Wednesday’s “scripts better than plans” news

Doctor Who

  • Stevie Moffat’s plans for series 6 [minor spoilers]

Film

  • Jude Law, Ray Winstone and Christopher Lee among those joining Martin Scorsese’s Hugo Cabaret
  • Andy Serkis joins Rise of the Apes
  • Facebook app “Mafia Wars” to be turned into movie
  • Trailer for Paranormal Activity 2

Theatre

  • Peter Egan and Robert Daws to star in The Secret of Sherlock Holmes

British TV

US TV

Tuesday’s resurrected pilots news

Film

  • Alice Eve to play Emma Frost on X-Men: First Class
  • Spike Lee to direct Nagasaki Deadline?
  • Trailer for David Fincher/Aaron Sorkin’s Facebook movie
  • Carey Mulligan to star in movie written by Prison Break star Wentworth Miller?
  • Trailer for part one of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows

British TV

US TV

Monday’s “Gene’s back” news

Doctor Who

Film

Theatre

  • John Nettles to join John Simm in Sheffield Theatres’ Hamlet
  • Martin Shaw and Jenny Seagrove to star in The Country Girl

British TV

US TV

Classic TV

Lost Gems: The Green Hornet (1966)

The Green Hornet

Back in the 60s when Batman was at the height of its popularity, the ABC network looked around for a similar superhero show to cash in on Batman‘s success. They hit upon an old radio programme, The Green Hornet, about newspaper proprietor Britt Reid who pretends to be the eponymous masked criminal so that he can stop actual criminals.

The producers soon cast Van Williams as Reid, but that was actually the least important bit of casting on the show. One notable aspect of the story format was that Reid was assisted in his fight against crime by his Asian man-servant, Kato. The producers looked far and wide before eventually landing upon a little known Hong Kong movie star for the coveted role.

That star was Bruce Lee.

As a result of that casting, The Green Hornet became possibly the only show in history where nobody really gave a toss about the lead character. The only character anyone was interested in was Kato, thanks to Bruce Lee’s incredible martial arts prowess. In Hong Kong, The Green Hornet was actually called The Kato Show.

Unfortunately, it was a short-lived show, lasting only a season. The fact that rather than camp and cheesy, the producers opted for straight-laced probably didn’t help, but having a dull lead character really didn’t help either.

Nevertheless, The Green Hornet‘s legacy lives on. Chinese martial artist Jet Li (best known here from Lethal Weapon 4) did more or less an entire film in the Kato costume, and Kill Bill Volume 1‘s massed fight scene sees “the Crazy 88” all wearing Kato masks. And in 2011, Seth Rogen (Knocked Up) and Asian martial arts star Jay Chou will be starring in a movie version of The Green Hornet.

Here then, for your delectation is the weird old title sequence of The Green Hornet, a clip of the show’s most famous fight scene, followed by an absolute treat – Bruce Lee’s original screentest for the show, which shows you simply how impressive a man he was.

Friday’s “Love Bites dumps” news

Doctor Who

Film

British TV

US TV