News

News: Kitty Winter arrives on Sherlock, a Constantine reboot, no Ali Larter on new Heroes + more

First pic of the 12th Doctor

Film casting

Trailers

  • Trailer for Wild, with Reece Witherspoon, Laura Dern, Gabby Goffman et al

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV shows

News

News: Horn-Rimmed Glasses return to Heroes, Jason Momoa to play Aquaman, Chasing Shadows trailer + more

Jason Moma

Film casting

Canadian TV

New UK TV shows

  • Trailer for ITV’s Chasing Shadows with Alex Kingston and Noel Clarke

US TV

US TV show casting

New US TV show casting

News: Discovery/BSkyB buy 5, Heroes’ digital prequel, Y Gwyll on Netflix + more

Film casting

Trailers

  • Trailer for Paul Haggis’ Third Person with Liam Neeson, Kim Basinger, Olivia Wilde et al
  • Trailer for David Cronenberg’s Maps To The Stars with Mia Wasikowska, Julianne Moore, John Cusack et al
  • Trailer for Oculus with Karen Gillan
  • Final trailer for X-Men: Days of Future Past

Internet TV

UK TV

US TV

New US TV shows

News: Being Human (US) cancelled, Matthew Perry’s Odd Couple gets a pilot and a new companion + more

Doctor Who

Film casting

Trailers

French TV

UK TV

New UK TV shows

  • Sky adapting: Diabolik with Sky Deutschland and Sky Italia

US TV

New US TV shows

New US TV show casting

The BarrometerA Barrometer rating of 4

Third-episode verdict: The Musketeers (BBC1/BBC America)

In the UK: Sundays, 9pm, BBC1
In the US: BBC America. Will air in late Spring

So we’re three episodes into The Musketeers, an adaptation of Alexandre Dumas’s classic The Three Musketeers so embarrassingly low in its ambitions, it decided to leave out the ‘Three’ in case people were confused by there being four heroes. Originally aimed at filling the gap in between seasons of Doctor Who, it’s had all the narrative sophistication of Dogtanian and The Three Muskehounds without the charm, characterisation, acting talent or fidelity to the original.

For the first two episodes at least, we’ve been treated to junior league antics, with a collectively poor bunch of actors (honourable exceptions: Peter Capaldi and Santiago Cabrera) prancing around Prague in leathers, sword-fighting like they’re still seven and playing at being Jedi in their back gardens. You’d have been hard-pushed to distinguish most of the characters from one another, such was its bland uniformity, and without their names, the occasional reference to France and the musketeers, you’d have been even harder pushed to realise what the source material for the series was.

Things changed considerably for the better on Sunday, though, where despite the presence of Gaius Baltar himself (James Callis), hamming it up something chronic as a pirate/trader, the show decided to take a turn for the serious and to dust off its moth-eaten copy of Dumas’ original to actually flesh out some of the characters, as well as do some of its own inventing. So at last we get some of Athos’ back story and Cabrera gets to show off his Spanish. The history of the period became something more than just a head-nod in between anachronisms and actually got to be an important plot and character point: Porthos, whose non-whiteness had until now been ignored and used mainly as a combination of colour-blind casting and an acknowledgement of the non-white Dumas, was revealed as the son of a former slave and his experiences of slavery were used to good effect to contrast with the then-legal practice of slavery that even a cardinal of the church could indulge in.

Unfortunately, despite the general hugely improved script quality of the episode compared with its predecessors’, the show’s structural flaws were still there for all to see. As well as the blatant fact the show isn’t filmed in France or have any real French qualities at all, the poor acting, and everything else, it’s about 20 minutes too long per episode. So even though the show was allowed to breath a little and to actually give some qualities to the musketeers for us to care about them, after a while, every scene ended with the surprise that there was yet another scene afterwards that you’d have to sit through to get to the end of the episode.

It’s not a great show – indeed, in combination with the likes of Atlantis and other “original British dramas” (which all seem to be adaptations, incidentally), I’ve been getting conditioned of late to hate anything that’s British and a drama, knowing it’s largely going to be a waste of my time and an insult to my intelligence – but this third episode did make me think there was hope in sight and the show might be worth watching by the end of the season. However, the fact they’re now going to have to write Peter Capaldi out of the series for the second season makes me think that even if I do get to the end of this season, there won’t be much point.

Barrometer rating: 4
Rob’s prediction: Will probably get another season but no more, and the departure of Capaldi might be sufficient pretext for the BBC to cancel the show if ratings continue to drop.