Saturday 31 December 2011

TV

The Big Fat Quiz of the Year 2011
Last year I did massively well at this; this year, not so much... though 27 out of 38 was still respectable enough to land me second.
[Watch it (again) on 4oD.]

Films

The A-Team: Explosive Extended Edition (2010)
[#100 in 100 Films in a Year 2011]
I did it, so I did! Hurrah!

The Man from Earth (2007)
[#98 in 100 Films in a Year 2011]

Winnie the Pooh (2011)
[#99 in 100 Films in a Year 2011]

DVD Extras

Featurettes on The Man from Earth
Four short interview-based bits, coming to only a little over 12 minutes total, about life On the Set, discussing The Story of the Story, screenwriter Jerome Bixby's Sci Fi Legacy, and the process of taking the film From Script to Screen. Interesting, but it might be nice to have a little more detail on the themes of the piece, which are so central to a tale like this. The disc does include two feature-length commentaries, but that swings the other way and feels somehow excessive.

Winnie the Pooh and His Story Too
Short featurette on the US Blu-ray of Winnie the Pooh briefly explaining the character's history. Nice.

Collection Count

Collection Count tracks my DVD/Blu-ray collection via a number of statistics every week.

So, here's my Christmas haul, and a couple more too. And as it's now New Year's Eve, this is also the final tally for 2011! Whoo! Last year's equivalent post has allowed me to chart how the collection has increased in the past year, alongside the regular weekly increase.

Number of titles in collection: 1,423 [up 9 this week; up 165 in 2011]
Of which DVDs: 1,148 [up 4 this week; up 48 in 2011]
Of which Blu-rays: 275 [up 5 this week; up 117 in 2011]

Number of discs in collection: 3,537 [up 20 this week; up 401 in 2011]
Number of films in collection: 1,514 [up 7 this week; up 180 in 2011]
Number of TV episodes in collection: 5,388 [up 50 this week; up 843 in 2011]

Crikey, that's a lot of TV! Wish I could remember what it all was...

As well as all that, it's also time for a (delayed) running time update...

Total running time of collection (approx.):
256 days, 2 hours, and 26 minutes.
(Up 4 days, 19 hours, and 50 minutes from last month, and 31 days, 20 hours, and 11 minutes from last year)

And that's that for 2011! See you next week, faithful reader.

Friday 30 December 2011

TV

Dara O Briain: This is the Show
Three stand-up shows in as many days! I guess it's not just the DVD market that likes to pump these out at Christmastime these days.
Ironically, whereas the other two were English comedians filmed in Ireland, here we have an Irish comedian filmed in England! Well I never.
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Felix & Murdo
One-off sitcom, and/or sitcom pilot, about two Edwardian gentlemen, played by Alexander Armstrong and Ben Miller, written by Men Behaving Badly creator Simon Nye. And that's an indicator of where this went. It was needlessly crass in places -- a list of sexual acts does not constitute a joke -- and slightly uncomfortably old fashioned -- all video-shot and studio-audience-laughter-getting-in-the-way -- but it had its moments. It probably wouldn't have seemed so bad if the Radio Times hadn't gushed about it so heavily.
[Watch it (again) on 4oD.]

Films

Faintheart (2008)
[#97 in 100 Films in a Year 2011]
24 hours to go; three films to go. It's not impossible...

The Spider Woman (1944)
[#96 in 100 Films in a Year 2011]

Thursday 29 December 2011

TV

Bill Bailey: Dandelion Mind
roflysst
[Watch it (again) on 4oD.]

I've Never Seen Star Wars
2x00 Stephen Fry [Christmas special]
Two-and-a-half years since they last tried to bring this Radio 4 series to TV, it's back, with a new host, a new set, the same theme music, and only as a one-off. I enjoyed it first time round and I like it just as much now. More please.
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Little Crackers
2x09 My First Christmas Number One
2x10 Papaji Saves Christmas

Films

Hotel for Dogs (2009)
[#95 in 100 Films in a Year 2011]
Right down to the wire. Doesn't look like I'll make 100 this year.

Wednesday 28 December 2011

TV

Little Crackers
2x06 Shappi 4 Todd
2x07 My First Ton
2x08 The Daltons

Poirot
12x04 The Clocks [season finale]
It seems daft to bung a season finale tag on Poirot, seeing as how ITV seem to show them in whatever order they fancy over the course of several years per series, but hey-ho, technically this is the last in the 12th run.
[Watch it (again) on ITV Player.]

Simon Amstell: Do Nothing Live
Stand-up from the former Buzzcocks host. I identified.
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Tuesday 27 December 2011

TV

The Graham Norton Show
10x09 Christmas Special
For some reason the BBC episode guide doesn't include this in the series' regular run, instead listing the next episode as number 9. Why? Yes, this edition was slightly longer and very mildly Christmas themed, but it was still mostly a regular episode with the regular kind of guests promoting their just-released/upcoming stuff. I don't care what you say, BBC -- this is episode 9.
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Have I Got News For You
42x10 (23/12/11 edition; extended repeat) [Christmas special]
[Watch the extended version (again) on iPlayer.]

