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  • Matthew Perry, Rita Wilson, Denis O’Hare et al to return for CBS All Access’s The Good Fight
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What have you been watching? Including Beyond, Sherlock, and Man Seeking Woman

It’s “What have you been watching?”, my chance to tell you what movies and TV I’ve been watching recently and your chance to recommend anything you’ve been watching. 

TV networks around the world are starting to crank into life, with a few old favourites returning to our screens and a few more new ones on their way this week (Canada – I’m looking at you here). That means that after the jump, as well as the latest episodes of Shooter and Sherlock, I’ll be looking at the return of Lethal Weapon, Man Seeking Woman, and Son of Zorn.

I’ve not yet had a chance to watch NBC’s gritty Wizard of Oz adaptation, Emerald City, from Friday, so I’ll be reviewing that separately on Wednesday. But the other major newbie out last week was…

Beyond (US: Freeform; UK: Available now on Netflix)
A gender-swapped insipid amalgam of every other Young Adult sci-fi/fantasy show you’ve ever watched, whether it be Twilight or even Freeform’s own Kyle XY, in which a young adult (Burkely Duffield in this case) discoveres he’s very, very special for some arbitrary reason and both a skulking conspiracy and a band of goodies want to recruit him to their respective teams.

Here, the conceit is that Duffield was knocked out when he was 12 years old and since then has been in a coma. Except during that time, his disembodied consciousness went to another realm – unimaginatively called The Realm – something that’s given him telekinetic/firestarting abilities. Waking up, he’s pursued by a ‘man in a yellow jacket’ (Peter Kelamis), as well as a foreign-sounding ‘ninja girl from The Matrix‘ (Dilan Gwyn), while having visions of an old man (Alex Diakun). Duffield not only has to recover his memories from that time in The Realm and try to escape those who would control him, he’s also got to get used to the new world of cellphones, Wikipedia and being a 12-year-old in a 24-year-old’s surprisingly unatrophied body. There’s also all the changes in his family, with younger brother now effectively the elder brother and his parents having separated.

There are moments in Beyond – most of them in the pilot – where the show’s almost cool, such as when Duffield uses his powers for the first time. There’s also a sweet charm to Duffield’s character, who tries to woo girls by talking about science and history, because that’s all he knows about, having missed out on half his life. Kelamis’s ‘yellow jacket’ is both sinister and amusing, and the introduction in episode 5 or so of a coma-girl with powers of her own was a welcome addition.

But I managed to sit through six episodes without finding anything much more than that, although maybe I should have held on a bit longer until Martin Donovan shows up as the Big Bad. There’s not much danger, nothing too exciting about The Realm beyond a few dogs. Duffield’s powers seem to consist of accidentally blowing things up a lot, which gets boring after a while. Gwyn is far less Trinity, far more Bella (but before she gets all cool and vampirey), constantly pining after Duffield but never actually doing much. 

The show also has a 24-year-old’s memory of history. So while it’s interesting we learn that US youth have in just 12 years gone from first making phone calls to talk to someone they like to texting them (something last week’s Lethal Weapon touches on, oddly enough), everything else exists in an oddly timeless vacuum. While we’re clearly in something like the present day, judging by the phones and the CSI:Miami-style floating displays and touchscreens behind invalids’ beds, Duffield doesn’t know about Apple Computers (iPod generation 2 released 2002) and his 12-year-old self had a bedroom adorned with original Star Wars and Empire Strikes Back posters. Meanwhile, Kelamis wears a pair of glasses straight out of 1988.

All in all, you’re probably better off watching Shadowhunters, if you’re going to be watching any YA fantasy shows.

Continue reading “What have you been watching? Including Beyond, Sherlock, and Man Seeking Woman”

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When’s that show you mentioned starting again, TMINE? Including The Brokenwood Mysteries

Every Friday, I let you know the latest announcements about when new, imported TV shows will finally be arriving on your screens – assuming anyone’s bought any, of course.

It’s the start of the year and there haven’t been that many acquisitions, so don’t be too surprised that I can’t give you too many new dates yet. In fact, I’ve only got one:

  • The Brokenwood Mysteries (New Zealand)
    Drama: February 24th, 8pm
    Episode reviews: 1

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