Thursday 31 January 2013

TV

Doctor Who
1x41 A Bargain of Necessity
1x42 Prisoners of Conciergerie [season finale]

Being parts five and six of The Reign of Terror, released on DVD this week. Like yesterday's The Tyrant of France, A Bargain of Necessity no longer exist in the archives and has been animated for the DVD. For my thoughts on the animation, see yesterday's TV post.

It makes for a fast-paced end to the serial, particularly the last episode. And it's also the end of Who's first season. We think of season finales being quite a modern, US-derived concept -- and, indeed, in the way we know them today they are -- but The Reign of Terror certainly ends on a note of awareness that the series is about to take an extended break... even if there is a "Next Time" card.


The Last Leg
2x01 (25/1/13 edition)
[Watch it (again) on 4oD.]


Yes, Prime Minister [2013]
1x03 Gentlemen's Agreement

Wednesday 30 January 2013

TV

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


Doctor Who
1x39 A Change of Identity
1x40 The Tyrant of France

Being parts three and four of six-parter The Reign of Terror, released on DVD this week. Two of the serial's middle episodes, The Tyrant of France and A Bargain of Necessity (which I'll be watching tomorrow), no longer exist in the archives, so for the DVD have been animated to fan-made recordings of the full soundtrack. I'm all for the idea of animating missing episodes of Doctor Who -- the chances of many (or any) more being recovered are remote, so why not plug the gap in this way? It's only a shame it's so expensive and can't be done for all 106 lost episodes.

That said, I wouldn't want to see any more done in this style. You don't have to slavishly emulate the static wide shots used in '60s Doctor Who -- indeed, one may well argue you explicitly shouldn't -- but this seems to have been edited by a child with ADHD who has no concept of the purpose of specific shots. It jumps around between close-ups, extreme close-ups, high-angles, and more, sometimes at lightning speed, most of the time to little or no effect. It's a real shame, because the actual art and underlying animation is good enough, but the choice of camera angles and the whip-fast way they're cut between not only jars with the '60s soundtrack and style of the remaining four episodes, it's also plain amateurish in and of itself.

Recently they rejected Ian Levine's animated reconstruction of Shada. I'm not entirely sure why (I don't know if it was made public), but one mooted reason was the animation wasn't professional enough. Well, the screenshots you can see from a quick Googling look alright, but that's not motion. Either the full thing must be really dreadful quality, or I'm not sure the commissioners at 2entertain have much taste...


The Great Comic Relief Bake Off
Episode 4 (of 4)
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]


John Bishop's Only Joking
1x03 Episode 3

DVD Extras

Audio commentary on Doctor Who: A Bargain of Necessity

Or The Reign of Terror part five. This is one of two episodes in the serial missing from the archive which has been animated for the DVD (more here), but the animation wasn't complete when the commentaries were recorded, so they had to come up with something different. For this episode, fan/journalist/comedian Toby Hadoke interviews missing episode hunters Philip Morris and Paul Vanezis for 25 minutes.

Tuesday 29 January 2013

TV

Doctor Who
1x37 A Land of Fear
1x38 Guests of Madame Guillotine
Being parts one and two of The Reign of Terror, released on DVD yesterday. It's been a while since I watched any first Doctor adventures, so I'd forgotten quite how often they go off on tangents for no particular reason. I wonder just how many six-parters are actually four-parters with the odd episode-filling aside thrown in... Still, it's all good fun. And, as the last story of the series' first season, feels particularly season-finale-like, with lots of references to previous adventures and whatnot.

The Great Comic Relief Bake Off
Episode 3 (of 4)
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

The Sarah Millican Television Programme
2x02 Episode 2

Articles

David Bradley to play William Hartnell in Celebration of Doctor Who
(from Doctor Who official site)

Announcing the cast for Mark Gatiss' birth-of-Doctor-Who drama.

Hartnell was 55 when Doctor Who started; Bradley is 70. Just an observation.