Monday 26 December 2011

TV

The Borrowers
Wasn't too sure what I'd make of this -- I loved the BBC series that was on when I was young, then read and enjoyed all the novels, but the American film that came out a few years afterwards was awful, and this new version looked uncertain. But I actually really enjoyed it. Sequel please.
Now I just need to see Ghibli's Arrietty... which fortunately is out on DVD & BD here in a fortnight. On the same day as this production. What a coincidence!
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Doctor Who
32x13a The Prequel to The Doctor, The Widow and The Wardrobe
Oops, forgot to watch this before the episode itself! It is, of course, short and typically pointless -- if it was vital it would be in the programme itself, wouldn't it.
[Watch it (again) on the official Doctor Who website.]

Downton Abbey
2x09 Christmas Special
Advantage to watching it the day after: no ad breaks. It had a 125-minute slot on TV; we got through it in 93 minutes. Thats half-an-hour of my life saved.
[Watch it (again) on ITV Player.]

Little Crackers
2x03 Barbra
2x04 Your Face
2x02 Daddy's Little Princess
2x05 The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Daytime
Sky1's Christmas short films return for a third year with a second round of eleven celebrity-starring autobiographical tales. Jane Horrocks' and Jack Whitehall's were fine; Alan Davies' started darkly but had a sweet dog; Harry Hill's was stupid. I don't like Harry Hill. (The numbering is the order they were originally shown; the order they're listed is the order they were shown in an omnibus on Christmas Day and therefore the order I watched them.)

Michael McIntyre's Christmas Comedy Roadshow
Good fun.
According to the BBC website this is episode 3 of 6. Which is strange as it's the only episode scheduled -- even if there's a new series on the way, surely this is therefore episode one?
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Mock the Week
10x13 Christmas Special
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Sunday 25 December 2011

TV

Doctor Who
33x00 The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe [Christmas special]
I enjoyed that -- particularly good performances by Matt Smith and Claire Skinner, and the bit with the Bill Bailey-led whatsits was most amusing -- but it wasn't a patch on last year's, in my opinion, which I adore.
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

The Gruffalo's Child (2011)
[#94a in 100 Films in a Year 2011]
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Rev.
2x07 Christmas Special [season finale]
Surprisingly glum. Well, maybe not surprisingly. I guess there was a reason it wasn't part of the Christmas Day schedule. Good though.
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Strictly Come Dancing
9x27 Christmas Special 2011
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Films

Nativity! (2009)
[#94 in 100 Films in a Year 2011]
Appropriate, no?

Comics

2000 AD #2012

The bumper-length Christmas Prog, because, as a weekly, 2000 AD stops publishing over Christmas. Plus this way we get four more pages of Thrill-power than we would in the three Progs it covers. Four!

It also usurps the regular numbering to take next year's 'name'. I don't know quite what they'll do when they reach the real Prog 2000. I wouldn't be surprised if they don't either. Plus there's a Prog 2000 and a Prog 2002 but not a Prog 2001 -- awkward. But hey, that's all 5 years away yet!

As a lot of this Prog is Christmassy themed and several of the strips take place out of the on-going storylines (or start new ones), I've jumped ahead to read some of it -- would be a bit odd to get all this Christmas Thrill-power when I finally catch up in January (or February, or March... God I'm behind...) Those that are on-going, or kick off new on-goings, I'll come back to when I catch up.

Anyway, because of the jumping ahead, no ECBT 2000AD reviews yet. I'll add them later. For now, some have links to relevant features on the 2000 AD website. (Naturally, these are only the ones I actually read.)

  • Judge Dredd Choose Your Own Xmas
  • Absalom Sick Leave
  • Aquila Prologue
  • Dandridge A Christmas Ghost Story
  • Sinister Dexter Now & Again

  • this week on 100 Films

    Merry Christmas!

    Anyway...

    3 new reviews were posted to 100 Films in a Year this week, and they were...

    Beyond the Pole (2009)
    Unfortunately it’s only mildly amusing rather than laugh-out-loud hilarious. Worse still, it’s occasionally a bit thumb-twiddly as the inevitable plot points inevitably happen. In fact, it goes a bit OTT with implausibility for my liking… On the bright side, it doesn’t go on about the green agenda too much

    The Brothers Bloom (2008)
    it can be surprisingly dramatic in places, at least more so than the trailer suggested. It’s not quite as all-out-fun as it looked… but then the job of a trailer is to sell you a film, so if the end result doesn’t match it 100% is that a failing? How are you meant to summarise the entire tone of a film in a two-minute spoiler-free sales burst anyway?

    Cruise of the Gods (2002)
    Though the film pokes fun (fairly good-naturedly) at sci-fi obsessives, the underlying story here is about a man overshadowed by his past. In this Brydon gives a strong performance — I think he’s a better actor than he’s normally given credit for — and he’s ably supported by Corden in particular

    More next Sunday.

    Saturday 24 December 2011

    TV

    Charley Boorman's Extreme Frontiers
    Episode 4 (of 4)
    [Watch it (again) on Demand 5.]

