Classic TV

Your handy guide to true religions on TV – Celtic, Western and Northern Germanic religions + Wicca

This entry is one of a series of articles covering religions depicted on TV as being true. For full details and a list of the other religions covered, go to the introduction.

Celtic, Western and Northern Germanic religions + Wicca
The belief in the deities worshipped in Scandinavia, Germany and Britain until Christianity took over has seen some uptake on TV. The most famous of these gods were the Norse gods Odin, Thor, et al, but Anglo-Saxon gods include Wayland the Smithy and folk gods such as Herne the Hunter have all managed to show up. While often these have been part of fantasy shows, so not taken entirely seriously by the authors, some shows have raised them in works contemplating national identity, regarding pagan beliefs as important parts of ‘Welshness’ or ‘Englishness’, for example. 

However, writers have usually played fast and loose, and with most of the pagan religions in these areas being reconstructionist, the question of authenticity to the original religions is difficult, relying instead of pagan-like activity created by the authors. Frequently, where the shows have invoked paganism and shown it to be true, it’s been shown to be based on some kind of science (cf Children of the Stones, Sky, Quatermass and Doctor Who). 

However, there are some exceptions.

Continue reading “Your handy guide to true religions on TV – Celtic, Western and Northern Germanic religions + Wicca”

Classic TV

Your handy guide to true religions on TV – Other religions

This entry is one of a series of articles covering religions depicted on TV as being true. For full details and a list of the other religions covered, go to the introduction.

Other religions
Religions outside of the previous categories are much rarer on TV. Although very occasionally Native American religions have featured on US TV, for example, AFAIK they’ve never been shown to be true except in shows like Star Trek: Voyager that later reveal that science is behind any truth they might have. Nevertheless, there have been one or two shows that depict religions other than the ones mentioned above.

Continue reading “Your handy guide to true religions on TV – Other religions”

Friday’s “Cancellations, pick-ups and renews, plus the return of 24?” news

Film

Film casting

Trailers

  • Trailer for Gravity with Sandra Bullock and George Clooney

UK TV

US TV

US TV casting

New US TV shows

Thursday’s “NBC, Fox, CTV, TV4, Fuse and TNT cancellations and pick-ups, plus Everybody Loves Catherine Tate” news

Film

  • Guy Ritchie to direct, Alicia Vikander to star in The Man From UNCLE

Film casting

Trailers

  • Trailer for the Coen Brothers’ Inside Llewyn Davis, with Carey Mulligan, John Goodman, F Murray Abraham et al
  • Trailer for Paul Greengrass’s Captain Phillips, with Tom Hanks
  • Trailer for Edgar Wright’s World’s End, with Simon Pegg, Martin Freeman, Reece Shearsmith et al

Canadian TV

French TV

  • Fuse to launch Entourage-like The Hustle

International TV

UK TV

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

  • Piers Morgan developing Fleet Street for Starz
  • Fox green lights: dramas Rake, Gang Related, Sleepy Hollow and Almost Human
  • …and comedies Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Surviving Jack, Enlisted and Us and Them
  • Fox red lights: Delirium
  • NBC red lights: Bloodline, The Sixth Gun, The Gates, Joe & Jane, Brenda Forever, Hatfields & McCoys, Holding Patterns and The Secret Lives of Husbands and Wives
  • TNT green lights: Legends (trailer)

New US TV show casting

The Weekly Play

The Wednesday Play: Penda’s Fen (1974)

Paganism, while not exactly featuring heavily in the more secular and Christian-influenced television drama schedules of Western societies, hasn’t been completely invisible over the past few decades. As we’re shortly to discover (ie either on Thursday or Friday when I write about it in much greater detail), British writers, particularly those who were working in the 70s, have occasionally taken time out to examine other religions in drama.

Despite coming from a family of strict evangelical Christians, one of the main writers to do so is David Rudkin. As well as translating Greek pagan works, such as those of Aeschylus and Euripides, Rudkin examined British paganism in plays and long-form series such as The Stone Dance, The Sons of Light and ultimately Artemis 81.

One of his major works was a Play For Today: Penda’s Fen. Directed by Alan Clarke, who normally was a strictly realist director and who admits he didn’t really understand it, the play is an evocation of the conflicting forces within England, both past and present. These include authority, tradition, hypocrisy, landscape, art, sexuality, and most of all, its mystical, ancient pagan past. In the play, all of this comes together in the growing pains of the adolescent Stephen, a vicar’s son, who encounters angels, Edward Elgar and King Penda, the last pagan king of England, during the play.

Since its broadcast, Penda’s Fen has gone on to be regarded as a minor classic. Leonard Buckley (no relation) of The Times wrote: “Make no mistake. We had a major work of television last night. Rudkin gave us something that had beauty, imagination and depth.” In 2006, Vertigo magazine described it as “One of the great visionary works of English film” while in 2011, it was chosen by Time Out London magazine as one of the 100 best British films, describing it as:

“A multi-layered reading of contemporary society and its personal, social, sexual, psychic and metaphysical fault lines. Fusing Elgar’s ‘Dream of Gerontius’ with a heightened socialism of vibrantly localist empathy, and pagan belief systems with pre-Norman histories and a seriously committed – and prescient – ecological awareness, ‘Penda’s Fen’ is a unique and important statement.”

And it’s your Wednesday Play – enjoy!

Further reading: Sparks in Electric Jelly