Monday 28 January 2013

TV

The Great Comic Relief Bake Off
Episode 2 (of 4)
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Miranda
3x06 A Brief Encounter [season finale]
Over so quickly! Well, at least there has to be a fourth series -- with that cliffhanger and those ratings, how can there not be?
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Stella
2x02 Episode 2

Films

City Lights (1931)
[#10 in 100 Films in a Year 2013]

Sunday 27 January 2013

TV

QI
10x15 Jolly (XL edition)

Films

The Extraordinary Adventures of Adèle Blanc-Sec (2010)
[#9 in 100 Films in a Year 2013]

This is on Film4 on Friday, so I shall endeavour to have a full review up by then. But I will say that it's an awful lot of fun.

this week on 100 Films

Four new reviews were published to 100 Films in a Year this week, and they were...


Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part II (2013)

two big battles form the cruxes around which the story works: Batman vs the Joker, and Batman vs Superman. I won’t spoil the outcomes for those who’ve not read the book, but both are excellently realised on screen... I’d go so far as to say the Superman fight improves on the novel’s version

Read more here.


Repo Chick (2009)

the second of director Alex Cox's “microfeatures”: films shot for a budget below the Screen Actors Guild cut-off of $200,000. By shooting his actors quickly (in ten days) on green screen, then putting in sets made from toys, Cox made the entire film for closer to $180,000. It’s not going to work for every film, but perhaps there’s some lessons big over-expensive Hollywood productions could learn…

Read more here.


Room on the Broom (2012)

It’s a simple story with simple rhyme for little kids, of course, but that’s where its joy lies. Pre-schoolers are treated to far better poetry (because, ultimately, that’s what it is) than the dreary stuff us adults are meant to engage with.

Read more here.


Special (2006)

If you’re looking for comparisons, Special is more in line with Super than Kick-Ass. It doesn’t quite have James Gunn’s crazy surreal touch, but it shares the low-budget realist aesthetic and a surprisingly recognisable cast (albeit with smaller, TV-er faces here).

Read more here.



And new to the new blog...


Ashes of Time Redux (1994/2008)

Reviews talk about it being a confusingly-plotted art film — and those are the positive ones — which, coupled with my relative dislike of Chungking Express, meant I didn’t really expect to like it a great deal. But I found myself surprised, because I really enjoyed it.

Read more here.


The Hurt Locker (2008)

The Hurt Locker is episodic, moving from one bomb-based set-piece to the next. But this is surely a realistic depiction of the environment and this job: they’re not going to end up on the tail of some master bombmaker, or single-handedly end the war in Iraq

Read more here.


Panic in the Streets (1950)

not a particularly film noir-y film noir [but] there’s still a criminal underworld, a (slightly) downtrodden hero, criminal wrongdoings, some shadow-drenched photography, and a smattering of other traits that do place it within the genre, but it’s not a textbook example.

Read more here.


The Seeker: The Dark is Rising (2007)

allegedly based on Susan Cooper’s five-volume fantasy series... Changes from book to screen abound, however... Fan-baiting changes aren’t the only things wrong with the film, though. For much of the first half I was almost considering a scene-by-scene account of the irritations and weaknesses, but that would mean watching it again.

Read more here.


Son of Paleface (1952)

It slowly morphs into a live-action cartoon, in the process becoming a lot funnier and, in recreating the style of cartoons, technically impressive too. The comedy is genuinely entertaining when it finally reaches these sections

Read more here.


More next Sunday.

Saturday 26 January 2013

TV

Weirdly, exactly the same as last Sunday. The things this blog makes me notice...

Blandings
1x02 The Go-Getter
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Room 101: Extra Storage
13x03 Episode 3
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Splash!
1x04 Semi-Final
[Watch it (again) on ITV Player.]

Collection Count

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

Just one new title this week, a film, but I also spotted some TV episodes I missed, so that number gets corrected. And it's the running time update! Thrills.

Number of titles in collection: 1,526 [up 1]
Of which DVDs: 1,147 [up 1]
Of which Blu-rays: 379 [no change]

Number of discs in collection: 3,842 [up 1]
Number of films in collection: 1,604 [up 1]
Number of TV episodes in collection: 5,712 [up 2]
Number of short films in collection: 374 [no change]

And the running time update comes to...

