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Film casting

Trailers

  • Trailer for American Sniper with Bradley Cooper
  • Trailer for The Imitation Game with Benedict Cumberbatch, Keira Knightley, Rory Kinnear et al
  • Trailer for Home Sweet Hell with Katherine Heigl and Patrick Wilson [NSFW]

International TV

  • Mexico’s Televisa to remake Israel’s Prisoners of War/Hatufin

US TV

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News: Sky Atlantic and Canal+ go tri-lingual, Netflix to make a movie, Sweden’s Nurse Jackie + more

Film

  • Netflix to make Crouching Tiger sequel

Film casting

Trailers

  • Trailer for Paul Thomas Anderson’s Inherent Vice with Joaquin Phoenix, Reese Witherspoon, Owen Wilson et al

French TV

Scandinavian TV

  • Sweden to remake Nurse Jackie [subscription required]

UK TV

UK TV show casting

UK TV

New UK TV shows

New UK TV show casting

  • Vanessa Redgrave and Jim Broadbent join BBC1’s The Go-Between
  • John Simm and David Threlfall to star in ITV’s Code of a Killer

US TV

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New US TV shows

The Brokenwood Mysteries
US TV

Review: The Brokenwood Mysteries 1×1 (New Zealand: Prime)

In New Zealand: Sundays, 8.30pm, Prime

Despite its physical size, New Zealand is somewhat of a small country in terms of population, with just 4.5m inhabitants spread over its 104,000 square miles. That means that it can’t really afford that much by way of original TV programming, largely importing TV from the US, Australia and Britain.

In fact, despite having several TV networks of its own, if you put aside documentary-making, then at times it can feel like there’s only one production company in the whole country: South Pacific Pictures. Responsible for seemingly everything from the long-running soap Shortland Street (22 years strong this year), which pretty much created the New Zealand TV industry anyway, through Outrageous Fortune, The Blue Rose to perhaps the country’s most famous and successful home-grown drama, The Almighty Johnsons, South Pacific has such a grip on the nation’s airwaves that the only scripted show I can think of in recent memory that South Pacific didn’t produce is Harry.

Given that New Zealand didn’t have its own detective show, it’s no surprise that South Pacific is now trying to fill that particular hole in both its and the country’s drama portfolio with The Brokenwood Mysteries. And although South Pacific is somewhat promiscuous in who it provides shows to, one thing it’s very keen on is loyalty to actors* – you can pretty much guarantee that Siobhan Marshall is going to turn up in any of its shows sooner or later, for starters – so equally it’s no surprise that The Brokenwood Mysteries stars Fern Sutherland (Dawn from The Almighty Johnsons) or that all four episodes are written by The Almighty Johnsons and Outrageous Fortune star and occasional scriptwriter Tim Balme.

There isn’t anything especially innovative or exciting about The Brokenwood Mysteries. In fact, it’s basically Y Gwyll, if you were to give that show a quick location change, a different mix of languages and ethnicities, and a more stereotypical Kiwi optimism. Sutherland is the the Mali Harries of the piece, a police detective living in the backwaters of New Zealand in a small town called Brokenwood who’s naturally miffed when city detective and Tom Mathias equivalent Mike Shepherd (Neill Rea), arrives to supervise her and her latest investigation: the apparent suicide of a local farmer.

The down-at-heel Shepherd saunters around the small town and its pretty surrounding countryside, interviewing suspects, finding lots of red herrings, bickering with Fernwood and listening to country and western music on his in-car cassette player in an ostentatiously quirky way, while having to deal with his multiple ex-wives. It’s his character who gets the bulk of the development, attention and character quirks, with the business-like Sutherland having to play the straight woman who inevitably grows to admire him and his idiosyncratic ways.

Rea is fine – as you’d expect from someone who’s also one of the country’s leading casting agents – while Sutherland does well with the little that’s asked of her and is convincingly un-Dawnish. But rather than the dark misery of Y Gwyll, this is genteel, New Zealand drama designed to appeal to perhaps an older demographic that likes comfortable murder-mysteries and to New Zealanders eager to watch anything that’s actually set in New Zealand and stars New Zealanders. Unfortunately, such is that low bar to entry, if you’ve seen any detective show ever, you’ll begin to wonder exactly how isolated from the outside world New Zealand really is, given the dialogue it chooses to show just how stunningly intelligent its lead detectives are – most murders are committed by people known by the victim, are they? Gosh, that’s a new and exciting fact I wouldn’t have gleaned from any other show.

