Watch some of the US version of The IT Crowd with Richard Ayoade and Community’s Joel McHale

The first episode of The IT Crowd is perfection apparently. At least, several other countries seem to think so, judging by the number of times it’s been remade more or less frame by frame overseas.

We’ve already had a gander at German TV’s version, Das iTeam – die Jungs an der Maus. Germany, of course, has something of a track-record of remaking things more or less identically. The US, however, either remakes a show more or less frame-by-frame at first (e.g. The Killing) or it does something almost completely different, while still using some of the original ideas (e.g. Homeland).

Now, back in 2007 with The IT Crowd, the US took the former path, choosing to recapture the apparent perfection of the first episode with an almost frame-by-frame remake. Although most of the cast were American, the producers even went to the effort of importing Richard Ayoade to revisit the character of Moss for them. But, as so often happens with US identikit copies of comedies, it still wasn’t funny, as you can see from this delightful video from the pilot episode.

Interestingly for Community fans, Joel McHale here plays the part of Roy and Richard Ayoade went on to direct an episode of Community‘s second season – I wonder if he had a hand in that.

Monday’s “Guest stars, Anger Management and King of Soho name change” news

Film

Trailers

Canadian TV

  • Claudia Black to guest on Haven
  • Continuum‘s Lexa Doig and Eureka‘s Colin Ferguson to guest on Primeval: New World
  • Fiona Conway to be CBC executive director of programming

UK TV

US TV

New US TV shows

Wednesday’s “Sky acquires four US shows, The Newsroom down 20% in ratings and Tom Cruise is Jack Reacher” news

Film

Trailers

  • Trailer for Why Stop Now, with Jesse Eisenberg, Melissa Leo and Tracy Morgan
  • Trailer for Jack Reacher, with Tom Cruise

Comics

UK TV

  • Sky 1 HD acquires Arrow; Sky Atlantic HD acquires The Following and Vegas; Sky Living acquires Elementary

US TV

Tuesday’s “More Newsroom and True Blood, the Bates Motel series and US Sirens gets picked up” news

Doctor Who

  • Diana Rigg and Rachael Stirling to guest on Doctor Who

Film

Trailers

  • Trailer for Compliance with Dreama Walker
  • Trailer for The Tall Man, with Jessica Biel

US TV

New US TV shows

  • A&E orders Carlton Cuse’s Bates Motel to series
  • Trailer for Tom Hanks’ web series Electric City
  • Lili Taylor and Kandyse McClure to appear in Netflix’s Hemlock Grove
  • USA picks up Paging Dr Freed and Sirens
US TV

Review: Anger Management (FX) 1×1-1×2

Anger Management

In the US: Thursdays, 9.30pm, FX
In the UK: Not yet acquired.

So how do you want to be remembered when you die? Do you want to go out with a bang or do you want to fade away?

Charlie Sheen seemed dead certain to be going for option a. After a catastrophic public meltdown that saw him chucked off Two And A Half Men, one of the US’s top-rated comedy shows, he seemed to be going pellmell towards even further collapse. And then…

…he signed up for Anger Management, an FX sitcom. Well, surely that was going to be like petrol to a forest fire – an even greater disaster in the making.

Except not. Anger Management is a fairly traditional sitcom in which Charlie Sheen plays Charlie, a former baseball player turned anger management therapist who has some – but not much – difficulty dealing with his patients, another therapist (Selma Blair) who is also his best friend with benefits, his ex-wife and his daughter, as well as dating in general.

And while there are a couple of meta-moments about his firing from Two And A Half Men at the beginning of the first episode and while in many ways this is the same womanising Charlie of that sitcom, this is not the Charlie Sheen you might have been expecting. This is a Charlie Sheen who can talk coherently, intelligently, sensitively about issues and resolve them like an intelligent adult.

Boy is it dull, even if FX is trailing it as something of train wreck. It seems Charlie Sheen went with option b.

Continue reading “Review: Anger Management (FX) 1×1-1×2”