the Triffids

Film casting

Trailers

  • Trailer for Oculus, with Katee Sackhoff and Karen Gillan

Canadian TV

New UK TV show casting

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

Are you nostalgic about something?

I’m running a bit low on nostalgia. Okay, I’m not really – there’s still plenty of shows piled up in the ‘Nostalgia Corner’ queue. However, the time needed to do them justice versus the time I actually have available most of the time aren’t always the same thing.

So in a somewhat radical move, for the first time since I opened the blog in 2006, I’m asking you gentle reader if you’d like to contribute your memories of a TV show from your youth to Nostalgia Corner. They can have aired anywhere in the world and you can write as much or as little as you want. The only criteria I have are:

  1. There should, if at all possible, be illustrative clips available on sites such as YouTube, Vimeo, the Daily Motion, et al that can be embedded in an entry
  2. They should either be in English or be available subtitled/dubbed into English.

Do I have any volunteers?

The Weekly Play

The Wednesday Play (on Thursday): Fable (1965)

Sometimes, plays can be used to illustrate a societal or political problem, through allegory or even fable. Sometimes, though, they can be too subtle for their own.

Fable, John Hopkins’ 1965 The Wednesday Play, was actually a rather daring piece – a commentary on race relations in the UK and South Africa that inverts the two countries’ societies to imagine a British racial apartheid, but one in which whites are the brutally oppressed, blacks the authoritarians running the system. Narrated by Keith Barron, the play contrasts the experiences of an oppressed white couple, Joan (Eileen Atkins) and Len (Ronald Lacey), with the middle-class, black, liberal writer Mark (Thomas Baptiste) living under house arrest with his wife Francesca (Barbara Assoon). As well as showing by analogy just how poorly black people were then treated by white people, it also castigated the efforts of white liberals in South Africa to challenge the regime, arguing that they showed little interest in doing anything except being self-righteous.

The play, which was also interspersed with stills and documentary footage of conflicts in South Africa, Vietnam and elsewhere, was powerful enough that its broadcast was initially postponed by several weeks because of fears that it would raise racial tensions in a forthcoming by-election in Leyton, East London, that involved a candidate who had previously lost his seat following a notoriously racist campaign in Birmingham. 

Disappointingly, however, the audience at the time didn’t quite understand Hopkins’ message. “I got a letter from a viewer which said ‘I really enjoyed that play. Boy, you showed them what would happen if they came to power, if they had the authority.’ He didn’t even need to specify who ‘they’ were.”

You can watch the play below, although unfortunately, this copy is from BBC4’s 2005 ‘TV on trial’ season, so involves a certain amount of on-screen ‘grafitti’. 

Bill Cosby’s NBC show, Jamie Alexander is Open, more Father Brown and a Psych remake

Film casting

Trailers

  • Trailer for Better Living Through Chemistry with Sam Rockwell and Olivia Wilde

UK TV

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

The BarrometerA Barrometer rating of 4

Third-episode verdict: Intelligence (CBS)

In the US: Mondays, 10pm/9pm CT, CBS

Three episodes in and there’s not much really to add since my review of the first episode about the very silly Intelligence, in which Sawyer from Lost in a US government secret agent with a computer chip in his brain and and Little Red Riding Hood from Once Upon A Time is his useless minder. It’s largely the same set-up as every other CBS procedural: a by-the-numbers team that together give Sawyer easily solvable missions that are largely meaningless sci-fi drivel, with by-the-numbers (foreign) baddies (usually Chinese). There’s also a tedious story plot about Sawyer’s ex-wife being a secret agent who may or may not have been/be a terrorist. There’s the occasional element that suggests that there’s at least some understanding of science and technology among the writers, but largely it all gets skirted in favour of, for example, things like edible explosives.

But I will say this: they really should have learned from The Bionic Woman reboot, since the three episodes have spent an awful long time showing us how awesome the Chinese version of Sawyer is and not actually giving us any real missions. On top of that, the actress they chose for the part was terrible and the producers decided that because she’s ‘evil’, she must be both sexual and ‘deviant’ (better for her to be punished, unlike the ‘good’ and passive Little Red Riding Hood), so it was an even worse decision than The Bionic Woman. But with no real idea of why Sawyer’s so vital a US asset beyond an ability to access computers, and with a much better idea of why his Chinese opposite is better, it does feel like we were watching a remake of a much better show we just haven’t seen yet.

With no real sign of any life in this one, a poor set-up, poorer scripts and everything else by the numbers, I’m saying this one’s a miss rather than a hit.

Barrometer rating: 4
Rob’s prediction: Will be cancelled by the end of the season