Archive for February, 2008

Werewolves, Vampires and Ghosts, Oh My

It seems that the BBC has adopted the American practice of making pilots of its new dramas before going on to produce a full series. One such pilot currently being shown on the new and fabulous BBC iPlayer (sadly not available to those reading outside the UK) is begging to be picked up for a full series. In the rich drama/horror/black comedy Being Human, the BBC has created a surprisingly excellent show.

Being HumanOn the face of it, it sounds like a fairly cheesy premise - a vampire, a werewolf, and a ghost live in a house together and try to lead ‘normal lives’. But the production is deftly handled and any potential cheesiness is completely off-set by some wonderful, sharp scripting and incredibly well-sculpted performances from the three main leads. They each reveal a deep sense of desperation and sadness underneath a thin veneer of sarcasm and witty banter.

I am particularly enamoured of Anya, the ghost of a young woman who died ‘quickly’ and who is cursed with the compulsion to make cups of tea but the inability to drink them. Actress Andrea Riseborough brings a wonderful deadpan delivery to some great lines, hinting at a great misery and a life that ended without resolution, trapping her in the house where she died. Mitchell, the vampire, is sickened by his need for the blood of young women, and is determined to go cold turkey even though it goes against his very nature. And George, the werewolf, desperately wants to lead a normal life, but once a month he has to lock himself away in isolation so that he won’t kill the people he loves. Actor Russell Tovey brilliantly portrays a gentle man who is filled with self-loathing but also, secretly, enamoured of the power and blood-lust that his monthly transformation brings.

The script crackles with pop-culture references and is full of rapid-fire throwaway lines that will make you smirk when you catch them. I particularly enjoyed the werewolf/vampire/ghost take on that old chestnut - which house would you be in if you went to Hogwarts? (Anya - ‘I always fancied Hufflepuff, it sounds like they spend all day playing with safety scissors and glitter’.) I really really hope that this show gets picked up for a full series. In fact, I am doing more than hoping; I’m taking action. And you can too. There’s a petition up here to beg the BBC to green-light it.

If you haven’t already seen Being Human, it’s still up on the iPlayer for another few days, and I fervently hope it will make an appearance on BBC America before too long, although as far as I can tell it’s not scheduled there yet. If you get the chance, watch this show, and then consider yourself very fortunate that you’re only human after all.

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Questioning Lost

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Right, people. Let’s talk Lost.

I must first confess that I am not one of the Lost faithful. I like it well enough, and some episodes have been incredible. On the whole however, I find the questions to answers ratio frustratingly high and wish, just once, they’d wrap up a storyline in a somewhat conclusive manner (and no, Nicky and Paolo don’t count). I’ve given up on the show more than once, but it somehow always lures me back in. Shirtless Sawyer may have something to do with that.

However, even more powerful than half-naked Sawyer was the producers’ promise to wrap up the entire story within 48 episodes. There was a plan! Some may claim there’s been a plan all along, but considering that Michael Emerson (Ben) was only supposed to be in a handful of episodes in the second season and is now a major player, I am dubious. Still, the show clearly had an endgame in place now, and while rambling, love-triangle obsessed Lost causes me to reach for the vodka bottle, focused, urgent Lost is plenty intoxicating on its own. In other words, I really like season 4.

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Raise Your Voice

Someone pointed out to me this weekend that I haven’t written about season 4 of Lost yet. I have good reasons for this — namely, that I don’t see the episode till Friday evening, and by the time I’d get around to posting on Monday, I’d be so muddled as to what actually happened that the odds of producing a sensible post would be slim indeed (arguing whether “sense” and “Lost” should ever share the same sentence is a debatable point, I’m sure).

However, she was absolutely right, and there will definitely be a mid-season Lost check-in coming this week. It also got me thinking: what other favorite shows have I been overlooking? Here is your chance, fellow Vultures, to tell me what you would like to see more of on this site.  What are your top three favorite shows? Which articles have been your favorites? This is your blog, too — don’t let me miss anything important!

Though, in all honesty, if anyone says Big Brother, I will probably ignore that particular request.