    Life's Too Short
    1x07 Episode 7 [season finale]
    Well, that was that. Ricky Gervais says there'll be a second series. Not sure I can be bothered with it.
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Lorraine's Last Minute Christmas
    Why they didn't keep up the branding and call this Christmas Made Easy I don't know.
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Merlin
    4x13 The Sword in the Stone Part Two [season finale]
    Ooh, much dramaticness! All set-up quite intriguing for a fifth -- and, possibly, final -- season.
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Never Mind the Buzzcocks
    25x12 Christmas Special
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Outnumbered
    4x07 The Broken Santa [Christmas special]
    The BBC don't give episode titles for Outnumbered, but this list on Wikipedia has them so they must've come from somewhere. (You'd assume the DVD releases, but this episode doesn't have one yet.)
    Apparently this is our last Outnumbered for a while -- there's to be no series next year, but perhaps some specials. I can understand why they might want to finish it off as the kids are getting older, but wouldn't it be nicer to officially end it and give it a big proper send-off, rather than slowly wind it down so it sorta fades away?
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    The Rob Brydon Show
    2x08 Christmas Special 2011
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Ruth Jones' Christmas Cracker
    2011
    Shown on BBC Two on Wednesday, and then in a slightly extended version on BBC One Wales-only the next day. But hey, that's on iPlayer, so naturally it's the longer one I've linked to here.
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Collection Count

    Collection Count tracks my DVD/Blu-ray collection via a number of statistics every week.

    A few last minute things here (as it were), most of which I didn't actually expect to turn up until after Christmas. So that's nice.

    Number of titles in collection: 1,414 [up 3]
    Of which DVDs: 1,144 [up 1]
    Of which Blu-rays: 270 [up 2]

    Number of discs in collection: 3,517 [up 9]
    Number of films in collection: 1,507 [up 6]
    Number of TV episodes in collection: 5,338 [up 3]

    See you next week, faithful reader, with all my Christmassy haul, and the delayed running time update to boot!

    Friday 23 December 2011

    TV

    Argumental
    4x08 Christmas Special
    A Christmas special? Those things get everywhere these days...

    The Bleak Old Shop of Stuff
    1x00 Christmas Episode
    Dickens spoof. Most amusing. Look forward to the full (well, full-ish -- it's only three episodes) series next year.
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Junior Bake Off
    Episode 13 (of 13)
    Hooray!

    Lost Christmas
    A one-off "urban fairytale" starring Eddie Izzard. Surprisingly gritty for a kid-friendly Christmas tale, which is presumably why they wound up scheduling it so far out from Christmas (despite a Christmas Eve setting, it was shown on the 18th). I thought it was really good... until the final few minutes, when the chance for a genuinely worthwhile message was abandoned for a reset happy ending. Oh well.
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Merlin
    4x12 The Sword in the Stone Part One
    Dark, exciting season finale stuff, but also with plenty of the funniness. Well played, Merlin. Good thing I only have to wait 'til tomorrow for the second half.
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    The song ITV didn't want you to see

    ITV Cut Tim Minchin’s Christmas Song Amidst Fears Of Offending Christians And Right-Wing Press
    by Hannah Shaw-William (from Bleeding Cool)

    This was due to air on the Christmas edition of The Jonathan Ross Show tonight on ITV1, but they seem to have had a last-minute wimp-out and cut it. (Lots more detail at the above link, including comments from Tim Minchin and Jonathan Ross.)

    Fortunately, Mr Minchin obtained a copy of the final edited song before it was cut, and he's made it available to view online himself:


    If you enjoyed it -- or even if you didn't -- feel free to complain to ITV about their censorship via an email to viewerservices@itv.com.

    Thursday 22 December 2011

    TV

    It's "catch up before all that Christmas telly begins" time!

    Black Mirror
    1x01 The National Anthem
    Media-satirising anthology series from the brain of Charlie Brooker, which in fairly typical me fashion has already finished before I'm even starting it (still, at least this was only three episodes -- I'm a series behind with Misfits and I've not even got going on the 15-part Story of Film). Very dark, very good. Anthology series are in short supply so it would be nice if this took off.
    [Watch it (again) on 4oD.]

    Dave's One Night Stand
    3x05 Tommy Tiernan [season finale]

    The Graham Norton Show
    10x08 (16/12/11 edition)
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Have I Got News For You
    42x09 (16/12/11 edition; extended repeat) [2nd watch]
    A particularly good episode, I thought; and, as ever, even better extended.
    [Watch the extended version (again) on iPlayer.]

    How I Met Your Mother
    7x07 Noretta
    [Watch it (again) on 4oD.]

    Life's Too Short
    1x06 Episode 6
    Apparently this has been picked up for a second series. Not sure how I feel about that.
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Live at the Apollo
    7x06 Episode 6 [2nd watch]
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Rev.
    2x06 Episode 6
    A season finale of an episode, even though there's a Christmas special next week... well, it was on two days ago, but... yeah.
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Wednesday 21 December 2011

    TV

    The Impressions Show with Culshaw and Stephenson
    3x06 Episode 6

    Michael Bublé: Home for Christmas
    Mmm, cheese.
    [Watch it (again) on ITV Player.]

    Onion News Network
    1x04 Fifth Anniversary

    Rev.
    2x05 Episode 5
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Articles

    Digital Spy readers' awards 2011: The winners!
    by Mark Langshaw (from Digital Spy)
    I wouldn't bother mentioning this normally, but the final award prompted a laugh: in a Digital Spy poll for best entertainment news website, Digital Spy won! What a shocker.

    Tuesday 20 December 2011

    TV

    Argumental
    4x07 Episode 7

    Death in Paradise
    1x08 Episode 8 [season finale]
    That was good fun. I hope we get more.