If The Brokenwood Mysteries arrives on UK screens, it’ll probably be on ITV3, some time after Rosemary & Thyme. But I wouldn’t hold my breath for it, unless you like unchallenging, comfortable and unspectacular fare.

* The fact there aren’t that many in New Zealand probably helps

News: Rutger Hauer Galavants, Josh Holloway joins USA’s Colony, Devious Maids renewed + more

Canadian TV

  • Trailer for CBC’s Strange Empire

Internet TV

New Zealand TV

UK TV

New UK TV show casting

US TV

US TV show casting

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New US TV show casting

Australian and New Zealand TV

Review: The Code 1×1 (Australia: ABC; UK: BBC4)

The Code

In Australia: Sundays, 8.30pm, ABC
In the UK: Acquired by BBC4
In the US: Acquired by the Audience Network  

If you watch Australian drama, you’ll notice that almost all of it is set and shot in Melbourne or Sydney or perhaps the Outback. The nation’s capital of Canberra hardly gets a look in, largely because it’s mostly only people who work in the government who live there, whereas most of the nation’s film and television industry are based in – you guessed it – Melbourne and Sydney. Plus getting permits to film in Canberra is tricky.

So ABC’s new political thriller The Code is going to be a combination of the familiar and the unfamiliar for both Australian and overseas viewers. The story is split into two halves, one set in the more familiar Outback, where a school teacher (Lucy Lawless from BSG and, of course, Xena: Warrior Princess) is busily trying to find two of her missing students, who eventually turn out (slight spoiler for the first episode) to have been murdered; meanwhile, back in Canberra, all kinds of exciting political fun and scandal is going on involving the deputy prime minister (David Wenham from Top of the Lake), the foreign minister (Ian Bradley) and a mistress or two.

Investigating both plotlines is a journalist for online publication Password (Dan Spielman – The Secret Life of Us), overseen by Adam Garcia (best known in the UK as one of the long-standing judges of Sky1 show Got To Dance. I wonder what the overlap between viewers of that and viewers of this on BBC4 is going to be? Me?) and his Asperger’s brother (Ashley Zukerman – Rush), who’s supposed to stick away from computers, thanks to all that naughty hacking he got up to.

Doing its level best to ape just about any top-end conspiracy thriller, including State of Play, Homeland and The State Within, the first episode doesn’t exactly sell itself, throwing at us half an hour of slow-moving jerky-cam and uninvolving and even off-putting characters with little explanation. But as the story begins to unfold, the conspiracy elements start to play in and explanations begin to emerge, it does become a whole lot better.

The journalism side of things is pretty good: not absolutely accurate but more in the State of Play realm than the Anchorman realm. But where the show does really well is in computer hacking, which is what most of the story revolves around. Now while ‘Aspie hacker who gets into trouble for hacking the wrong people’ isn’t new in either real-life (Gary McKinnon) or fiction (The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo), usually being very cliched in the latter, The Code makes a bold attempt at getting the syndrome right, down to sensory integration problems. It’s still all headline weirdness stuff to highlight the ‘other’, even before it’s made obvious by the dialogue, but Zukerman does a good job with the portrayal, as does the script.

But more importantly, the actual hacking looks right. Following the path of Sherlock and every other show that’s needed to have what’s on a screen on-screen, The Code is frequently a mess of CGI text overlaid on various scenes. But in contrast to the general meaningless guff that you see in most shows, if you know your UNIX, you can see what’s going on is pretty accurate, with greps, ffmpegs and rsyncs aplenty (although I couldn’t swear to all the switches being correct…). Even when it’s made up, such as when a Mac-based Trojan turns up, the naming convention is right.

However, the rest of it needs work. Lawless’s plotline is just developing and the politics is veering more towards the humdrum and ordinary at the moment. But I’m going to hold out for episode two at least, since things willstart to kick into high gear with spies and torture, just for starters. I worry that given the Lawless storyline seems to hinge on a particular truck belonging to a fictional company and said spies are going to be working for a fictional Australian government agency, we’re going to be heading into Salamander territory in terms of plausibility and relevance to real-life. But maybe The Code might just have some import, beyond being one of the few shows to get approval for Canberra-filming.

PS BBC4: if ABC can show this one episode per week, you can, too.