The Weekly Play

The Wednesday Play: The Flipside of Dominick Hide (1980)/Another Flip for Dominick (1982)

With The Wednesday Plays, I have tried as much as possible to steer clear of sci-fi, since – and let’s face facts here – there’s plenty enough of that on this ‘ere blog already. However, doing so has meant steering clear of possibly the most famous ‘double bill’ in Play For Today history: The Flipside of Dominick Hide and Another Flip For Dominick.

Set in both the 1980s and 2130, the first play sees time-travelling researcher Dominick Hide (Peter Firth) return to his own past to investigate an ancestor. There he meets a woman, Jane (Caroline Langrishe). And that’s all I can say without spoiling it for you.

So popular was the first play that writer Alan Gibson bowed to popular demand and brought all the characters back for a sequel two years later, about which I can tell you even less because I’ll spoil the first play if I do. Let’s just say it involves another time-traveller and leave it at that.

While being quite slight things that probably won’t impress the hard-core SF fan, they are, as with most BBC sci-fi plays, more about relationships and people than concepts. Both plays contrast the society of the future with the conventions of English society as it was then, as well as the differences between relationships. They also largely rely on Peter Firth’s endearing performance to draw in the viewer, particularly since he seems to know remarkably little about how to survive in the present day for a man whose job it is to know all about the past.

Since their original airings, both plays have been repeated several times and are available on DVD as well (for a mere £6, too). But you can watch them both below. Enjoy! Don’t forget, if you like them, buy them so that the creators are rewarded.

The Babylon 5 20th anniversary reunion panel

Babylon 5 was, in retrospect, one of the most influential sci-fi shows on the past two decades. It demonstrated that TV sci-fi could be clever and could have ongoing storylines, with proper world-building; it also showed that you could use CGI for all your space scenes, without models. It affected Star Trek: DS9 while that show was still being made.

Twenty years later, and the surviving Babylon 5 cast recently reunited with creator J Michael Straczynski for a panel in Phoenix, which you can watch below. Along for the show were: Julie Caitlin Brown, Jason Carter, Claudia Christian, Robin Atkin Downes, Jerry Doyle, Mira Furlan, Stephen Furst, Peter Jurasik, Walter Koenig, Bill Mumy, Tracy Scoggins, Pat Tallman and Andrea Thompson.

Amongst its revelations: Michael O’Hare had to leave the show because tragically, he was suffering from mental illness, including paranoia and hallucinations.

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Wednesday’s “Rik Mayall to play Greg Davies’ dad, Joan Collins goes to Benidorm and a new Dexter trailer” news

Film casting

Trailers

  • Trailer for Scenic Route with Josh Duhamel and Dan Fogler

UK TV

US TV

US TV casting

US TV

Review: Save Me 1×1-1×2 (US: NBC)

In the US: Thursdays, 8/7c, NBC

As we showed recently, every so often, a mainstream US TV channel will take a break from its usual agnostic programming to make a play for the Christian crowd. Whether it’s Touched by an Angel, Eli Stone or Saving Grace, suddenly sinners see the light and the Truth of His word is revealed. It’ll never be exactly according to any particular denomination’s beliefs and even the question of whether it’s a He or a She is up for grabs; there may even be an atheist’s ‘get out clause’ of ‘maybe it’s a brain condition causing this’; but the general principle – do what God wants and none of things He doesn’t – remains constant.

Save Me is like a slightly more comedic, slightly less offensive Saving Grace. In common with Eli Stone, it sees an ordinary American sinner – in this case Anne Heche, playing a former weather girl and party girl – discovers after nearly dying that she is to be a prophet of the Lord and spread His word, all while polishing up her fornicating, stealing, drinking act.

Manna from Heaven for religious viewers, you might think, but the only proof you’ll find of a loving God in this particular comedy black hole is Alex Breckenridge. Here’s a trailer.

Continue reading “Review: Save Me 1×1-1×2 (US: NBC)”