    The Royal Variety Performance 2011
    Back to ITV and it gets worse. Well, there were some very good bits, but most of the singing (of which there was plenty) was appalling.
    [Watch it (again) on ITV Player.]

    Monday 19 December 2011

    Sunday 18 December 2011

    this week on 100 Films

    2 new reviews were posted to 100 Films in a Year this week, and they were...

    Cars (2006)
    it’s a bit predictable, kinda like Pixar/any kids’ movie by numbers. Pixar are usually better than that. There may be one or two slight surprises along the way — mostly in aid of a Good Strong Moral Message for the kiddies — but at times it’s a bit thumb-twiddly as you wait for characters to reach the point they’re inevitably headed for.

    Diner (1982)
    Diner is like a series of vignettes. There’s a loose plot holding it all together — the aforementioned wedding — but it all plays like a series of connected subplots. It’s a “slice of life” kind of film, rather than a “big story” kinda film. That works for some viewers and not for others. For me, I enjoyed some of it and some of the amusing moments, but it all felt ultimately empty.

    More next Sunday.

    Saturday 17 December 2011

    TV

    Strictly Come Dancing
    9x25 The Final Part 1
    9x26 The Final Part 2 [season finale]
    [Watch both parts (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Friday 16 December 2011

    TV

    The British Comedy Awards 2011
    Didn't agree with all the winners... but then there were a few that really exceptionally deserved it, and it was Good Fun All Round. Plus, a Harry Hill clip that actually made me laugh. First time for everything.
    [Watch it (again) on 4oD.]

    Have I Got News For You
    42x09 (16/12/11 edition)
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Live at the Apollo
    7x06 Episode 6
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    QI
    9x16 VG Part 1
    I seem to have completely missed an episode of QI. Really don't know how. Annoyed about that now.
    This was just a highlights show. Which was fine. It also included at least one clip from at least one episode that hasn't aired yet. Which was different.
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Articles

    Best And Worst Sci-Fi Movie Posters 2011 by Dave Golder
    (from SFX)
    You might not agree with every choices in either category (I certainly didn't), but it's a good reminder of the last year nonetheless.

    Doctor Who: Karen Gillan, Arthur Darvill to leave next series by Daniel Sperling
    (from Digital Spy)
    I know no one really believed it when they left toward the end of the last series, but the thing is kids probably did, and it was a good surprise, and more importantly it was a good, well-reasoned send off. How are they going to bring them back after the Doctor's resolve that he was messing up their lives? And how will they write them out again in a way that tops that? As much as I love Rory, it's a shame they've not just let them go.

    Doctor Who: "The assumption that the audience is intelligent has paid off" says Steven Moffat by Tim Glanfield
    (from Radio Times)
    Yes indeed. Though to be honest, I preferred it before all these intricate multi-year timey-wimey plots. Self-contained one- and two-parters with maybe a big linking season finale for me, please.

    Collection Count

    Collection Count tracks my DVD/Blu-ray collection via a number of statistics every week.

    This week, the number of films in my collection crosses the 1,500 mark. I dread to think how few of those I've actually watched...

    Number of titles in collection: 1,411 [up 3]
    Of which DVDs: 1,143 [up 1]
    Of which Blu-rays: 268 [up 2]

    Number of discs in collection: 3,508 [up 4]
    Number of films in collection: 1,501 [up 3]
    Number of TV episodes in collection: 5,335 [no change]

    This week should be the latest running time update, but I'm 'on the road' at the minute so don't have access to that information. Instead, I've decided to bump it back a fortnight, thereby covering whatever I get for Christmas too. Shiny.

    Before then -- see you next week, faithful reader.

    Thursday 15 December 2011

    Films

    Enchanted (2007)
    [2nd watch]
    This was #80 on 100 Films way back in 2008, and obviously I hadn't watched it since. It's bloody great though.

    Articles

    Doctor Who Magazine's Christmas tribute to Radio Times by Paul Jones
    (from Radio Times)
    The new DWM, out today, takes as its cover inspiration a Christmas RT from the '20s. See the original and the homage at the link.

    Wednesday 14 December 2011

    TV

    Curiosity
    1x03 Why is Sex Fun?
    Based on this -- a big new flagship documentary with a different celebrity presenter for each episode and that kind of thing -- the Americans aren't half as good at making documentaries as we are. Sure, it's ultimately informative, but it's also repetitive, over-directed and inaccurately titled. Plus it has a dreadfully cheesy title card/ad break bumper; so bad I thought it was years old, but it seems it's brand new. Ugh.

    Frozen Planet
    Part 7 On Thin Ice [final episode]
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    The Graham Norton Show
    10x07 (9/12/11 edition)
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Have I Got News For You
    42x08 (9/12/11 edition; extended repeat)
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Live at the Apollo
    7x05 Episode 5
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Onion News Network
    1x03 Man-Horse Marriage

    Tuesday 13 December 2011

    TV

    Dave's One Night Stand
    3x04 Stephen K Amos

    The Impressions Show with Culshaw and Stephenson
    3x05 Episode 5
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Life's Too Short
    1x05 Episode 5
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Pointless
    4x08 (23/3/11 edition)
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    A daily dose of sci-fi - Day 30

    To finish we need a great tune for the end credits -
    what's your favourite sci-fi theme?

