The BarrometerA Barrometer rating of 4

Third-episode verdict: Time After Time (US: ABC)

In the US: Sundays, 9/8c, ABC

I ended my review of the first two episodes of Time After Time – Kevin Williamson’s reimagining of the 1979 movie in which Jack The Ripper steals HG Wells’ time machine and journeys into present day New York, where Wells has to hunt him down – with a prediction. Given virtually the entire movie’s script had been exhausted by the end of the first two hours of the show, whither next for the series?

Maybe it’ll be “hunt the Ripper” every week or maybe it’ll start to explore Wells’ other novels… Everything’s to play for with episode three then. More of the tedious same or something a bit different. Has Williamson run out of ideas or does he still have some gumption? We’ll soon see.

However, we might have to wait a little longer to find out.

Episode three has two strands. The first half hour or so appears to set up Time After Time as the new Forever, with gentlemanly HG Wells (Freddie Stroma) and his quaint oldy-timey manners flirting away with insanely bland museum curator Génesis Rodríguez. Meanwhile, evil Jack the Ripper (Josh Bowman) continues the main theme of the first two episodes, by alternating between making threatening phone calls to Stroma and hacking various people to death. 

The unifying theme between the two? Marvelling at and being perplexed by modern technology, with Stroma delighted by the Internet, cars and talking SatNavs, Bowman excited by iPhones’ video capabilities and the burrito-heating properties of microwaves – if only he could find the button to open them.

It’s the second half of the episode that changes the show’s direction, since it quickly becomes apparent that literally everyone knows who HG Wells and Jack the Ripper are. Everyone. Because he’s got a time machine and in the future, he’s going to go back in time to their pasts and they’re going to find out about that somehow. And keep it a secret from him because he won’t know yet. 

Everyone? Really? Yep. That bloke who stalked Stroma in the pilot? He knows. That bloke’s mum? Even she knows. 

And that shifts everything. So, we’ve got some kind of odd conspiracy theory plot for Wells to deal with on the one hand. On the other, something odd is going on with Bowman. It looks like business as usual as he romances Jennifer Ferrin (The Knick, Falling Water, Falling Skies, Hell on Wheels), but then that goes in a very different direction than the one you’d expect.

All the same, despite this slightly surprising bit of plotting, this is still at heart the reasonably stupid, slightly unpleasant show of the first two episodes. As well as inventing the time machine, Wells apparently also invented lasers and quantum mechanics a few years early. Jack can viciously stab someone to death with a kitchen knife and not even wrinkle the suit he’s wearing, let alone get it bloody. The two of them speak almost fluent modern New Yorkese, and beyond one or two vestigial Victorian English manners like saying ‘please’ and ‘thank you’, appear to have entirely acclimatised through osmosis to modern American manners, too. Before you know it, they’ll be tipping a minimum of 20% without anyone telling them to, like some modern day Muad’dibs.

The leads are appealing, the subject matter is intriguing, but ultimately this is a very bad implementation of a potentially good idea. So I won’t be sticking with Time After Time any longer to see if it gets better. Or less stabby.

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Weekly Wonder Woman

Weekly Wonder Woman: Wonder Woman #18, Batman ’66 Meets Wonder Woman ’77 #8, Justice League/Power Rangers #3

The talk of the past week has been all about the new Wonder Woman movie. Again. Although, to be fair, we have had a rather impressive new poster (above) and a rather shiny new trailer to mull over.

Lots to discuss in that, obviously, although Diana flying, Dr Poison et al have all been hinted at elsewhere:

  1. Pretty much everything revealed about the plot chimes with what was revealed by IMDb last week
  2. At the very least, Diana has a secret and it seems to involve the ability to shoot energy out of her bracelets, much to her own surprise
  3. Fan favourite Artemis, the former Wonder Woman and newly revealed as bi current star of Red Hood & The Outlaws, makes an appearance
  4. She’s played by none other than Ann Wolfe, who’s probably the best fighter in the history of women’s boxing
  5. Diana thinks London’s hideous. Then again, it’s 1917/1918 and she’s probably already had to sail past the still-working wharfs before getting to Tower Bridge, so she probably would think that.

Elsewhere, Greg Rucka and Liam Sharp’s run on Wonder Woman is currently part of an exhibit at the Israeli Museum of Caricature and Comics in Holon, Israel. And if you’re a big buyer of cereals, now’s the time to switch to Cheerios in the US, since they feature a whole bunch of DC comics and artwork, including Diana as drawn by Neal Adams.

And on TV, NBC’s Powerless not only revealed Themyscira’s (current?) time zone…

Themyscira's time zone revealed on Powerless

…it also hinted that the technology used in Diana’s invisible plane is being made available to the manufacturers of children’s toys.

The box for the toy Invisible Jet

Invisible jet toy under construction

Can’t imagine that ending badly.

After the jump, a look at the latest DC comics to feature our Diana: Wonder Woman #18, Batman ’66 Meets Wonder Woman ’77 #8 and Justice League/Power Rangers #3. But not in that order.

See you in a mo…

Continue reading “Weekly Wonder Woman: Wonder Woman #18, Batman ’66 Meets Wonder Woman ’77 #8, Justice League/Power Rangers #3”

The BarrometerA Barrometer rating of 3

Third-episode verdict: Taken (US: NBC; UK: Amazon)

In the US: Monday, 10/9c, NBC
In the UK: Tuesdays, Amazon

Three episodes into NBC’s Taken, a prequel of sorts to the movie franchise, it’s now reasonably clear that the show wants even less to do with Liam Neeson’s European family drama than the first episode intimated. Instead, what it really wants to be doing is a slightly smarter version of 24, but without the full-on, balls-out belief in the efficacy of torture that being on the Fox network brings.

What it really doesn’t want to do is have prequel Liam (Clive Standen) acting in any way even remotely resembling Liam Neeson did in the movies. Things like being a father, working by himself for no-one but himself, having contacts. That kind of thing.

So, each week since the pilot, we’ve had our Clive off with his team, doing team things together, at the behest of boss Jennifer Beals. He’s not learning his very particular set of skills, either, since he already has them. Unlike in the pilot, though, there’s absolutely no reference to the movies, no foreshadowing, no characters who’ll show up in the movies.

Indeed, beyond the fact it’s called Taken and features ‘Brian Mills’, there’s nothing Takenish about it. Even Standen’s hint at a Northern Irish accent in the pilot has disappeared, perhaps suggesting it wasn’t deliberate, although getting him to be a soccer player in the third episode suggests the producers want to hint at some kind of European background, at least.

That said, the scripts are a lot less stupid, Standish is a vastly more compelling lead and the action scenes are about 1,000% better than those of 24: Legacy. Certainly, you can usually rely on each episode to serve up an unexpected fillip to a fight or a scene that you’ve never seen before in a TV show.

But other than that, in its foundations, it’s unremarkable. There’s nothing unique about its set-up, characters or scenarios that you won’t have seen in a dozen other TV shows. Characterisation is shallow, perfunctory and uncompelling, and there’s certainly nothing that makes you think, “Ah, that’s why Liam Neeson is so frightened of Paris in the movie!”, for example.

If you can get by purely on action scenes and the occasional signs of intelligence, Taken‘s worth a punt. If you miss 24 and find 24: Legacy an unsatisfactory replacement, give Taken a whirl. But if you need involving plots, dialogue and characterisation, Taken‘s not for you.

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