Into The Badlands
News

Into the Badlands, The Son cancelled; Room 104, Project Blue Book, Genius renewed; + more

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Internet TV

Scandinavian TV

  • SF Studios developing: Drama adaptation of Max Tegmark’s Life 3.0: Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

UK TV

  • Trailer for BBC One’s This Time With Alan Partridge
  • ITV green lights: series adaptation of Julian Fellowes’ Belgravia
  • Stephen Merchant and Sheridan Smith to star in BBC One’s The Barking Murders

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US TV show casting

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Bergerac
News

Project Blue Book, The Valhalla Murders acquired; Bergerac reboot; + more

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Rig 45
News

Rig 45 acquired; 24 prequel and spin-off cancelled; Netflix’s five Spanish originals; + more

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  • Netflix green lights: badass Spanglish series Gentefied…
  • …developing: adaptation of Carlos Montero’s El Desorden que Dejas, superpowered down-and-out comedy Viaglondo (Colossal), adaptation of Astiberri’s El Vecino, sister drama Dias de Navidad and best friend drama Valeria
  • Adwin Brown to recur on Neflix’s You

UK TV

US TV show casting

  • Gus Kenworthy and Emma Roberts join FX’s American Horror Story

New US TV shows

  • CBS green lights: pilots of Chinese American dream comedy The Emperor of Malibu, family comedy Our House and dating widower comedy The Unicorn
  • Fox developing: adaptation of Boom! Studios’ Talent…
  • red lights24 prequel and spin-off

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The Good Doctor
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Modern Family, The Good Doctor, A Million Little Things, Mom, Good Trouble, Grown-ish, Light as a Feather renewed; + more

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  • Petrice Jones joins Netflix’s Locke & Key
  • Netflix green lights: series adaptation of Karin Slaughter’s Pieces of Her…
  • …and Ryan O’Connell’s I’m Special: And Other Lies We Tell Ourselves as Special, with Ryan O’Connell

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Hanna
Streaming TV

Review: Hanna 1×1 (Amazon)

Available on Amazon Prime

Young adults are apparently the most stressed out of any generation ever. Perhaps that’s why so many of them are murderous right now, even vicariously in a period piece such as Deadly Class. Even those of them who have grown up in forests with only their fathers for company and who’ve never met another living person are off killing people, apparently.

At least, if you believe Amazon Prime’s new show, Hanna, a remake/reboot of the 2011 Joe Wright movie.

Hanna’s sister

It sees Esme Creed-Miles – who eerily looks precisely 50% like dad Charlie Creed-Miles (The Gemini Factor, Press Gang) and 50% like mum Samantha Morton (Minority Report) – take on the Saoirse Ronan role as the titular wood-dwelling Hanna. She’s been camped out in a Central European forest since she was rescued by secret agent dad Joel Kinnaman (The Killing (US)Robocop, Altered Carbon) from a special institution when she was just a baby. Why was she there? We don’t know. Why has dad kept her from the world? Because he reckons that the evil secret agent woman in charge of chasing them down (Kinnaman’s The Killing (US) co-star Mireille Enos) is going to come after them if she discovers that they survived the car crash that killed Creed-Miles’ mother.

In the 16 years or so since, dad has been home schooling Creed-Miles in languages, geography and how to kill a man with just your thumb – presumably so she can look after herself or at least go to finishing school. Unfortunately, one day, she decides to disobey dad’s edict not to leave their little area of the forest and comes across a Polish wood chopper. After twatting him around a bit, she warms to him and ends up going exploring with him, which even more unfortunately leads to the wood chopper being arrested – and Enos discovering that Creed-Miles and Kinnaman are still alive.

Hanna

Hantastic?

And that’s more or less it for this first, preview episode of the series, which will premiere in full on Amazon next month. Which makes it hard really to tell if it’s any good. Creed-Miles is fine, Kinnaman is fine, Enos is fine. There’s all the gloss and production values you’d hope for from Amazon or even a Netflix production, with some lovely forest location filming and even a bit of Paris (or maybe faux Paris), too.

But the cast don’t really have that much to do. If you’re hoping that Kinnaman and Enos will even get to speak to one another, let alone have a scene together, you’ll be disappointed. Kinnamon gets to be punchy and test Creed-Miles on the population of Hanover, but there’s not really much of a familial bond between him and her, perhaps through design, perhaps not. The fight scenes are very good, but don’t do anything you’ve not seen before.

And as a plot… well, half an hour of wandering round the forest doesn’t really count.

Hanna

Wait and see

So while Hanna might be a great show, Amazon’s decision to try to preview the series to whet our appetites is a weird one. I feel like I’ve already started the show and when episode two finally arrives in a month or so, I’ll be restarting after a long gap of time. And this first episode is certainly not spectacular enough – or even particularly engaging – to make me feel that’s going to be a worthwhile endeavour.

I’ve also already seen the original movie, and given this sticks relatively closely to the original story, I’m not that sure if watching something five times longer that’s basically the same is a good use of my time either.

So if you were planning on watching this, I’d advise holding off until the rest of the series becomes available.