    This one really is very, very easy, and conforms to what I'm certain must have been a running theme...


    Whether it's the creepy electronic original, or one of the synth-tastic '80s versions, or the orchestral TV movie recording, or one of Murray Gold's bombastic modern renderings, the Doctor Who theme is always unbeatable. It can inspire dread or excitement as needed, and that scream into the cliffhanger... Ah, perfection!

    Plus, it's easily singalongable. Who hasn't at some point oo-wee-oo'd?


    That's it! The end! What a good note to end on (see what I did there?)

    I've quit enjoyed this, even if I did struggle with a few answers. Maybe I should try to find another one...

    Read about a daily dose of sci-fi, with links to the rest of the series, here.

    Monday 12 December 2011

    TV

    Argumental
    4x06 Episode 6

    Blue Peter
    5/12/11 edition
    For the making of the BBC One Christmas trail. Also, Ed Sheeran is clearly not cut out to be a presenter.
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Charley Boorman's Extreme Frontiers
    Episode 2 (of 4)
    Most of it, anyway -- for some reason the copy on Virgin Media Catch Up died every time at the final ad break. I suppose I should just watch it online...
    [Watch it (again) on Demand 5.]

    Death in Paradise
    1x07 Episode 7
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Never Mind the Buzzcocks
    25x10 Episode 10
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    A daily dose of sci-fi - Day 29

    Best pre-1980s sci-fi

    For this one I wanted something that was only pre-'80s -- so no Doctor Who (not even classic series only), no Star Wars or Star Trek, etc. Naturally cases could be made for all of these -- I could just have an era of Who, or the original Trek, or just Empire Strikes Back -- but I wanted to push for something different.

    I don't know if "best" is quite the right word, and maybe I should've chosen this yesterday, but...


    Larry "Buster" Crabbe starred in three of these cinema serials (the precursor of TV series, I suppose) in the '30s and '40s -- Flash Gordon, Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars and Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe. They used to show them on BBC One on Saturday mornings in the late '90s (God that makes it sound long ago), when I was in the early year(s) of secondary school, and my friends and I used to love them.

    They're silly and schlocky, and notorious for those kinds of cliffhangers where everything seems impossible... and in next week's recap something completely different happens and everything's OK. Ah, an age before repeats or VHS or harddrive recorders or iPlayer. Or, apparently, memory.

    These things aren't Great in the proper use of the word -- there's no revolutionary SF concepts or fantastic screenplays or beautiful performances to be found -- but they're damn good fun, full of scrapes and spills and primitive special effects. They're a joy.

    And I don't think I've seen all of them. I've seen at least two, because I remember the serial changed on the Beeb and suddenly the lead female characters had swapped hair colours, which was most confusing. I have two on DVD -- I hope different ones -- but I'm not sure which two, because they go under so many different titles. Quick read of Wikipedia suggests I have the first and third; don't know which I saw on telly. Anyway, I must try to right this and see them all.


    Read about a daily dose of sci-fi, with links to the rest of the series, here.

    Sunday 11 December 2011

    TV

    Have I Got News For You
    42x07 (2/12/11 edition; extended repeat)

    How I Met Your Mother
    7x06 Mystery vs. History
    [Watch it (again) on 4oD.]

    Articles

    Two Doctor Who episodes recovered! by Chuck Foster
    (from Doctor Who News)
    Headline says the salient point, really, though there's plenty more detail in the article. Indeed, there's an even more thorough article at the Radio Times.
    This is obviously fantastic news -- I never expected any more episodes to be found, as the last discovery was back in 2004. Still 106 to go though...

    A daily dose of sci-fi - Day 28

    A great sci-fi B-movie

    I haven't seen many B-movies, those cheap '40s/'50s/etc films knocked out during the studio era to fill out cinema schedules, notorious for their so-bad-they're-good-ness. I feel I should've seen more. But when there are so many good films to watch...

    Anyway, this is a complete and utter cheat, but tough.


    It's a tribute to the B-movie rather than a B-movie in its own right, but that's the best I can do.

    It's wonderful for all sorts of reasons, but as this is meant to be about B-movies I'll mention some of those elements, because it's littered with them right from the start. I mean, if you were in any doubt, the opening song highlights it: Science Fiction Double Feature. It's there in the name, never mind the lyrics.

    Then there's the Ordinary American Small-Town Couple who Get Lost In The Woods At Night, going to the Big Mysterious Mansion for help, where they find it's Full Of Weirdos who are conducting A Crazy Scientific Experiment, and it all goes loopy and Changes Them Forever, and there's a climax with Ray Guns and Aliens Who Look Like Humans, and no doubt all kinds of other things where I could capitalise every first letter and make it look like a widely-acknowledged trend. (I can't be bothered to surf through all of tv tropes for the real ones, but I bet all of these -- and more -- are on there.)

    So no, it's not a B-movie. But it's the best homage to them there is. And if you've never even seen a proper B-movie, it's still rollicking good fun.


    Read about a daily dose of sci-fi, with links to the rest of the series, here.

    this week on 100 Films

    Just 1 new review was posted to 100 Films in a Year this week...

    That Touch of Mink (1962)
    a sex comedy… but being a film produced in ’60s America, no one comes close to using such language. But it’s unquestionably all about that. However, despite being all about a lewder side of life, tonally and visually it’s very light, fluffy and funny. It’s also briskly paced and constantly amusing

    More (hopefully several more) next Sunday.

