The West Wing’s latest effect on politics: the Big Block of Cheese Day

The West Wing was a show about politics that also had an effect on politics – many of Tony Blair’s advisors were avid West Wing fans, for example, and the show’s heady brand of liberal optimism about politics affected them, too.

However, perhaps one of the strangest effects of the show, nearly a decade after it finally left our screens, was ‘the Big Block of Cheese Day’.

Last year, the White House launched a virtual Big Block of Cheese Day. You knew about that, right? Perhaps not.

Recognising it might have been a little too low profile last year, this year, it’s got a whole bunch of The West Wing‘s cast together to promote the second Big Block of Cheese Day. What would you like to talk about?

News: In The Flesh cancelled, Gotham, Empire renewed, Twin Peaks returning characters, Chuck joins Heroes + more

Film casting

Trailers

UK TV

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

  • Mel Brooks, Jimmy Kimmel, Rob Reiner et al to guest on FX’s The Comedians
  • Joe Manganiello, Lea Michele, Abigail Breslin et al to star on Fox’s Scream Queens
  • Sheryl Lee and Dana Ashbrook to return for Showtime’s Twin Peaks
  • Mary Steenburgen joins Fox’s The Last Man on Earth
  • Gary Sinise to star in CBS’s Criminal Minds spin-off
  • Zachary Levi to star in NBC’s Heroes Reborn
Streaming TV

Review: The Man In The High Castle 1×1 (US/UK: Amazon Instant Video)

The Man In the High Castle

In the US: Free to stream on Amazon Instant Video
In the UK: Free to stream on Amazon Instant Video

Packing more great, mind-warping ideas into even one short story than many authors achieve in their lifetime, Philip K Dick is (rightly) considered one of the best science-fiction authors who has ever lived. However, his stories can be hard to adapt. Even some of his easier, longer novels, such as Through A Scanner Darkly, which could be taken more or less straight off the page, still needed some imaginative thinking to depict faithfully and the end result, with its massively downbeat ending, still wasn’t the most accessible of works.

Most of his stories, however, are shorter and involve small people in the midst of big ideas, making them much harder to adapt. Much of Blade Runner’s source, Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep?, actually revolves around the protagonist’s efforts to please his wife by purchasing a real, rather than synthetic sheep as a pet – and the problems of having children in a radioactive environment, thus necessitating his lead codpiece. Total Recall, based on We Can Remember It For You Wholesale, involves a man discovering that he’d inadvertently saved the world from alien hamsters, while Minority Report is more an intellectual exercise about how predicting the future can affect that future – as well as future predictions.

Dick’s Hugo Award-winning The Man In The High Castle is as similarly reality- and identity-wiping as the rest of his work, detailing an alternative reality in which the Nazis and the Japanese win the Second World War and take over the world. The two empires partition the US, and the book details the alternative history and examines how Americans, as well as their rulers, live in this reality. ‘The Man In the High Castle’ is an author who suggests that this is an alternative reality and that history is actually something completely different – although in true Dick fashion, reality turns out to be more fluid and unreliable under both the characters and readers’ feet. Similarly to Dick’s other stories, there’s little plot per se and much of the focus is on smaller characters with small concerns, such as how to run their business to appeal to the new Japanese rulers and how marriages are affected.

Nevertheless, for the past few years, attempts have been made to turn The Man In The High Castle into a TV series. The first efforts started in 2010, backed by the BBC and Blade Runner’s director Ridley Scott. When that fell through, Scott turned to the Syfy channel in 2013, bringing on board X-Files writer Frank Spotnitz. And when that never happened, Scott went to Amazon where finally he got some traction.

There were three big questions at this point, of course. The first was how to turn such a plot-free and inconclusive but much-revered and also potentially inflammatory source into a multiple-episode TV series. The second was whether Spotnitz, who’s been producing hackneyed action scripts for shows such as Strike Back, Hunted and Transporter: The Series for years now, was someone who still had the skills to adapt it. And the third was whether Amazon, very much the also-ran in online programming compared to Netflix, could produce something genuinely good (Transparent apart).

While we don’t quite have the answer, Amazon so far only giving us a pilot episode, it’s fair to say that Frank has shown us the way and given us potentially Amazon’s first genuine series to match House of Cards. Here’s a clip:

Continue reading “Review: The Man In The High Castle 1×1 (US/UK: Amazon Instant Video)”

Weekly Wonder Woman

Weekly Wonder Woman: Superman/Wonder Woman #14-15, Injustice: Gods Among Us: Year Three #16, Wonder Woman ’77 #2, Sensation Comics #19-21, Justice League: Throne of Atlantis

Superman/Wonder Woman

Lots to do today in the first Friday Weekly Wonder Woman, with not only this week’s new releases to deal with, but also playing catch up on the ones I missed reviewing over Christmas. All this despite there already having been a WWW this week already – it truly is a golden age, if not the actual Golden Age.

So after the jump, a look at Superman/Wonder Woman issues 14 and 15, which have some exciting revelations and returning arch enemies, another Injustice involving Diana punching Sinestro a lot, the second Wonder Woman ’77 continues the action down the disco and three whole issues of Sensation Comics look at everything from Wonder Woman’s inspiration of female soldiers through to people Instagramming her backside.

And, oh yes, there was another Justice League movie released this week in the US. Guess who’s in that, too?

Continue reading “Weekly Wonder Woman: Superman/Wonder Woman #14-15, Injustice: Gods Among Us: Year Three #16, Wonder Woman ’77 #2, Sensation Comics #19-21, Justice League: Throne of Atlantis”

News

News: William Shatner to voice The Clangers, RTD’s AIDS drama, Sheridan Smith is Inside No 9 + more

The new Tracy Brothers in Thunderbirds

Film

Film casting

Trailers

  • Trailer for Cymbeline adaptation Anarchy with Ethan Hawke, Ed Harris, Milla Jovovich et al
  • Trailer for Get Hard with Will Ferrell and Kevin Hart

French TV

Internet TV

  • Ron Howard to re-record narration for chronological season four of Arrested Development

UK TV

UK TV show casting

  • Sheridan Smith, Jack Whitehall and Julie Hesmondhalgh to guest on Inside No 9

New UK TV shows

New UK TV show casting

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

  • Luis Guzman and Finesse Mithcell to recur on Showtime’s Roadies
  • Billy Burke and Kristen Connolly join CBS’s Zoo