Total running time of collection (approx.):
277 days, 5 hours, and 51 minutes.
(Up 10 hours and 54 minutes from last month.)

See you next week, faithful reader.

Friday 25 January 2013

TV

The Great Comic Relief Bake Off
Episode 1 (of 4)
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Articles

Skyfall becomes tenth highest-grossing film of all time
by Emma Dibdin (from Digital Spy)

It is predicted that Skyfall will ultimately climb to number seven in the list, bumping The Dark Knight Rises down to eighth place

Awesome.

Thursday 24 January 2013

TV

Britain's Brightest
1x02 Episode 2
So, to be Britain's brightest, you have to be prepared for them to change the rules mid-round without letting you know? Right.

Death in Paradise
2x03 Episode 3
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Films

Armored Car Robbery (1950)
[#8 in 100 Films in a Year 2013]

Wednesday 23 January 2013

TV

Yes, Prime Minister [2013]
1x02 The Poisoned Chalice
Feels particularly pertinent, given today's news.

Films

You Only Live Twice (1967)
[5th or so watch]

My latest go at "Bond from the Beginning" stalled in October and ground to a halt in November, but I'm picking it up again now, hopefully with a concerted effort.

So, I'll be reviewing this as #7a in 100 Films 2013, alongside the other '60s Bond films, at a later date.

Tuesday 22 January 2013

TV

John Bishop's Only Joking
1x02 Episode 2

The Sarah Millican Television Programme
2x01 Episode 1
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Spies of Warsaw
Part 2 (of 2)
Felt like there was more incident in this part. Maybe the first just needed a little more oomph, or something.
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Monday 21 January 2013

TV

Miranda
3x05 Three Little Words
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Non-Fiction

Bond on Bond by Roger Moore (with Gareth Owen)
Bond on Screen
Bond on Films
[the end]

I'll again echo my thoughts on the first half. Though it's a shame the last chapter is just a list of main credits and box office stats -- it might've been nice to hear Moore's thoughts on the films themselves, as opposed to elements of them. Though asking an 85-year-old man to distinguish between 22 broadly similar features would probably have been a bit much...

Sunday 20 January 2013

TV

Blandings
1x01 Pig-hoo-o-o-o-ey!
Well, that was broader than I was expecting. Funny in parts though.
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Room 101: Extra Storage
13x02 Episode 2
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Splash!
1x03 Heat 3
[Watch it (again) on ITV Player.]

Non-Fiction

Bond on Bond by Roger Moore (with Gareth Owen)
Bond on Style
Bond on Location
Bond on Bonds
Bond Behind the Scenes


My thoughts on the first half still apply.

this week on 100 Films

Two new reviews were published to 100 Films in a Year this week, and they were...


Django (1966)

Much of the film plays as an action movie. There’s a lot of atmospheric ponderousness at the start, but once things kick off they rarely let up... It’s practically a definition of bang for your buck, which I’m sure goes a long way to explaining its popularity.

Read more here.


Moonfleet (1955)

What you’d call a curio. It’s a colour CinemaScope Hollywood adventure movie from a director best known for epic German silents or dark film noirs; it’s not been passed by the BBFC since its original release in the ’50s; I believe it’s also unavailable in the US; yet a poll in France’s Cahiers du cinéma ranked it the 32nd “most essential film”

Read more here.


And new to the new blog...


Chinatown (1974)

It’s often held up as an example of a perfectly structured screenplay... packed with imagery and subtext for those who want it, but if that’s not your thing it still makes for a darn good thriller with a few neat twists.

Read more here.


Hellboy: Director's Cut (2004)

A surprise hit on release, this live action adaptation of the cult comic book is an exciting and entertaining, though flawed, mix of pulp fantasy, gothic style and action.

Read more here.


Hellboy II: The Golden Army (2008)

del Toro’s creation seems to overflow — the laying of plot threads for a further film is even more overt than it was in the first film — which makes it even more unfortunate that the director’s long term commitment to about half a dozen projects makes a proposed trilogy-closer seem increasingly unlikely.