    Saturday 10 December 2011

    TV

    Merlin
    4x11 The Hunter's Heart
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Pointless
    4x07 (22/3/11 edition)
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    A daily dose of sci-fi - Day 27

    Who are the nastiest bad guys?

    There are many different definitions of nasty in this context, I think. They could be cruel, they could be ugly, they could be just plain evil. But there's one, at least, that has all bases covered...


    Have you seen an Alien film? Then this shouldn't really need explaining. These terrifying-looking creatures are experts at stalking you in darkened corridors, or just flat-out attacking you, or sticking something to your face that implants itself inside you so that a new one of them is born by bursting out of your chest...

    And if you do, somehow, manage to damage them, they have acid for blood.

    "Nasty" doesn't cover it.


    Read about a daily dose of sci-fi, with links to the rest of the series, here.

    Friday 9 December 2011

    TV

    The Graham Norton Show
    10x06 (2/12/11 edition)
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Pointless
    4x06 (21/3/11 edition)
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Articles

    The Dark Knight Rises prologue: Tom Hardy's Bane blasted as unintelligible by Ann Lee
    (from Metro)
    The opening six or seven minutes of Christopher Nolan's third and final Batman film were screened for critics and filmmakers last night. Trust a Mail-owned paper to be depressing: most (perhaps all) of those critics have soundly praised the footage, noting the tricky dialogue as the one minor downside that may be fixed (the film's still six months away). For a more thorough preview, try /Film, which also has details on how much of the finished film will be in IMAX. Sounds incredible, though I'm not sure I'll be able to see it in that format. Still, there's time to plan yet...

    Doctor Who named most-downloaded US iTunes show over Modern Family by Hugh Armitage
    (from Digital Spy)
    "This is incredibly exciting news," said Doctor Who lead writer and executive producer Steven Moffat. "It's an honour to be on the same list as all those shows, let alone at the very top. And for a British show to have achieved this in the US is absolutely remarkable."

    Matt Smith rues cancellation of Doctor Who Confidential by Paul Jones
    (from Radio Times)
    “It’s a pity as I think it’s a show which can reinvent itself year on year and it’s one of the biggest shows on BBC3," said Smith. “I guess people come in and have new ideas and want to have their own fresh take on it"
    A polite way of saying "some people change things for the sake of it to make their own mark", I think.

    Collection Count

    Collection Count tracks my DVD/Blu-ray collection via a number of statistics every week.

    Not much to report this week, except for that the numbers are still going up, despite it being nearly Christmas. Expect some next week too; the week after, I'm not sure; and the week after that will be the big (hopefully!) Christmas one.

    I will say, though, that I was sent two packages from the same US retailer a couple of weeks ago. They shipped just 3½ hours apart. The one sent second arrived last Tuesday; there's still no sign of the one sent first. Weird.

    Number of titles in collection: 1,408 [up 4]
    Of which DVDs: 1,142 [up 1]
    Of which Blu-rays: 266 [up 3]

    Number of discs in collection: 3,504 [up 6]
    Number of films in collection: 1,498 [up 3]
    Number of TV episodes in collection: 5,335 [up 6]

    See you next week, faithful reader.

    A daily dose of sci-fi - Day 26

    Best battle scene

    I kinda feel this ought to be a big ol' space battle, like that one in Serenity or something, but I can't think of many that immediately jump out at me, so I guess this becomes "best battle/fight/action scene", and I offer up this one:


    I love a good movie sword fight, but unsurprisingly these are few and far between in sci-fi movies. Except for Star Wars.

    For all the prequels' flaws -- and they are many -- the one thing they have over the original trilogy are the lightsaber duels. Whereas the first three films largely feature actors bumping some sticks together a bit, the prequels feature fully choreographed fights that are properly exciting to watch.

    The best of these is at the climax of Episode I, when Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan take on Darth Maul (there's a bunch of Fantasy names if ever you saw them) and his infamous double-ended lightsaber. It is, as I said, fully choreographed and properly exciting, and just about everything you dreamed a lightsaber battle should be ever since you were a kid.

    Some may argue there are better duels later in the prequel trilogy. Maybe, but this is the first one that showed what a lightsaber duel really could be, and this is the one that sticks in the memory.

    And it's nice there's something to like about the prequels, eh?


    Read about a daily dose of sci-fi, with links to the rest of the series, here.

    Thursday 8 December 2011

    TV

    Life's Too Short
    1x04 Episode 4
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Live at the Apollo
    7x04 Episode 4
    Love Milton Jones.
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    The Mentalist
    4x04 Ring Around the Rosie
    "Hey, how ya doin'? You're under arrest of the attempted murder of... everybody." Love Cho.
    (Accidentally skipped episode three. That will, of course, be rectified.)
    [Watch it (again) on Demand 5.]

    Perfect Couples
    1x09 Perfect Lies
    E4 started really mucking about with showing this and the order they showed it in (or so it seemed to me), so I've resorted to downloading it. Not that I should really care, what with it being all cancelled and, let's be honest, not being that great in the first place.

    Pointless
    4x05 (18/3/11 edition)
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Rev.
    2x04 Episode 4
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Articles

    10 Common Words You Had No Idea Were Onomatopoeias by Andy Kneis
    (from Cracked.com)
    I had no idea! Most interesting.