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TV Blog Coalition: Feb. 22-24

TV Blog Coalition

Buzz wondered if a movie version of The Wire would be a good idea. (BuzzSugar)

Sandie shared a preview clip from the new season of FX’s Dirt. (Daemon’s TV)

The return of live American Idol makes Mikey nostalgic for the TV of yesteryear. (Mikey Likes TV)

Here at PV, Marcia considered whether Ashes to Ashes was a worthy successor to Life on Mars. (Pop Vultures)

Rae dissected what she liked and disliked about the Knight Rider movie and admits she’d probably still give it a shot if NBC picks it up. (RTVW)

Dr. Abbott, Ed Stevens, Ms. Hendricks, Mac’s roommate, The Shredder, Uncle Phil, and George Michael? Sign Scooter up for more episodes of Eli Stone even if ABC won’t. (Scooter McGavin’s 9th Green)

Cover your ears, TV fans. Jennifer couldn’t contain her anger and ranted against NBC for canceling Las Vegas. (Tube Talk)

The TV Addict helps pitch Friday Night Lights to the CW, TNT and SCI FI (the TV Addict)

Vance LOVES Lost even though he is completely lost while trying to follow the show. (Tapeworthy)

This week, Jace was underwhelmed by Knight Rider, entranced by Lost, and hungry for more of BBC’s culinary competition, Last Restaurant Standing. (Televisionary)

Dan dug up some reality show contestants’ porno past, including folks from Survivor and American Gladiators. (TiFaux)

Raoul interviewed Mary from Survivor (TV Filter)

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Secrets and Lies [Beverly Hills 90210]

Beverly Hills 90210

Beverly Hills 90210, S01 E12: Slumber Party

Last week, the show gave us dubious and confusing messages about the results of teen pregnancy and motherhood. This week, Brenda has an evil slumber party, and Brandon and Steve get scammed.

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5 Shows Canceled Before Their Time

With television renewals for next year coming fast and furious, diehard fans of certain shows are starting to get a bit nervous. They can’t shut down Friday Night Lights! How I Met Your Mother can’t end before we meet the mother! Cavemen shouldn’t be made history…nah, I can’t even pretend to care about that one. But, on the whole, these shows have at least been given a chance to prove their worth and accrue an audience. In the past, some of television’s best shows were yanked off the air after a measly handful of episodes. Today’s Friday 5 looks at the shows that were canceled too soon. Many of these STILL have mourners.

5. Action
Why it was brilliant:
Actionwas a blacker than black comedy and a merciless satire of Hollywood. Starring Jay Mohr as uber-producer Peter Dragon (imagine Brett Ratner and Jerry Bruckheimer had a short, snarky love child), the series focused on Dragon’s attempts to get his latest blockbuster, Beverly Hills Gun Club, from development to the screen. Naturally, this involved Russian mafia producers, drug-addled starlets, and a hooker with a heart of gold. The show was rude, crude, explicit, and hysterical. It’s also, to the best of my knowledge, the only TV-on-DVD set that still holds an NC-17 rating.
Why it was canceled: Fox, the network that brought you Married by America and The Littlest Groom, was always a bit nervous about the reception of this envelope-pushing sitcom. After all, some people might consider it tasteless! It was all well and good when the show’s publicity helped cement Fox’s reputation as the “edgy” network, but the network never fully committed itself to the risky show. Action only aired for eight episodes. When the ratings failed to impress the execs, they deemed America unready for such a raunchy comedy and pulled it.

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Ashes to Ashes, Funk to Funky

Life on Mars was arguably the best British drama of the decade. It was thoughtful and thought-provoking, engaging and entertaining, and was capped off with a near flawless finale. Everything seemed to be wrapped up as neatly as possible when dealing with the story of a time-traveling cop who may or may not be in a coma and/or completely mad.

ashes to ashesOf course, if you’re the BBC, struggling a bit to find truly high quality programming amidst various searches for the next West End Star or the world’s most awkward conversations between parents and teens, you can’t actually let the story end — especially when you’ve created a near iconic figure in Gene Hunt. All you need is a new setting, a new protagonist, a new David Bowie-inspired title, and you’re good to go. Whether the end result is a new winning formula or a strong contender for the “Beating a Dead Horse” award is another matter altogether.

Still need to watch the finale of Life on Mars? Then stop reading, cause I refuse to spoil it for anyone. Otherwise, follow the jump to the Ashes to Ashes review.

Continue reading ‘Ashes to Ashes, Funk to Funky’

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Tidbits for February 19, 2008: The Super-Sized Edition

I’ve gotten a bit behind on reporting the news this last week, an unfortunate side effect of living in a society that insists on practicing a service-for-currency system. It seems ludicrous that work should ever take priority over television reporting, I know. In an attempt to get caught up, today’s tidbits are coming at you in super-sized form.

