The Orville
US TV

Third-episode verdict: The Orville (US: Fox; UK: Fox UK)

In the US: Thursdays, 9/8c, Fox
In the UK: Acquired by Fox UK to air in Autumn

As I discovered while watching the first episode of Seth McFarlane’s new ‘pastiche’ of the Star Trek universe, it’s not actually a pastiche at all. In fact, it’s basically just Star Trek again, but with a few lewder jokes, a bit more workplace comedy and enough changes to names, places, species and Federations to make it ineligible for format-infringement lawsuits. Go into it expecting a slightly duller Star Trek, rather than a new Galaxy Quest, and you might even find something to enjoy.

Indeed, McFarlane himself says that he intends this to be something other than straight pastiche, swapping between outright comedy one episode to straight drama the next. Hopefully, the characters and their interplay will be what keeps us watching, he reckons.

So I went into the next two episodes with an open mind. Is it going to be a comedy this week? A romance? What?

Nope. It’s more Star Trek. As of episode two, we get a new title sequence and a theme tune that’s possibly even duller than Star Trek: Voyager‘s, despite the obvious attempts to emulate it and the fact it wasn’t thought humanly possible to have a duller title sequence than Star Trek: Voyager‘s. We also got what was more or less, bar a couple of changes, Star Trek‘s pilot episode, The Menagerie.

Episode three – directed by the show’s exec producer Brannon Braga (exec producer of Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Voyager, and Star Trek: Enterprise)  started out more promisingly with some jokes at the expense of the Star Trek holodecks. Said jokes were even funny for a change.

We then get… another old Star Trek: The Next Generation episode. I’m not sure exactly which one – any of the many trial episodes, such as The Measure of a Man, crossed with any of the “what line must we draw in accepting other people’s cultures?” episodes (eg The Host, Half a Life). For a bit of relevancy, the question under debate was “Should we perform sex-reassignment surgery on babies?”, although the waters were so muddied philosophically and the general intellectual tone of the debate was so low that by the end, the question was more “Can women make a contribution to society?” Still, that’s the state we’re living in right now, so maybe that discussion is as topical as trans rights is.

BUT IT WAS STILL STAR TREK AND NOT VERY GOOD STAR TREK AT THAT.

To be fair, in terms of scripting it’s at least as good as Star Trek: Voyager and most of the first couple of seasons of Star Trek: Enterprise. That’s not saying much, but it is a step up at least.

It’s equally fair to say that The Orville is the best acted, best written, unlicensed Star Trek cosplay with the best production values and special effects you’ll ever see. Like most cosplay, it adds little (here, a replicator that makes cannabis brownies), just remains in thrall to the original.

So if you want to watch Seth McFarlane in his own Star Trek, imagining he was once married to Adrianne Palicki, The Orville might be the show for you. Otherwise, Google “Star Trek funny episodes” and you’ll be bound to turn up something from the original shows that’s much much better.

Barrometer rating: 3

The Barrometer for TheOrville

Ryan Hansen Solves Crimes
News

Russell Tovey joins the Arrowverse; The President is Missing; Germanized; + more

Internet TV

  • David Gyasi, Indira Varma, Tamzin Merchant et al join Amazon’s Carnival Row
  • Trailer for YouTube Red’s Ryan Hansen Solves Crimes on Television

International TV

  • Mark Bonnar joins Channel 4/AMC (US)’s Humans
  • Daniel Mays and Sian Brooke join BBC Two/Amazon’s Good Omens

Australian TV

German TV

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

  • The CW developing: high school football drama and period reincarnation love epic Hold Fast
  • Fox developing: Lee Daniels culture-clash family comedy based on Israel’s Nevsu: A Young Multicultural Couple
  • …and drama adaptation of Lawrence Otis Graham’s Our Kind of People: Inside America’s Black Upper Class
  • Showtime developing: adaptation of Bill Clinton/James Patterson’s The President is Missing