    Review: Sherlock - A Scandal in Belgravia by David Brown
    (from Radio Times)
    It was the press screening of the new Sherlock last night, hence plenty of coverage and press releases today. This is the Radio Times review (obviously), but there's also the BBC press pack, including interviews with Moffat, Gatiss, Cumberbatch and Freeman; some nice publicity shots at Blogtor Who; and the PI, confirming it's on New Years Day at 8:10pm. Very exciting.


    Click to enlarge.

    A daily dose of sci-fi - Day 25

    Funniest sci-fi (intentional or otherwise)

    It feels like it should be hard to think of an SF comedy, but actually there are quite a few -- Red Dwarf, Hitchhikers' (on radio, in print, on TV and in film!), Back to the Future, Garth Marenghi's Darkplace, Galaxy Quest -- and those are just some of the good ones.


    Penned by now-showrunner Steven Moffat for Comic Relief back in 1999, this is easily the most affectionate Who spoof ever. Not only is it a very funny take on the show, it's very funny fullstop; and not only is it very funny, but it actually creates a great deal of nostalgia for the real thing -- some of the ending is only a short step away from the kind of sentimentality we've seen in the revived series.

    In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if this was in some way instrumental in bringing the show back to TV properly. Considering it was made for zero money (as it was for charity), I think it shows that a Who series was viable in '99 -- sure it might look dated now, but it looks pretty much as good as any other late-'90s SF.

    Other series and films may show more longevity and consistency -- this one only lasts for about 20 minutes after all -- but it's the one I'm most likely to re-watch again. And again.


    Read about a daily dose of sci-fi, with links to the rest of the series, here.

    Wednesday 7 December 2011

    TV

    Argumental
    4x05 Episode 5

    Frozen Planet
    Part 6 The Last Frontier
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Pointless
    4x04 (17/3/11 edition)
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Articles

    Thor 2 Director Patty Jenkins Exits by Borys Kit
    (from The Hollywood Reporter)
    as late as Monday afternoon Jenkins was actively working on the movie. The filmmaker participated in an interview and photo shoot ... on Dec. 2, during which she discussed her involvement in the project and praised Marvel.
    Weird.

    A daily dose of sci-fi - Day 24

    Who's the no.1 captain?

    There are plenty of Captains in military-esque SF like Star Trek or... well, other stuff... but the best one comes from a freer universe.


    Some say Mal is essentially Han Solo, but pish, he's better. He's funnier, for one thing. I bet he's braver. He's certainly got more morals. He tries to keep the latter two hidden, but they're definitely there. He always does the right thing... for himself and his crew anyway.

    Besides, is Solo actually a Captain? No. No he's not.

    If you don't know for yourself why Mal is awesome, you clearly haven't seen Firefly and/or Serenity. And if you haven't seen Firefly and/or Serenity, what kind of sci-fi fan are you?! Not one, I say.

    So there.


    Read about a daily dose of sci-fi, with links to the rest of the series, here.

    Tuesday 6 December 2011

    TV

    Dave's One Night Stand
    3x03 Reginald D Hunter
    An American, an Aussie and a German walk into a Scottish theatre...
    The Radio Times slagged off Hunter's stand-up (I was going to link to that, but they seem to have removed the review from their website), but I thought it was very good, and Henning Wehn was much better here than when he turned up on QI the other week.

    Death in Paradise
    1x06 Episode 6
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Happy Endings
    1x04 Mein Coming Out
    Completely random late night viewing. It was fine.

    How I Met Your Mother
    7x05 Field Trip
    [Watch it (again) on 4oD.]

    Music

    Imaginaerum by Nightwish
    The new Nightwish album, released here yesterday, which also forms the soundtrack to a forthcoming film. Apparently it's met with "universal critical acclaim", and I can see where they're coming from: this is everything you'd expect and want from a new Nightwish record, and probably a little more too.

    Articles

    CATS 1, KIDS 0 by Helen Killer (from regretsy)
    and
    Why @PayPal is wrong regarding @Regretsy, according to their own policies. by greengeekgirl (from geek girl)
    PayPal have demanded a group who raised money to provide Christmas toys for poor & disadvantaged children return all of that money. PayPal will still keep all of the transaction fees, though. And because the person in charge argued about it, they've frozen her personal account through which she does regular business.
    And all of this is against PayPal's own policies.
    (PayPal have since apologised -- well, sort of -- and are "working" to resolve the situation.)

    Jeremy Clarkson, The One Show and the most complained about BBC shows by William Gallagher
    (from Radio Times)
    As complaints about Clarkson's One Show comments reach a silly level, RT finds out how it compares to other recent BBC controversies.

    A daily dose of sci-fi - Day 23

    It's party-time!
    Which sci-fi character are you going to dress-up as?

    No one. Does that count? I guess not.


    Because I'm really lazy and really, really don't care.


    Read about a daily dose of sci-fi, with links to the rest of the series, here.

    Monday 5 December 2011

    TV

    Charley Boorman's Extreme Frontiers
    Episode 1 (of 4)
    After going to the far-flung corners of Africa and the Far East in Long Way Round, Long Way Down, By Any Means and By Any Means: Sydney to Tokyo, Charley Boorman now takes on the formidable challenge of… a jolly around Canada. OK, he does extreme-sports-y things there, but… it's Canada. Looks like a lovely place, mind.

