Wednesday’s murderous puffins news

Doctor Who

  • John Barrowman and Naoko Mori sing “The Last NIght of the World” at Comic-Con
  • Twist for Christmas special? (spoiler alert)

Film

  • Jack White and Alicia Keys writing the Quantum of Solace theme
  • Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince trailer
  • Marvin the Martian being developed into a feature
  • Johnny Depp to play the Mad Hatter in Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland?
  • Guillermo del Toro to produce remake of Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark

Art

  • Damien Hirst auction to fetch more than £65m

Theatre

British TV

US TV

Tuesday’s W news

Doctor Who

  • BBC America buys the third series of Torchwood. Plus a few hints of what will happen

Film

British TV

US TV

Tr2n trailer

Tron was one of those ground-breaking movies of the early 80s (cf Blade Runner, The Terminator) that naturally did very poorly at the box office but found its audience when the home video and cable markets exploded.

At first, no one understood it, computers were still baffling and alien to most people and so everyone ignored it on first release.

A Disney movie, it got lost down the side of the sofa by the company whenever the embarrassment about its costs compared with its audience got too much for Mickey’s friends – they never like to admit to anything as un-Disney as failure.

Featuring Jeff Bridges and Bruce Boxleitner, Tron was set in the real world but also inside a computer, as hacker Bridges gets ‘digitised’ by a rampaging artificial intelligence and forced to fight for his life against other computer programs. The most famous of these went on to launch dozens of imitator real-world games – in particular, the light cycle game.

The film featured groundbreaking computer graphics – which ironically eliminated it from winning any special effects awards, since that was regarded as cheating in the early 80s. But as computers became familiar and omnipresent, so people started to ‘get’ Tron.

Anyway, Disney, mindful that Tron went on to inspire a generation of computer programmers, has finally got round to producing a sequel, starring Jeff Bridges. Footage was shown at a panel at this year’s Comic-Con and here, live from someone’s camera phone, is Tr2n.

Monday’s Dalek-free news

Doctor Who

Film

Commercials

British TV

  • Daily Express: “Children’s TV classic Press Gang makes surprise return to the small screen” (no link)
  • More The Prisoner cast members, including Lennie James
  • Samantha Morton to direct drama for Channel 4
  • Carol Vorderman quitting Countdown


  • US TV

Thursday’s gleeful news

Doctor Who

  • Sweet FA to play lawyer on Law & Order: London

Film

Radio

British TV

US TV