New US TV show casting

  • Tamlyn Tomita promoted to regular on ABC’s The Good Doctor
  • Debi Mazar and Michael Maize to recur on Syfy’s Happy!
Marvels Inhumans
Airdates

When’s that show you mentioned starting, TMINE? Including Dynasty and Mindhunter

Every Friday, TMINE lets you know the latest announcements about when new imported TV shows will finally be arriving on UK screens – assuming anyone’s bought anything, of course

There’s been less acquisition activity this week than there was last week, but there’s been one biggie: ABC (US)’s Marvel’s Inhumans, which Sky1 has picked up to air some time in the Autumn. I haven’t seen it, but by all accounts, even shooting the first episode on IMAX equipment didn’t make it either good or interesting. Still, have a trailer for it now and I’ll let you know what it’s like once it’s aired:

Meanwhile, the redoubtable Walter has decided he’d quite like to present Yes (Israel)’s מלאך של אמא (Mama’s Angel). That’s not going to air until next Summer and nope, haven’t seen it either.

That leaves only two premiere dates, both for shows that I haven’t seen: Dynasty and Mindhunter. No, I don’t know why this category is called what it’s called.

Continue reading “When’s that show you mentioned starting, TMINE? Including Dynasty and Mindhunter”

Private Eyes
News

Private Eyes renewed; Sky1 acquires Inhumans, develops new sitcoms; HBO España’s Patria; + more

Canadian TV

Spanish TV

UK TV

New UK TV shows

US TV

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

Weekly Wonder Woman

Weekly Wonder Woman: Trinity #13, Justice League #29, Wonder Woman ’77 Meets The Bionic Woman #6, and Wonder Woman/Conan #1

Yes, it’s Weekly Wonder Woman – keeping you up to date on pretty much anything involving DC Comics’ premier superheroine, including which barbarians she’s hanging out with this month

With Wonder Woman coming out on Blu-Ray in the US this week, Warner Bros pulled out all the stops to promote it… by having a bunch of drones do some sky-writing over Los Angeles. I’m not quite sure what says ‘Wonder Woman’ about Los Angeles other than ‘Warner Bros has its offices here so we won’t have far to go for this’, but at least Warner put some footage up on the InterWeb for the few hundred million Americans who don’t live there (and the rest of the planet):

Maybe you had to be there.

Fortunately, we also got the final two of Lucy Davis’ marvellous ‘Etta Candy explains…’, the first about Ares, the god of war (extra bonus points to our Lucy for trying to pronounce in a Greek stylee), the second about ‘the Reinforcements’.

We also got another clip from the forthcoming Professor Marston & The Wonder Women:

Comics news

The only bit of Wondy (ish) comics news of the week was that Justice League is going to get a new writing team as of issue #34. Christopher Priest will be writing, Pete Woods on art, with Priest trying to add a bit more of a real-world aesthetic to the title:

“Is the Justice League still relevant? What are their goals and how do we define them? In the ‘real’ world, how would various societies around the globe view this pantheon of godlike beings?” Priest asked, saying that he intends to treat the series “more like a workplace drama,” and that — although there will be alien invasions and super villains to deal with — “the League’s greater challenge will be to define their place in this new and increasingly cynical age.”

Someone should probably tell him that Wondy isn’t just godlike, she is a goddess. Or a demi-goddess. Whatever DC editorial has agreed on this week anyway.

After the jump, we’ll be looking at this week’s crop of comics featuring Diana. We have exercises in counting up to three in Trinity #13, while over in Justice League #29, Diana administers some super tough love to her future son. Meanwhile, in Elseworlds team-up fun, we have the conclusion of Wonder Woman ’77 Meets The Bionic Woman in issue #6 and finally, we have the team up you’ve all been waiting for – it’s Wonder Woman meets Conan the Barbarian in Wonder Woman/Conan #1.

Continue reading “Weekly Wonder Woman: Trinity #13, Justice League #29, Wonder Woman ’77 Meets The Bionic Woman #6, and Wonder Woman/Conan #1”