Wednesday’s “Black Widow back, Revolution, Go On, New Normal, Boardwalk Empire get renewed and JMS-Wachowski’s Sense8” news

Film

UK TV

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

  • Fox buys Reese Witherspoon’s Wendy & Peter
  • NBC buys Jason Bateman’s 80s comedy Then Came Elvis
  • CBS orders pilot of Jerry Bruckheimer’s adaptation of Hostages

New US TV show casting

Cinemax and the BBC’s Hunted tries to do viral

Hunted is a relatively new thing: a shiny British-American action co-production. Like its predecessor, Sky’s Strike Back: Project Dawn, it’s co-produced by Cinemax and showrun by Frank Spotnitz, but in this case, it’s going to be on BBC1 and it’s made by Kudos, the people behind Spooks. It stars Melissa George as a sort-of spy, starts this Thursday at 9pm on BBC1 and on October 19 at 10pm on Cinemax in the US. Also like Strike Back: Project Dawn, it looks great but with a plot that is ‘muchos bobbins’. Here’s a trailer:

Over in the US, Cinemax is trying to raise interest in the show by viral marketing. They’ve set up a web site, Byzantium Tests, that ostensibly claims to be a personality test to see if you are suitable – i.e. disturbed and sociopathic enough – to join Byzantium Security, which is the company (I’m guessing) that Melissa George works for/used to work for in Hunted.

Here’s one of the tests. It features George doing her absolute level best attempt at an English accent.

Unfortunately, I simply don’t have the time to go through the estimated 1.6×10^10 questions in the test to see if it’s any good, but I’m told there’s a good pay-off at the end. Let me know if you make it all the way through…

Tuesday’s “Murder Bitches, cable up, network down ratings, and dead Munsters” news

Doctor Who

Film

  • Longmire‘s Bailey Chase joins Ashley Scott and Cuba Gooding Jr in Summoned

Trailers

  • TV spot for Alex Cross, with Tyler Perry, Mathew Fox, Rachel Nichols and Jean Reno

Canadian TV

UK TV

US TV

US TV casting

New US TV Shows

  • Munsters reboot Mockingbird Lane ironically probably dead
  • ABC buys Dakota, CBS buys The Centurion
  • Ryan Murphy to produce drama Montauk for Fox, comedy for NBC
  • Shonda Rhimes sells I Hate LA Dudes and The Mix to ABC
  • CBS buys single-camera family comedy
  • The Mentalist producers sells Murder Bitches to CBS
  • Fox buys two couples comedies
  • The CW developing supernatural ‘fixer’ drama Abaddon’s Journal
  • The SHIELD characters [minor spoilers]

What did you watch last fortnight? Including Moone Boy, Homeland, Revolution and Mob Doctor

It’s “What did you watch last fortnight?”, my chance to tell you what I movies and TV I watched in the past two weeks that I haven’t already reviewed and your chance to recommend things to everyone else (and me) in case I’ve missed them.

First, the usual recommendations: The Thick of It and Homeland.

So here’s a few thoughts on what I have been watching:

  • Go On – Still okay. Last week’s episode was dedicated to giving the lesbian character some actual, you know, character, which actually worked quite well – looking at with less tired eyes, Go On actually probably has the most diverse cast on TV. It’s just a little too Perry-focused, a little too Benanti-light still and the rest of the cast need to get more characters, too
  • Homeland – Well, I watched the first 20 minutes last time, and good news! The rest of it’s really good, too. While Carrie’s storyline is more obviously mental than last year’s, Brodie’s is working out well quite tensely, thank you, and the final scene with his daughter was surprisingly touching. So still one to watch.
  • Mob Doctor – Switched off halfway through episode two. Jordana Spiro’s great but this show isn’t the vehicle for her, unfortunately.
  • The New Normal – episode two was such a hate crime, I gave up. I hear episode 4 might have been interesting though, since it’s from Ellen Barkin’s point of view. Not going to try it though.
  • Perception – While the finale was still marginally ludicrous, everything with Daniel worked well. Overall, a pretty good first season, hampered by its format. Jamie Bamber was woefully under-used, while Rachael Leigh Cooke shouldn’t have been used at all. Definitely recommended as a bit of fluff with surprising depth, and I’ll be tuning into season two.
  • Revolution – Episode two was possibly even more boring than episode 1. If it weren’t for the sword-fights, there would be literally nothing to this show at all.
  • The Thick of It – The beast is back! Good to see Malcolm back to his old fieriness and poor old Nicola. A beautifully written piece of political manipulation.
  • Animal Practice – A mild improvement on episode one, but still a fundamentally flawed, stupid NBC comedy.
  • Moone BoyThe IT Crowd‘s Chris O’Dowd writes and stars in this semi-biopic as the imaginary best friend of his 1989 self. Very weird, but charming and amusing.

Still in the pile: Made in Jersey and 666 Park Avenue. I’ll get onto them later today and tomorrow.

And in movies:

  • The Dark Knight Returns: Part 1 – A pretty decent animation of Frank Miller’s acclaimed “Batman when he’s old” graphic novel. This only covers Batman’s return, the new Robin and the pre-Superman half, with a second movie to come dealing with all of that. Peter Weller is a little miscast as the voice of Bruce Wayne, lacking much expressiveness, but he’s not the worst Batman there’s ever been, by any stretch of the imagination. It also shows its age, having originally been written in the 80s, and its vision of the future is indeed very 80s. Ariel Winter from Modern Family is the surprising choice for Robin, but she works quite well, too.

“What did you watch last fortnight?” is your chance to recommend to friends and fellow blog readers the TV and films that they might be missing or should avoid – and for me to do mini-reviews of everything I’ve watched. Since we live in the fabulous world of Internet catch-up services like the iPlayer and Hulu, why not tell your fellow readers what you’ve seen so they can see the good stuff they might have missed?

UK TV

Review: Doctor Who – 7×5 – The Angels Take Manhattan

Angels Take Manhattan

In the UK: Twas on BBC1 on Saturday. Available on the iPlayer
In the US: It was on BBC America on Saturday, y’all

Vroomfondel: I think our minds must be too highly trained, Majikthise

From the Hitch-Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

So here we are. The end of an era. Exeunt Ponds, stage right, chased by a baby Angel. Stevie Moffat introduced them to us two and a half years ago with the first of his stories, The Eleventh Hour, and here he is, writing them out again.

Should be quite a moving moment, shouldn’t it? Rusty usually managed to make companion departures the big tearjerkers they should be. Maybe not Martha, although who cared about her. But the ‘death’ of Pipes? The ‘death’ of Donna? Pass me a snivel-rag now.

Except, while there was a certain degree of sadness right at the end, this wasn’t quite the tour de force I was hoping for from our Stevie. The trouble? I think that Stevie might be getting too clever for his own good. And working too hard.

Continue reading “Review: Doctor Who – 7×5 – The Angels Take Manhattan”