Friday’s “David Cronenberg back on TV, Michael Bay’s Treasure Island TV prequel, Supernatural renewed and the BBC’s new dramas” news

The Daily News will return on Tuesday

Film

Trailers

  • New trailer for The Amazing Spider-Man
  • Trailer for End of Watch with Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Pena
  • Trailer for The Expendables 2

Theatre

Canadian TV

UK TV

US TV

US TV pilots

  • Jeff Fahey and David Cronenberg to guest on SyFy’s Rewind
  • AMC orders pilots for two shows, including Low Winter Sun
Streaming TV

Review: Netflix (UK)

Netflix on PC

Netflix in the US is a massive force. Kind of like Lovefilm, it has a TV and film DVD rental service as well as an online streaming service, but it makes so much money, it can now afford to make its own programmes, including a remake of House of Cards with Kevin Spacey.

Now it’s come to the UK. Available on your laptop, your Apple TV, your iPad, your iPhone, your PlayStation, your Wii and probably your cooker as well, Netflix is simple to use, integrates well with social networks, and delivers a true multi-platform experience, all for £5.99 a month.

It’s just a shame there’s bugger all to watch on it.

Continue reading “Review: Netflix (UK)”

Random Acts

Random Acts: Ali Larter eats cake, Amber Heard photobombs

Ali Larter loves Reddit

It’s been a while since we’ve heard from our Ali, although she’s been off doing lots of charity work and raising her new son. But she recently did an interview on Reddit in which she revealed not only is she working on a cookbook, she’s also working on a TV show not too far from home:

I’m developing a TV show. I love the brainstorming and creative process…exciting to be a producer, help guide the show, and be an actress… It’s a dark comedy based in the charity world…it’s about doing bad in the name of good.

I’ve also been working on a cookbook about entertaining. I started traveling at a young age, and cooking/entertaining was a way to create a familial environment everywhere I went.

Meanwhile, Amber Heard has been off photobombing people:

Amber Heard photobombs

Don’t ask me why. I mean this is random acts, isn’t it?

Tuesday’s “up even later all night” news

Doctor Who

  • Matt Smith signs on for series seven and 50th anniversary special

Film

  • Amber Heard and Dominic Cooper to star in Motor City
  • Chris Evans to replace James Franco in The Iceman
  • Trailer for Gone, with Amanda Seyfried and Jennifer Carpenter

British TV

  • Chiwetel Ejofor and Matthew Goode to star in Poliakoff’s The Lost Prince
  • Kudos to adapt Swedish sci-fi drama Real Humans [subscription required]

US TV

US TV

What did you watch last week (w/e September 28)?

Time for "What did you watch last week?", my chance to tell you what I watched last week that I haven’t already reviewed and your chance to recommend things to everyone else (and me) in case we’ve missed them.

My recommendations for maximum viewing pleasure this week: The Daily ShowDoctor Who, Modern Family, Happy Endings and Community.

Things you might enjoy but that I’m not necessarily recommending: Strike Back: Project Dawn, Ringer, Up All Night.

Now, normally, of course, after the first episodes of all the new series have aired, I stick around for the second and third episodes of all the shows that are promising. Unfortunately, this year, there’s been a whole load of second episodes that have been so unbareably painful to watch, that I turned off halfway through them. So, don’t, whatever you do, bother with:

  • Revenge: ridiculously stupid and pretentious.
  • Whitney: cutting-edge relationship observations such as "It’s hard for two people to take a shower at the same time" and "Maybe go on a date together to re-kindle the romance – except you know it’ll go wrong". Oh dear
  • 2 Broke Girls: badly written, not funny and even more racist than Sex and the City 2
  • Charlie’s Angels: The Angels go undercover as fashion models. FRO.
  • Unforgettable: even more generic than the first episode.

I also tried the first episode of Hart of Dixie with Rachel Bilson – ridiculously attractive, brilliant neurosurgeon ends up having to take a job in the Deep South – which was on a par with 2 Broke Girls for relentless stereotypes and equally relentlessly cliched dramatically. So I turned that one off pretty quickly.

But there were a few second episodes that were tolerable at least:

  • The Playboy Club: settling down into more of a soapy groove and starting to plays to its stars’ strengths while steering them away from their weaknesses. So Eddie Cibrian’s character took a turn for the slimey. Amber Heard’s character stopped being quite so wet and became a lot more assertive and sexier, allowing her to remember how to act. The supporting cast all got a lot more to do as well. However, all pretence that the show was in any way about empowering women disappeared, with the main plot revolving around the bunnies having a competition to pose for the front cover of Playboy. Oh dear.
  • Prime Suspect: A big drop-off in quality from the first episode, but at least this one was genuinely about a ‘prime suspect’. Largely by the books procedural, but a relatively good one.
  • Person of Interest: Something of an origins story, but still much less interesting than the first episode because of the reduced violence levels.

Still in my viewing pile: last night’s Dexter and Friday’s A Gifted Man. I should have a review of How To Be A Gentleman up later.

And in this week’s list of movies:

  • Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy: certainly faster paced than the TV series, it’s a brilliant evocation of the 70s that starts off a little bit fragmented and difficult to follow but really finds its feets after about the first 20 minutes or so. A must-see.

But what have you been watching?

"What did you watch last week?" 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?