  • CBS has renewed 11 shows for next season, among them Cold Case, NCIS, Ghost Whisperer, The Big Bang Theory, and all three CSIs. Looking at this list, I am reminded of how little I actually watch or care about CBS. Worryingly, How I Met Your Mother is not on the list, though it has been picked up for nine more episodes this year, indicating that the network has yet to give up on it.
  • What Would Riggins Do?  Save Friday Night Lights!Which is, sadly, more support than Friday Night Lights is currently getting from NBC. I have delayed writing about this, clinging to some desperate hope that the NBC bigwigs will pull their heads out of their collective arses and renew the best show currently on network television, but so far there has been nothing but deafening silence coming from the studio bosses on high. Best Week Ever has launched a full-scale Save Our Show campaign. If Jericho fans can do it, so can we, damn it. What would Riggins do, indeed? (Well, Riggins would probably get drunk, end up in bed with some hot neighbor, moon over Lila a bit, and then pass out on the sofa. You can do all that if you want, but sign the petition first, okay?)
  • How about some good news? Season 4 of Battlestar Galactica returns on April 4. Still wondering what the big deal is? Well, if you can’t be bothered to watch the DVDs of previous seasons (and more fool you, I say), the Sci-Fi channel is helpfully airing a half hour special on March 28 to get new viewers caught up on the ins and outs of the space apocalypse action soap opera and contemporary moral allegory.
  • Can’t get enough of Philip Glenister in Life On Mars or Ashes To Ashes? Have Moonlight and Blood Ties failed to sate your desire for television vampires? Then you’ll be pleased to hear that Glenister will be starring in a new ITV drama in the UK. Still untitled, the drama aims to update Bram Stoker’s Dracula in a London setting. At least these bloodsuckers are sensible enough to live where it’s dark and gloomy 3/4 of the year, unlike those foolish Southern California-dwellers of the Buffy series.
  • Finally, for all you aspiring screenwriters, Eric Estrin — who we interviewed for the Adopt A Writer — has officially kicked off the LAObserved Script Project. Break out the Final Draft and see what stories you want to tell. Short on ideas? No worries — just combine the best shows from this post and end up with a football playing vampire with a robotic girlfriend from the future. It will be a surefire hit, I promise.

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Project Runway Puts on an Art Show

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Project Runway, S04 E11: The Art of Fashion

Previously on Project Runway: the universe righted itself when Ricky and his ugly hats were aufed at long last. This week: the designers are asked to design outfits based on pieces from the Metropolitan Museum of Art and do a pretty good job of not screwing it up.

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TV Blog Coalition: Feb. 15-17

TV Blog Coalition

Pop Vultures is a proud member of the TV Blog Coalition, which brings you the best of the TV blogosphere each week.

Buzz is pitting all of this season’s Project Runway looks against each other to figure out which is the most fab. (BuzzSugar)

Eric came up with the Top 5 TV Villains on television today. (Daemon’s TV)

With all of this early news about the Fall 08 season, Mikey wonders why How I Met Your Mother still hasn’t found an audience after three years on the bubble. (Mikey Likes TV)

Here at PV, Marcia celebrated Valentine’s Day by remembering some of television’s greatest kisses. (Pop Vultures)

After attending the taping of MTV’s America’s Best Dance Crew premiere episode, Spads shared tidbits from her conversations with judges JC Chasez, Lil Mama, and Shane Sparks. (RTVW)

Scooter finally got around to watching the first two episodes of the new season of Lost and, um, well… yeah. (Scooter McGavin’s 9th Green)

Last week, Vance bawled while watching Friday Night Lights. Now he may bawl at the thought of NOT being able to watch any more new Friday Night Lights. (Tapeworthy)

Dan took some time to think about whether he actually liked Eli Stone, or whether it was just the best scripted show still in new episodes. Either way, Jonny Lee Miller’s dreamy. (TiFaux)

Jennifer pondered why everyone falls for Boston Legal’s Shirley Schmidt and gushed about Scott Bakula’s visit to the firm. (Tube Talk)

Kate came up with a Gossip Girl drinking game. (TV Filter)

Taking a page from How I Met Your Mother’s Barney and his Hot/Crazy Scale, the TV Addict is proud to introduce the LOST Quality/Question Scale! (theTVaddict.com)

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