House
Friday, 29 May 2009
ER is dead. Long live House
House
Thursday, 28 May 2009
Hey C*** F**ksy! John's back!
Sunday, 24 May 2009
APOLOGIES, BUFFY FANS We missed the start of Joss Whedon's new show
Saturday, 23 May 2009
AD BREAK: Sponsorship will eat itself at Five
Thursday, 21 May 2009
PLAYER POWER (Shows you haven't missed after all)
Feast
BBC iPlayer
(and BBC4, Wednesdays, 9pm)
Conflict of interest alert! Presenter Stefan Gates is an old friend, so of course I'm a big fan. But I'd enjoy this series anyway - travel, food and personable presenter with an easy style: what's not to like?
In this first episode he visits India. First he's a guest at a three-day society wedding in Rajasthan (why don't we have cricket matches at British weddings?). Generously, he does not compare it to PoshnBecks' nuptials, even though he must have been sorely tempted. In fact, Stefan humanises something that seems all façade - and eventually the incredibly overprivileged families come across sympathetically.
Later, he visits Kerala for the Onam festival. Whereas the food is rather glossed over in the wedding section, there is some good insight into Keralan cooking here. But the highlight is when our man gets shaved and painted like a tiger for a parade. (He still had a yellowish tinge when I saw him about a week after he got home.)
As the first white boy to join in this part of the festival, he attracts a lot of media attention and accidentally assaults a local TV reporter. The Indian equivalent Dennis Norden (Dinesh Norden?) will already have bought up that clip.
Just one point of order - Gates claims the hypnotic tiger dance is like being at a rave in the 80s. Rave, Stef? When we DJed together in 1989, you kept on putting on James Brown records while I was trying to play 808 State and A Guy Called Gerald.
Monday, 18 May 2009
END OF SEASON REPORTS
Damages: 6/10
The climax was pretty good - although it was obvious from the start that Ellen wouldn't have shot "Paddy" Hewes (despite attempts to convince us with a flash forward of Patty bleeding in the lift). Nice that Patty was in control of the situation all along (at home as well as work - that little priggish son needed bringing down a peg or ten), and how Wes dealt with sociopath detective Rick Messer.
However, on the whole, this felt like a bit of a holding series. Frobisher featured so fleetingly, there was hardly any point him being involved; Walter Kendrick wasn't much of a baddie; and we didn't get enough of the really sinister characters – Dave Pell (played by the brilliant Clarke Peters - Lester Freamon in The Wire, Mandela in Endgame and soon to be in Holby City!) and "The Deacon", the dead-faced killer of Purcell's wife. We must hope season 3 will centre on them. More cold sweat from William Hurt would be good too.
Heroes: 3/10
Should this be a judgement on Season 3 or Volume 4? I don't know: it's a mess.
Season 3 began by implicitly saying, "Let's pretend season 2 never happened". Characters disappeared (Monica the muscle mimic, Maya, Molly - woe betide anyone whose name began with M, barring moaning Matt Parkman). And it ended in much the same vein - poor old Daphne the speedster dies and a couple of episodes later Parkman seems to have forgotten that his whole purpose was to build a life with her and is now fighting to get his former missus back.
Volume 4 just tread water, despite having a clear villain (in The Hunter). That was what made Season 1 so good - everything built towards foliing Sylar. This term Sylar swapped sides twice an episode, heroes were unconvincing both as villains (it boiled down to Petrelli family bickering) and fugitives (they just wandered around a bit). The main heroes – Claire, Peter, Nathan, Parkman, Mohinder (oh, another surviving M), Hiro & Ando – became duller and duller. Meanwhile new characters drifted in and out: Claire Bear's daddy issues made it impossible to keep a boyfriend; and some interesting ones were killed off instantly, thus wasting ability-based storylines which could have developed nicely.
At least Sylar's shape-shifting was cool and the subsequent identity crisis was the only genuinely engaging storyline since Season 1.
In the end though, you spend too much time wondering about stuff you've missed or forgotten – or possibly the producers have. Does Mohinder have powers still? If not, why does Ando? Is Ando still going to kill Hiro? What was all that about Sylar becoming a stay-at-home married dad with a penchant for cooking in the future? Was that that in season 2 so therefore "didn't happen"? Do we even care any more?
Coming soon: Lost (I've got a few episodes to catch up) and 24
Thursday, 14 May 2009
NEW SERIES TONIGHT - Lie To Me
Wednesday, 13 May 2009
WOT WE SEEN URRIN? (Familiar faces from your favourite shows)
Show... Sons Of Anarchy