Wednesday’s Heroes simulcast news

Film

Art

British TV

Irish TV

US TV

Tuesday’s “celebs aren’t quality?” news

Doctor Who/Theatre

Film

British TV

  • Gavin & Stacey likely to move to BBC1 for Christmas
  • Details of The Prisoner remake, including Sir Ian McKellen as Number 2
  • Hat Trick to develop crime drama with “strong female victims” [free registration required]
  • Martin Shaw to return as George Gently
  • Plea for more programmes featuring ordinary Welsh life. Plea from Rob for no more Tipyn o Stad
  • Bob the Builder and Thomas & Friends to go CGI [free registration required]
  • Hamish Mykura to take over as head of More4

US TV

Monday’s big chicken bill news

Doctor Who

Art

Film

British TV

US TV

US TV

Review: In Plain Sight 1×1

In Plain Sight

In the US: Sundays, 10/9c, USA Network

In the UK: They’re all in hiding

Awful. Just awful.

What? You want more from that in a review?

Sigh. Okay. Here we go then.

Although at first sight the USA Network has a clear theme – it’s the “network of characters” – that’s not quite what it is. It’s the network of 80s shows. These weren’t shows made in the 80s, mind. These are shows that fit the show templates of the 80s.

For the most part, we’re talking private detective shows – quite good ones at that. So, for example, we have Monk, the private detective who works for the police department and has OCD. We have Burn Notice, featuring the private detective who’s an ex-spy. And we have Psych, the private detectives who also work for the police department and pretend to be psychics.

Typical story in any of these: helpless person comes to private detective, private detective investigates, finds clues, solves crime use his special “character” skills. The end.

Psych is in fact the purest of these retro 80s shows, since not only does it use the old script templates of the 80s, it references all the shows explicitly (I’m still guffawing at Gus’s Airwolf jacket) and even has the same actors (Corbin Bernsen, for example).

As we can see the USA Network knows its audience: old enough to remember the 80s and its tele fondly; wishing they made tele like in the good old days.

Thing is, most 80s US TV was a bit pants. If we polish off our old Betamaxes of Riptide, Simon and Simon, Tucker’s Witch, Jake and The Fatman, et al, we’d see how poorly they stand up compared to the far more sophisticated and intelligent fare (with exceptions) that modern US TV has to offer.

Except we don’t have to, because here’s In Plain Sight, starring Mary McCormack. It’s an 80s police/action show lovingly recreated in every detail using modern television techniques. And it’s rubbish.

Continue reading “Review: In Plain Sight 1×1”

Promo for FX’s Sons of Anarchy

FX – aka ‘the obscure, manly channel that likes to show dark dramas’ – has been a bit quiet about its Fall line-up. All we really knew was that a show about bikers called Sons of Anarchy was due any time soon – September, in fact. Originally starring Scott Glenn but now starring Ron Perlman (Beauty and the Beast, Hellboy), Katy Sagal (Married with Children) and Sprague Grayden (Jericho), it, well, … erm, that’s about it, apart from what you can glean from the IMDB page for it and the writer’s blog.

There’s a bit of plot too:

A man in his early 30s struggles to find a balance in his life between being a new dad and his involvement in a motorcycle gang.

As, as they say, you do. There’s a trailer for it, but I’m in a non-safe work environment, so can’t watch it. I understand it’s ‘bad ass’ though. Let me know what you think. [via]