Godfather of Harlem
News

Godfather of Harlem, Mytho, Indian Criminal Justice, Brassic, Cobra, Intelligence renewed; + more

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Internet TV

  • Eric Balfour and Janet Varney join Netflix’s Country Comfort
  • Ida Engvoll and Björn Mosten to star in Netflix’s Kärlek & anarki (Love & Anarchy)

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New US TV show casting

Year of the Rabbit
News

Year of the Rabbit, Superstore renewed; Altered Carbon, Liar trailers; + more

Every weekday, TMINE brings you the latest TV news from around the world

Internet TV

Australian TV

  • ABC green lights: psychiatric hospital drama Wakefield, with Rudi Dharmalingam, Mandy McElhinney, Geraldine Hakewill et al

Canadian TV

  • CBC green lights: early 40s female detectives comedy Lady Dicks, with Meredith MacNeill and Adrienne C Moore
  • APTN green lights: relocated Indigenous family drama Unsettled

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Ragnarok
Streaming TV

Boxset Tuesday: Ragnarok (season one) (Netflix)

In the UK: Available on Netflix

It’s usually right-wing European ideologies that hark back to their historic, home-grown paganism in order to foment nationalism. Greece’s Golden Dawn used to be fervent proponents of worshipping the gods of Olympus, while you only have to look at Der Pass to see how Woden and Krampus are being used in Austria and Germany for similarly unpleasant ends.

Which makes Ragnarok‘s new youth-oriented Norwegian original an interesting exception to the rule, being a left-wing call for the youth of Norway to channel the viking gods and protect the environment from capitalists.

Ragnarok

Very Thor

The show sees David Stakston playing Magne, a young dyslexic, not especially bright man who moves with his mum back to their home town, Edda, in the remote wilds of West Norway. The last place to be Christianised in Norway, it’s now the home of Jutul industry and its super-rich family of Jutuls, who also run the school and most of the companies in Edda.

However, there are concerns about pollution, with the glaciers defrosting and the drinking water more than a bit suspect. Yet nothing happens, because the Jutuls own everything, including the police.

But when Magne shows kindness to an old, one-eyed man, he suddenly finds himself a changed man. He no longer needs glasses, he can run faster than the world’s best athletes, he can smell different kinds of blood, he’s nearly indestructible – and boy, can he throw a hammer.

How will Magne use his new abilities? And are the Jutuls quite what they seem?

Continue reading “Boxset Tuesday: Ragnarok (season one) (Netflix)”
Events

Some nice new TV things to buy: StarzPlay and The Year of the Sex Olympics

StarzPlay on Amazon

StarzPlay streaming special-offer

So StarzPlay is quietly shaping up to have some of the best imported content in the UK. There’s Counterpart, Pennyworth, Doom Patrol, Castle Rock, Mr Mercedes, The Rook, Perpetual Grace LTD, and Four Weddings and a Funeral from the US, while from Europe, there’s the likes of Instinto, Sanctuary, Rig 45 and Monster.

And that’s just for starters – why only this very day, it became the UK home of Power and its spin-offs.

It used to have a drawback, though. Until recently, you had to have a subscription to Amazon Prime first, after which you had to take out a second subscription to StarzPlay itself, in order to watch it. That was a slight faff and not cheap, if you weren’t already an Amazon Prime member.

However, it’s now available on Apple TV(+), Android and iOS via its own app, as well as regular web browsers, so you can use any of those apps. Unfortunately, if you want to use your Roku, you’ll need to use the Amazon route in the UK, since although there’s a US Roku channel, there isn’t a UK equivalent.

Another reason to go the Amazon route, though: you can now sign up for a three-month trial at Amazon for 99p/month. Three quid for all for three months is pretty reasonable, I’d have said, wouldn’t you? And you can’t do that through any of the other usual sign-up means.

Anyway, you’ve got until March 31st to sign up for the trial, after which it’ll be back to £4.99/month as usual. What have you got to lose? Apart from £2.97.

The Year of the Sex Olympics

The Year of the Sex Olympics

Meanwhile, TMINE god Nigel Kneale‘s ground-breaking play The Year of the Sex Olympics is being reissued by the BFI, a mere 16 years after its previous release. That’s a snip at £14.99 but it won’t be available until April 20.

An anticipator of the reality TV of our own day and age, it sees Leonard Rossiter trying to find something even more interesting than the constant diet of porn with which the masses are currently being placated – and he hits upon real-life as the option. Unfortunately, real-life is actually a bit dull, so then he thinks adding a murderer to the mix might boost the ratings.

If you’re cunning, you’ll spot the esteemed Brian Cox. No not that one, the other one.

News

Ladhood renewed; three Power spin-offs; + more

Every weekday, TMINE brings you the latest TV news from around the world

Internet TV

  • Sam Claflin to star in Amazon’s Daisy Jones and the Six

Nordic TV

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US TV

  • Teaser for season 3 of NatGeo’s Genius

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

  • Starz green lights: three spin-off series from Power
  • CBS green lights: pilot of daughter-father surgeons drama Good Sam and improving-because-retiring cop drama Out the Door

New US TV show casting