News: more Vikings, less Hebburn, Kevin Spacey is Churchill + more

Film casting

  • Kevin Spacey to play Winston Churchill in Captain of the Gate

Trailers

  • Trailer for Hercules: The Thracian Wars
  • Clip from Raid 2
  • Trailer for Let’s Be Cops with Damon Wayans Jr and Jake Johnson
  • Trailer for Doug Liman’s Edge of Tomorrow with Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt

UK TV

UK TV casting

New UK TV show casting

  • James Norton, Robson Green to star in ITV’s Grantchester

US TV

New US TV show casting

US TV

Review: Crisis 1×1 (NBC)

Crisis NBC

In the US: Sundays, 10/9c, NBC

Normally, you can rely on two things in life: CBS to do action well, and NBC to do action badly. There is a CBS Action channel; there is no NBC Action channel.

So works the universe. Or so I thought.

Colour me surprised, therefore, by NBC’s latest action show, Crisis, which not only is good in its own right but is also better than CBS’s very similar Hostages. It even has a better Dermot in it (Dermot Mulroney rather than Dylan McDermott).

As with Hostages before it, it sees a family abducted in order to force a very important person to do some things they wouldn’t normally do. Here, though, Crisis ups the ante somewhat by having a whole coach load of VIPs’ children abducted and those VIPs then getting forced to do things they wouldn’t normally do. Trying to stop the baddies is FBI agent Rachael Taylor (666 Park Avenue, Charlie’s Angels), newbie secret service agent Lance Gross (Tyler Perry’s House of Payne) and Taylor’s sister, CEO and parent Gillian Anderson (The X-Files, The Fall, Hannibal).

And although it’s prone to silliness in much the same way as another NBC action hit, The Blacklist, on the whole it’s smart enough and interesting enough that I’m looking forward to the next episode.

Continue reading “Review: Crisis 1×1 (NBC)”

US TV

Mini-review: Those Who Kill 1×1 (A&E)

In the US: Mondays, 10/9c, A&E

There’s a lot of debate about the purpose of international remakes, particularly in the age of the internet, BBC4 and streaming services that allow you to watch the originals even before the remakes air.

I think there’s a point when

  1. It’s a good show
  2. Not many people will have seen it
  3. You do something good with it

So, for example, there was a point to Showtime’s remake of Prisoners of War/Hatufilm, Homeland, which told a different story from the original, which being on Israeli TV hardly anyone had seen; there was also a point to The Tunnel, Sky Atlantic/Canal+’s remake of Denmark/Sweden’s Bron/Broen, since it tied up the narrative considerably and gave it far more local colour and humour, even if the female lead character was nowhere near as good.

I will tell you what there’s is absolutely no point to, though: it’s A&E’s Those Who Kill, which fails on all three counts. Firstly, the original Danish show, Den Som Dræber, which aired on ITV3 in the UK and is available on Netflix in the US, was rubbish – a terrible attempt to make a US serial killer and crime show that treated women terribly and was unremarkable in every way, beyond featuring Lars Mikkelsen.

Neither of those would have been insurmountable issues, had the writers and producers actually done something good with it. But they haven’t. It’s almost exactly the same.

In it, Chloe Sevigny, who was so good in Sky Atlantic’s Hit and Miss but is utterly ignorable in this thanks to having to play a thankless, by the numbers, blank cipher of a rookie detective, goes through exactly the same motions as her Danish predecessor, assisted/hindered by dodgy university professor/potential serial killer James D’Arcy. The big change, if you can call it that, is that while Lars Mikkelsen’s character was a surprisingly supportive and emotive boss, James Morrison’s (Space: Above and Beyond, 24) is a surprisingly supportive and growling boss.

It’s clearly got a much bigger budget than the original, has Glen Morgan (Space: Above and Beyond, The X-Files) writing and producing, and Joe Carnahan (The Grey, The A-Team, The Blacklist) directs the pilot at least. But it adds nothing to something that was incredibly derivative and cliched in the first place.

This is rubbish in any language. I don’t need to review it because I’ve reviewed it already and I don’t need to watch any more of it because I’ve watched it already.

News: Taylor Lautner is BBC3’s new Cuckoo, the good Sheriff of Nottingham, Flash back + more

Film casting

  • Olivia Wilde to star in and produce Reed Morano’s Meadowland

Trailers

  • New trailer for Jonathan Glazer’s Under The Skin with Scarlett Johansson
  • New trailer for Wally Pfister’s Transcendence with Johnny Depp, Paul Bettany, Rebecca Hall et al

Theatre

  • Lily Cole to play Helen of Troy in The Last Days of Troy

Canadian TV

  • CBC greenlights: comedy Schitt’s Creek with Eugene Levy and Catherine O’Hara

UK TV

UK TV show casting

New UK TV shows

  • Reece Shearsmith, Alex Kingston and Noel Clarke to star in ITV’s Chasing Shadows

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

News: Scrotal Recall, more House of Cards and Lex Luthor is Agent X’s president

Film casting

International TV

  • Michael Nyqvist and Dominic Monaghan to star in Swedish-set Merrick adaptation 100 Code

New UK TV shows

UK TV show casting

  • Ian Lavender, Michael Jibson and Dorothy Atkinson join BBC2’s Tubby & Enid

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting