Tag Archive | "Battlestar Galactica"

10 result(s) displayed (1 - 10 of 95)

Fox's Fall 2008 shows

Posted yesterday at 10:15 | 1 comment |

Dollhouse

We've looked at ABC's new Fall drama, Life on Mars, and we've had a look through CBS's as well, so now it's time to give Fox's Fall 2008 output a looksie.

On the schedule, we have a new Joss Whedon sci-fi spy show starring Eliza Dushka, Dollhouse; a new animated comedy from Family Guy's Seth MacFarlane, The Cleveland Show; an X-Files for the noughties from Alias/Lost creator JJ Abrams, Fringe; a covert remake of Angela's Eyes in the form of Lie to Me; not so covert remakes of Australian show Sit Down, Shut Up and British shows Secret Millionaire and Outnumbered; Alfred Molina playing Judge House; and something that makes Hotel Babylon seem like art.

Continue reading "Fox's Fall 2008 shows"

Read other posts about: , ,

Monday's villainous news

Posted 5 days ago at 08:54 | 2 comments |

Doctor Who

Film

Theatre

British TV

US TV

Subscribe to the daily news by RSS or email

Read other posts about: , , , ,

Wednesday's “Awright, Little Dorrit?” news

Posted 10 days ago at 07:22 | Post a comment |

Doctor Who

Film

British TV

US TV

Subscribe to the daily news by RSS or email

Read other posts about: , , , ,

Friday's 24 cast shot news

Posted 22 days ago at 07:28 | 1 comment |

24 cast

Doctor Who

Film

Events

  • Jessica Hynes to do a night of stand-up and DJ sets for charity with friends

British TV

US TV

Subscribe to the daily news by RSS or email

Read other posts about: , , , , , ,

Tuesday's fabulous Absolutely news

Posted 25 days ago at 07:55 | 4 comments |

Doctor Who

Film

Comics

British TV

US TV

Subscribe to the daily news by RSS or email

Read other posts about: , , , ,

Review: Battlestar Galactica 4x1-4x2

Posted on April 14, 2008 at 17:10 | Post a comment |

BSG 412

In the US: Fridays, 10/9c, Sci-Fi
In the UK: Tuesdays, 9pm, Sky One. Starts 15th April

It's easy to have a love-hate relationship with Battlestar Galactica. On the one hand, if you ever need to cite an example of well executed adult science-fiction, all you have to do is say "Battlestar Galactica" and you're sorted. Space-faring humanity lives on 12 colony planets, fearing only the return of their own robotic creations, the cylons, who've been quiet for the 40 years since their war of independence. The robots come back – looking like humans and convinced they're God's new favourites, endowed with souls – and nuke the hell out of the colonies, leaving just a few tens of thousands of survivors who manage to escape, protected by the one surviving military vessel of note, Galactica

So far, so bleak. And indeed, much of the first season is unrelentingly bleak, as humanity tries to work out how to get food, water and other necessary supplies, all the while chased by the unresting, unrelenting legions of cylons trying to exterminate them once and for all as they try to find the missing 13th colony – Earth.

But if there's one watchword that defines the series, it's change. Everything changes. Relationships between people change. Characters die. New characters appear. The whole format changes, with another Battlestar appearing, the humans finding a new world to live on. and characters suddenly finding out that they are in fact cylons themselves.

And not all of these changes have been for the good. In particular, BSG began to suffer from "up its own arse" syndrome. Weighed down by its own mythos and intricacies, it stopped being an accessible metaphor for war and terrorism and became more than a little daft at times. When it was good, it was very, very good, but when it was bad, it was horrid.

So what's season four – the final season, even though it's been cut in half – going to be like?

Continue reading "Review: Battlestar Galactica 4x1-4x2"

Read other posts about:

Monday's political impersonations news

Posted on April 14, 2008 at 09:03 | 2 comments |

The latest news, plus a few things that happened while I was on holiday last week. Apologies if I left anything important out!

Doctor Who

Film

British TV

US TV

Subscribe to the daily news by RSS or email

Read other posts about: , , ,

Thursday's “Bill and Ted… not!” news

Posted on April 3, 2008 at 07:21 | Post a comment |

Doctor Who

Film

British TV

US TV

  • ABC unveils new sitcoms, including Molly Ringwald vehicle Brenda Hampton and Roman's Empire/Never Better remakes
  • NBC unveils Fall schedule, including Lipstick Jungle, Friday Night Lights, 30 Rock, a spin-off from The Office and the last season of ER
  • CSI/Two and a Half Men writers swap will lead to Cybill parody?
  • Britney to return to HIMYM?
  • A long interview with Ronald D Moore about BSG season four et al
  • Ridley and Tony Scott to adapt Ken Follett's The Pillars of the Earth thanks to Oprah

Subscribe to the daily news by RSS or email

Read other posts about: , ,

Wednesday's dimensionally transcendental news

Posted on April 2, 2008 at 08:03 | 2 comments |

Doctor Who

Film

British TV

US TV

Subscribe to the daily news by RSS or email

Read other posts about:

What's your favourite TV decade? And how did you get to see it?

