Street Legal
US TV

What have you been watching? Including Street Legal and Jann

It’s “What have you been watching?”, your chance to recommend to fellow TMINE readers anything you’ve been watching this week

Toshiro Mifune in Akira Kurosawa's Sanjuro

Toshiro Mifune in Akira Kurosawa’s Sanjuro

This week’s reviews

After deciding to not bother reviewing ABC (Australia)’s The Heights on the general grounds the series description included the word ‘soapy’, this week I turned my attention to reviewing:

Meanwhile, for this week’s Orange Wednesday film reviews, I reviewed Peppermint (2018) and Sanjuro (1962).

Jann

New shows

After last week’s flurry of new shows in the US, Canada decided to get in on the act this week. I’ll be turning my attention to last night’s new CBC show Diggstown in the next few days, but after the jump, I’ll be looking at the revival of CBC’s Street Legal, as well as CTV’s preview of forthcoming ‘grumpy old singer’ comedy Jann.

Secret City returned for a second season in Australia on Monday as well and as that’s now all on Netflix in the UK, I might give that a watch over the weekend. However, from Friday, there’s a bit of competition on Netflix from Ricky Gervais’ new show After Life and Starz in the US will be premiering Now Apocalypse on Sunday. There’s bound to be other stuff, too, but let’s see how I fare with that little lot, too.

The Magicians

The regulars

After the jump, we’ll be talking about: Corporate, Doom Patrol, The Magicians, Magnum P.I., Ófærð (Trapped), The Orville, The Passage and Star Trek: Discovery, as well as the second episodes of The Enemy Within and Whiskey Cavalier. I’ll be dropping one of them from the regulars queue, but which?

Continue reading “What have you been watching? Including Street Legal and Jann”

Arrow
News

Arrow to end; The Sinner, Rebecka Martinsson, Les rivières pourpres renewed; Mad About You revived; + more

Every weekday, TMINE brings you the latest TV news from around the world

Internet TV

French TV

  • France 2 renews: Les rivières pourpres (The Crimson Rivers) [in French]
  • Arte green lights: series of collapsing society thriller Moloch, with Olivier Gourmet and Marine Vacth [in French]

Scandinavian TV

  • TV4 renews: Rebecka Martinsson, Sascha Zacharias to replace Ido Engvoll

UK TV

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

  • Trailer for Epix’s Perpetual Grace, LTD
  • HBO green lights: series of quit your life comedy Run, with Merritt Wever, Domhnall Gleeson and Phoebe Waller-Bridge
  • Spectrum green lightsMad About You revival, with Paul Reiser and Helen Hunt

New US TV show casting

Peppermint (2018)
Film reviews

Orange Wednesday: Peppermint (2018) and Sanjuro (1962)

Every Wednesday, TMINE reviews two movies and infringes a former mobile phone company’s trademarked marketing gimmick

One of the nice things about doing TMINE is that it gives me a chance to watch things that either I’d never have known about without research or I’d never have got round to watching. Certain features of the blog have, in fact, specifically been geared up to this – Today’s Joanna Page, for example, may have seemed little more than an excuse to watch lots of Joanna Page, but it did enable me to watch some really quite good things I’d never probably have bothered with: Making Waves, David CopperfieldThe Cazalets, To The Ends of the Earth, to name but a few.

So it is with Orange Wednesday, which is forcing me to watch two movies a week. This is harder than it sounds, and not just because I’m lazy and have a lot of TV to watch as well. It’s because, actually, there aren’t that many good new movies out each week, even with Netflix getting in on the act. As a result, I’m having to hunt them out.

Of course, the downside is it also means I’m also watching some rubbish movies I would never have touched with a bargepole, otherwise.

Guess which categories this week’s Orange Wednesday movies fall into:

  • Peppermint (2018) – bank teller Jennifer Garner’s family is murdered, so she goes to seek her revenge
  • Sanjuro (1962) – Akira Kurosawa’s sequel to Yojimbo, in which ronin Toshiro Mifune helps a hapless bunch of clansmen deal with a corrupt local superintendent

Continue reading “Orange Wednesday: Peppermint (2018) and Sanjuro (1962)”

Sofia Helin and Kyle Maclachlan in NRK (Norway)'s Atlantic Crossing
News

Freeform’s witch war; Ture Sventon and the Mystery of the Bermuda Triangle; Michael Sheen – serial killer; + more

Every weekday, TMINE brings you the latest TV news from around the world

Internet TV

International TV

Australian TV

  • Aaron Pedersen, Huw Higginson, Harry Richardson et al join ABC’s Black B*tch

Scandinavian TV

  • TV4 green lights: adaptation of Åke Holmberg’s Ture Sventon books as Ture Sventon och Bermudtriangelns hemlighet (Ture Sventon and the Mystery of the Bermuda Triangle), with Robert Gustafsson
  • Søren Pilmark joins NRK’s Atlantic Crossing

UK TV

  • Ron Perlman, Famke Janssen, Ben Miles et al join BBC’s The Capture
  • Brain Cox joins BBC/Amazon’s Good Omens

US TV

  • Trailer for season 8 of HBO’s Game of Thrones

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

Il Miracolo (The Miracle)
Italian TV

Review: Il Miracolo (The Miracle) 1×1-1×2 (Italy/UK: Sky Atlantic)

In Italy: Aired on Sky Atlantic, May 2018
In the UK: Tuesdays, 9pm, Sky Atlantic

Like most right-thinking people, I hate Rupert Murdoch. Being a Sky customer for 15 years – through necessity, rather than choice – has therefore been something of a vexing experience. We didn’t want to give money to Rupert Murdoch but… we did. Things obviously got better last year when News International sold all its share in Sky, but there’s still that lingering “Grrr” of annoyance at the thought of supporting Sky.

What’s equally annoying is that Sky is responsible for some of the better European TV out there. As well as all the Sky Atlantic originals we’ve had in the UK, we’ve also recently had both Babylon Berlin and Das Boot from Sky Deutschland, and from Sky Italy we’ve had the likes of 1992 and now Il Miracolo. The last of these isn’t quite in the same league as the rest, but it’s clear that we’re all going to have to get used to the idea of a benevolent Sky god, rather than Rupert Murdoch.

Il Miracolo

Not miraculous

The Miracle (to give it its English name) starts off at a somewhat different level from the rest of the show – with an almost literal blood bath. Police raid a mafia boss’ home but when they find him the basement, he – and most of the basement – are covered in bucketloads of blood.

But there are no bodies.

Meanwhile, Italy’s prime minister (Guido Caprino) is having a hard time of it. There’s a referendum on leaving the EU due to take place in just a few days. Meanwhile, his wife (Elena Lietti) is having random sex at parties with ugly blokes and his kids are just humming. No, really, they’ve got a nanny and every time he passes their bedroom, they’re praying – and usually humming – with her.

Then the police tell him they have a very particular concern. They show Caprino what they found in the mafia’s boss basement – a plastic statue of the Virgin Mary. Thing is this statue is crying blood. They’ve tested it and it’s definitely a man’s blood. And despite being attached to nothing, the statue is crying blood at the rate of nine litres an hour, every hour. They’ve even had to stick it in an empty swimming pool with a bucket under it to catch all of it.

Is this a miracle? If it is, what does it mean and what does God have up His sleeves? And more importantly, what should Caprino do with the information – tell the world and risk riots or keep it to himself? And can he even keep it to himself or will the news leak anyway?

Continue reading “Review: Il Miracolo (The Miracle) 1×1-1×2 (Italy/UK: Sky Atlantic)”