Classic TV

Weird old title sequences: The Avengers

The Avengers

Today’s weird old title sequences are for The Avengers. You remember The Avengers don’t you? Steed, this dapper bloke in a bowler hat, and his lovely sidekick Mrs Peel fight weird sci-fi crimes together?

Kind of.

You see The Avengers changed a lot over its six series. Originally envisioned as a vehicle for rising star Ian Hendry from Police Surgeon, it began with Dr David Keel (Ian Hendry) investigating the murder of Peggy, his office receptionist and wife-to-be, by a drug ring. A mysterious trenchcoat-wearing stranger named John Steed (Patrick Macnee), who was investigating the ring, appeared on the scene and together they set out to avenge her death in the show’s first two episodes – hence the show’s title ‘The Avengers’. Afterwards, Steed asked Keel to continue partnering him when needed to solve crimes.

In this first series, Steed was the secondary character – he doesn’t even appear in some episodes. He also isn’t the dapper man about town we all grew to know and love, either. He was a hard-edged, ruthless character, willing to do what it took to get the job done, with Hendry’s Keel providing the moral centre for their work. In keeping with this blunt, down-at-heel approach, the show got some equally down-at-heel titles, with Hendry and Macnee lurking around on street corners in their trenchcoats, and – oh f*ck no – a jazz theme tune.

But slowly, the show began to change – and get a whole load more weird title sequences.

Continue reading “Weird old title sequences: The Avengers”

What have you been watching this week? (w/e January 15)

I’ve had a little bit of time to watch tele this week, and most of it’s been catch-up, but there’s been a few things:

  • Cougar Town: Last week’s episode, not this week’s. Still, it was – surprisingly, given it’s a show about women – I think the first episode so far that’s been written by a woman, and easily the best. It rang a lot more true than previous episodes in some of the details. Lisa Kudrow was excellent as the evil dermatologist. More Lisa, please
  • Leverage: An okay episode. Jeri Ryan‘s a good (temporary) replacement for Gina Bellman, but the show’s starting to slack off a little. They were never a really plausible bunch of con artists, but the show seems more to be about everyone having a laugh while they’re making it than about being convincing now. That would certainly explain the ‘accents’, the outfits, etc. Oh, and if you’re going to create a fake fashion magazine, try not to get a graphic designer off a failed US trade magazine to design it, because there’s a substantial difference between one of those and a consumer glossy – not the least of which is that the latter look good, the former look like sh*te. Having said that, Heroes managed to mock up a newspaper clipping on Monday and left it full of lorem ipsum Jabberwocky text, rather than copy so hey ho…
  • Modern Family: Again, last week’s not this week’s. Funny. Nice to see Benjamin Bratt back in action after The Cleaner got slaughtered, and good to see Ed O’Neill’s character being out-machoed.
  • Piers Morgan On… Las Vegas: Not a brilliant piece of work, it has to be said, and Morgan’s fake laughter to woo interviewees was insanely bad (do people really believe it?). But it was an actual piece of journalism all the same, which is something to be revered in this age of Fearne Cotton Talks To… A Plank of Wood, and an interesting look at an interesting topic.
  • The Daily Show is back. It’s okay at the moment, looks a little light on correspondents, and John Oliver is actually being more entertaining than Jon Stewart.
  • Wallander: Much better than last week’s depression fest, this one actually made sense and some of the supporting characters got a look in as well. There were a few cringe moments in it, but very good, although it felt like there should have been more continuity with his father’s storyline

What have you been watching though?

As always, no spoilers unless you’re going to use the <spoiler> </spoiler> tags, please. If you’ve reviewed something on your blog, you can put a link to it here rather than repeat yourself (although too many links and you might get killed by the spam filter).

Friday’s renewal news

Film

British TV

US TV

Thursday’s no New Tricks? news

Film

British TV

US TV

Competitions

Competition and Review: Doctor Who: The Writer’s Tale – The Final Chapter

Doctor Who - The Writer's Tale: The Final ChapterAuthors: Russell T Davies, Benjamin Cook
Price: £16.99 (Amazon price: £11.04)
ISBN: 978-1-846-07861-3
Pages: 704
Publisher: BBC Books
Published: January 14th (that’s tomorrow, baby)

Writing’s not easy. It’s very hard. Ask a writer. Go on. Any writer. They’ll tell you about it at length. Really quite absurd length.

Journalist Benjamin Cook asked Russell T Davies how hard writing is, some time just before the launch of the third series of Doctor Who in February 2007, and the resulting email and text correspondence lasted, well, years. But in a radical move, Cook and Davies decided to turn all that correspondence into a book, and thus Doctor Who: The Writer’s Tale was born.

Since then, Russell T Davies has continued to tell Benjamin Cook just how hard writing is, and the additional 300 pages or so of correspondence have been collected together and added to the original book to produce Doctor Who: The Writer’s Tale – The Final Chapter. This not only continues Davies’ insights into writing for Doctor Who, as well as Torchwood, The Sarah Jane Adventures and indeed television in general, but also looks at the politics of television, the nature of television production, how PR and the press work, and more.

And if you keep reading this exciting review, you’ll be able to win a copy of it. How’s that for fun?

Continue reading “Competition and Review: Doctor Who: The Writer’s Tale – The Final Chapter”