    Never Mind the Buzzcocks
    25x09 Episode 9
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Pointless
    4x03 (16/3/11 edition)
    [Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

    Films

    Diner (1982)
    [#93 in 100 Films in a Year 2011]

    The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Extended Trailer
    The semi-mythical 8½-minute trailer for David Fincher's adaptation of Stieg Larsson's novel has now been released. (Above link should be for the UK; US is here). It's worth checking out, because 8½ minutes is a long time and you get a great idea of the film from it. Looks like it could well be something special.

    Articles

    The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo: 8-Minute Trailer Streaming, 6 Tracks of Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross’ Score Available for FREE by Germain Lussier
    (from /Film)
    I've mentioned the trailer in today's Films post, but this is worth noting for the free sampler. After the massive success (both artistically and critically) of Reznor & Ross' score for The Social Network, this is a definite pre-order for me.

    A daily dose of sci-fi - Day 22

    Coolest alien race

    So what does "coolest" mean, eh? There are loads of possibilities for a category like this. I don't think it means "alien race most like Samuel L. Jackson", for instance.


    I love the Cybermen. They're better than the Daleks. They prefigure the Borg.

    When done right they can be properly scary, because they take us humans and strip away all that makes us human. They have no emotion -- they can't be reasoned with or bargained with or persuaded. And they stomp about and shoot stuff and blow stuff up and all that too.

    And, in the right designs, they can look rather cool.


    Read about a daily dose of sci-fi, with links to the rest of the series, here.

    Sunday 4 December 2011

    TV

    Have I Got News For You
    42x06 (25/11/11 edition; extended repeat)

    Onion News Network
    1x02 Snowlocaust

    Articles

    Space: The Final Frontier by Shaun Usher
    (from Letters of Note)
    just weeks before NBC's season premiere of the original Star Trek series, two of the programme's producers... contacted Gene Roddenberry and asked him to quickly write the show's now-famous opening monologue... For the next week or so the three men exchanged drafts by memo, a couple of which can be seen below; Roddenberry came up with the final draft on August 10th, an hour before it was recorded.

    A daily dose of sci-fi - Day 21

    Favourite alien invasion movie/series

    Alien invasion is a constant theme of sci-fi across books, TV, film and more. Unsurprising, really -- it involves aliens (sci-fi!) and keeps it grounded on Earth, which can be good for both relating things to your viewers and, perhaps even more importantly, the budget.


    It's not an invasion story per se: only one alien actually arrives and it's after, essentially, a bribe. But it's a bribe to stop an alien invasion (if I remember correctly), so I'm going to count it. And that's because it's bloody brilliant.

    Torchwood was quite good through its first two series. Some episodes were brilliant, some were dire, and overall it felt half-thought-through and made up on the fly -- characters' behaviour changing from week to week, that kind of thing. I think more people wanted to like it, as a rare dose of adult-orientated genre TV in the UK, than actually genuinely did.

    But that all changed with Children of Earth, which is flat out one of the greatest SF miniseries ever made, never mind its connections to previous Torchwood or Doctor Who or what have you. It's a cracking tale full of action, emotion, humour, tension, fear, heartbreak...

    You don't need to have seen previous Torchwood to get it, and if you disliked previous Torchwood that shouldn't put you off: Children of Earth is exceptional.


    Read about a daily dose of sci-fi, with links to the rest of the series, here.

    this week on 100 Films

    Just 1 new review was posted to 100 Films in a Year this week...

    How to Train Your Dragon (2010)
    I saw a trailer for this at the cinema a few months before its release. I thought it looked to have basic animation and a too daft tone. I wrote it off, expecting a Pixar-wannabe… Imagine my surprise when it garnered endless positive reviews and a huge box office. My impression from the trailer was massively wrong. How to Train Your Dragon is, as everyone else has likely already impressed upon you, brilliant.

    ...but, as I'm sure you've noticed, we're now in December (almost Christmas!), so there was also the November update this week. Grand.

    More next Sunday.

    Saturday 3 December 2011

    TV

    How I Met Your Mother
    7x04 The Stinson Missile Crisis
    [Watch it (again) on 4oD.]

    Merlin
    4x10 A Herald of the New Age
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    Strictly Come Dancing
    9x20 Week 10 (aka Movie Night)
    To repeat myself from last year, "I'm usually in the room when Strictly's being watched, but rarely or barely watch any of it myself. Movie Night's a different beast though, what with being a film fan, and I found it all rather entertaining." Very hard to judge this year -- the score that landed Harry Judd a lowly fourth (of six) would've been enough to top the leader board just a fortnight ago.
    [Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

    A daily dose of sci-fi - Day 20

    What's the best adaptation of a sci-fi book/story?

    I don't read enough books to judge this properly -- "best adaptation" implies "the one that has been adapted best", not "the best one that is also an adaptation". So, um...


    I've not read The Children of Men, but damn it made for a good film.

    And especially good for me because I went to the cinema knowing nothing about it (can't even remember what led me there -- a vague awareness it had received some good reviews, I think), and consequently was completely blown away by it.

    And it's probably not going to get mentioned anywhere else in this month of sci-fi-ness, so why not now?


    Read about a daily dose of sci-fi, with links to the rest of the series, here.