US TV

Review: Spartacus – Blood and Sand 1×1

Spartacus

In the US: Fridays, 10pm ET/PT, Starz
In the UK: Summer 2010

Every so often, someone will come along and claim of a British TV programme, “Of course, you wouldn’t see that on US TV. It’s too gritty/grimy/explicit [delete as appropriate].” These kind of people have never seen US cable TV.

HBO is the obvious standout when it comes to risk-taking, but Showtime and AMC are now pushing the envelope as well. But the latest arrival to decent, risk-taking TV programming in the US is Starz. As well as the likes of Crash and Party Down, Starz has just added Spartacus to its roster of edgy shows.

Imagine the violence and look of 300 coupled with the language of The Wire and the soft core porn of Caligula and you have Spartacus. Oh, yes – it has a subtitle: Blood and Sand. That’s kind of a clue.

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Classic TV

Weird old title sequences: The Invaders (1967)

The Invaders

Back in the 60s and 70s, there was a kind of show that we don’t really see any more: “the fixing-up wanderer” show. Whether it was The Immortal, Branded, Coronet Blue, The Fugitive, The Incredible Hulk, Kung Fu or any of the others, the format was essentially the same and designed to allow shows to be broadcast in any order during syndication, re-runs, etc, without anyone getting lost: a man (it was always a man) would travel from town to town, doing his best to evade some horrible authority or person chasing after them; he’d try to stay low profile, but sooner or later, he’d discover some drama in the town that needed fixing. The situation would get fixed and the hero would move on to another town for the next episode, typically without anything happening that would change the overall show format (unless it was the first or last episode of a season).

Many of these shows were from Quinn Martin Productions, and after the popular The Fugitive started to draw to close in 1967, producers started looking for a replacement show of the same ilk. Larry Cohen, the creator of both Branded and Coronet Blue, came up with something that hooked into the flying saucer craze that had gripped the nation since the late 50s. It was The Invaders and it had a weird old title sequence.

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Thursday’s Iron Man Hot Tub news

Doctor Who

  • Pics of David Tennant and Jerry O’Connell in Rex is Not Your Lawyer

Film

British TV

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Monday’s plummeting ratings news

Doctor Who

Film

Theatre

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News

Thursday’s shrugging Titan news

Scarlett Johanssen in Iron Man 2

Doctor Who

Film

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Canadian TV

  • Canwest commissions pilot of comedy Rise Up

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