Posted on March 27, 2008 at 11:21 | 4 comments |

 

At first sight, this looks like a meme. And it is. Sort of. But it's also about something that's been concerning me of late: the youth of today. Ah, I must be getting old if I'm getting concerned about the youth of today – and using the phrase "the youth of today". It's a short step to the Daily Telegraph from here.

What's your favourite TV decade? In other words, which decade produced the television you love the most? Maybe it was the 60s with its escapism and gritty social realism, all rolled into one. Maybe it was the bleak 70s, or the action-packed 80s? It might even be the 90s, when US television really got into quality products for the first time.

But the second part of the question is slightly different: how did you get to see that TV?

I'm gambling that, to a certain extent, most people's favourite TV decade – if they have a favourite decade – will be the time in which they were growing up. If they were young in the 80s, they probably fondly remember 80s TV. And so on.

But there will be a few who will cite an earlier time, and probably a few who will say that the current programmes on TV are the best we've ever had. I'm very fond of 1960s and 1970s, even though I was either too young to have seen very much of it or I hadn't even been born yet – and there's a whole load of 1950s TV that's very good, too.

I grew up in the 80s when there were just four TV channels available to most people. Back then, network programmers had no problem with sticking old programmes and movies on at primetime. Channel 4 stuck The Addams Family, Car 54 Where Are You?, The Munsters, and The Abbott and Costello Show on at 5pm on weekdays, and The Avengers on at night. BBC2 was quite happy to repeat The Invaders, the Basil Rathbone Sherlock Holmes movies, the Falcon and the Saint movies, and more at 6pm of an evening. ITV littered its daytime schedules with The Sandbaggers and Randall & Hopkirk (Deceased) and stuck The Baron, The Champions and Thunderbirds on at the weekends. And BBC1 would trawl out Bonanza on a Sunday afternoon. That's how I got introduced to the TV classics of the past – as well as a few old bits of rubbish.

Nowadays, you can get all of this on DVD, of course, and with multi-channel TV, there are networks more or less dedicated to old faves: ITV4 is a haven for all those ITC shows (R&H (Deceased), Space: 1999, The Champions and The Prisoner are all on right now); there's the Bonanza Channel (or used to be at least) for anyone wanting to catch Lorne Greene before he boarded the original Battlestar Galactica; and BBC4 will occasionally dredge something up from the archives for a brief season (Steptoe and Son, recently, or Doctor Who, starting on the 5th April).

But not the terrestrial channels. More to the point, you have to go looking for this stuff: it's not right there in front of you when you turn on the TV. Which is all well and good, but how – and this is my big point – are the youth of today going to ever see any of their TV heritage and become interested in it? How will they ever experience the thrills of The Outer Limits, The Twilight Zone or The Night Gallery? How will they know the joy of Mrs Peel and Steed's interplay, Carter and Regan's bad driving, or the simple happiness of life in Camberwick Green and Trumpton?

Obviously, learning French, reading classics of literature, and getting a fair understanding of physics, chemistry and biology so they can laugh at homeopaths, particularly French homeopaths, are far more important than tele. But whole lot of effort, expertise, creativity and passion went into creating these old shows, some of which are infinitely superior to their modern successors. Who wouldn't want the original Invaders over its remake, for example? Or, indeed, Randall & Hopkirk (Deceased) - shame on you Vic and Bob. Some of the shows are historical documents in their own rights and are referenced in books and films of the time; some even changed society altogether. And I think it would be a shame to forget that heritage, just as it would be a shame to forget the literature of the 1960s, say.

Is it going to take parents forcing DVDs on their kids or locking every channel except the nostalgia channels to teach them TV history – not that that's a particularly good way to enthuse kids about anything? Now that MOMI's gone we no longer have the equivalent of New York's Paley Center so that's not an option. Worse still, are the youth of today just never going to be able to relate to old TV, any more than most people can relate to classics of Victorian literature? Should we just let ephemeral old TV disappear into the ether and live in the now?

What do you think?

Read other posts about: , , ,

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Next

Powered by Fast Search

Featured Articles

Supernatural - The Official Companion (Season 2)

Win a copy of the book

Read the article

Asides

  • Is there any way to cure me of my addiction to the word 'actually'? I used it twice in a sentence today. I'm out of control!

  • I'm off to see the wizard: the wonderful wizard of Oz.

  • I've added a few new "quick comments" to the list. I hope they help.

RSS feed

RECENT VIDEOS

Click below to view videos...

Amazon goodies

  • Supernatural: The Official Companion: Season 2
  • Theme Time Radio Hour With Your Host Bob Dylan
  • Takin' Over The Asylum
  • Spiral - Series 1
  • Gavin & Stacey : Complete BBC Series 2
  • The Fixer
  • Primeval: Shadow of the Jaguar
  • Gavin And Stacey
  • Absolutely - Absolutely Everything
  • The Andromeda Strain

See all audio play or DVD reviews