Read more here.


Sense and Sensibility (1995)

A host of familiar British faces turn up in this Oscar-winning adaptation of the Austen-novel-with-the-name-like-Pride-and-Prejudice-only-not. Fans of any of the following will love this film: Jane Austen, costume drama in general, Emma Thompson, Alan Rickman, Hugh Grant, Kate Winslet.

Read more here.


More next Sunday.

Saturday 19 January 2013

Films

Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part II (2013)
[#7 in 100 Films in a Year 2013]

I liked Part 1, but this was excellent. And I got it early: it's not officially out in the US until the 29th. No UK date set yet, but they released Part 1 so I assume it'll follow at some point.

Non-Fiction

Bond on Bond by Roger Moore (with Gareth Owen)
Introduction
Bond on Beginnings
Bond on Villains
Bond on Girls
Bond on Gadgets
Bond on Cars


(or, pretty much exactly half the book)

The suavest Bond of them all, Sir Roger Moore, is our inimitable guide (well, ghostwritten by Gareth Owen) for this lavishly illustrated whistle-stop overview of the entire Bond film series, occasioned by its 50th anniversary last year.

Organised thematically-then-chronologically (rather than the usual guidebook style of chronologically-then-thematically), Moore shares his thoughts on (most of) the series' villains, girls, gadgets, and more. Naturally the strongest memories come from the seven films he starred in, and it is a quick and idiosyncratic tour -- while some topics are afforded lengthy recollections, others get a cursory line or two, while still others get no mention at all.

But it doesn't aim to be a thorough, all-inclusive guide -- it's not written by a fan or an academic who's devoted decades to cataloguing the films' minutiae -- these are Moore's personal memories and opinions; like having a genial chat with the man himself, I shouldn't wonder. For his anecdotes and many of the pictures, that makes it an essential read for fans.

Comics

Star Wars #1 by Brian Wood & Carlos D'Anda

Dark Horse have published dozens -- probably hundreds -- of Star Wars tie-in books down the years, but this is the first simply entitled Star Wars. (So people keep saying, but it isn't. Still, that was 10 years ago.)

Set immediately after the end of A New Hope, it's the further adventures of Luke, Leia, Han and Darth Vader (and the rest). Despite opening with a slightly dull three-page dialogue scene, the rest of the issue is content-packed and largely entertaining. A promising start.


The Superior Spider-Man #1 by Dan Slott & Ryan Stegman

So the controversial new era of Spider-Man begins… and I thought it was really good. So there. Great twist at the end too.

Collection Count

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

This week, I upgraded my Jaws DVD (to the BD digibook, mmm), acquired Dredd, finally got the Doctor Who Legacy Collection box set, and received Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2 nearly two weeks before its US release date.

Only a handful of changes mean the numbers look... completely normal, though weirder things happened before the Who set and Batman turned up. Ho hum.

Number of titles in collection: 1,525 [up 3]
Of which DVDs: 1,146 [no change]
Of which Blu-rays: 379 [up 3]

Number of discs in collection: 3,841 [up 5]
Number of films in collection: 1,603 [up 2]
Number of TV episodes in collection: 5,710 [up 10]
Number of short films in collection: 374 [no change]

See you next week, faithful reader.

Friday 18 January 2013

TV

Romanzo Criminale
2x09 Episode 9
2x10 Episode 10 [series finale]
It's the second -- and very much final -- Romanzo Crimifinale! And these make for a neat two-parter of an ending. In the first, the gang are finally brought to trial, and we see how that pans out for everyone. Then in the second, it's years later and we discover everyone's ultimate fates -- including who the old man was in the pre-titles of series one episode one. Grand.

Yes, Prime Minister [2013]
1x01 Crisis at the Summit
Gold's reboot, from the original writers but with a new cast and set in the present day, and based (in part or whole, I don't know) on the 2010 stage play. It's a little odd, with the characters falling somewhere between impression and re-interpretation, but it is still funny. May just take a bit of time to bed in.

Yes, Prime Minister: Re-elected
A tribute-ish programme to the original and mini behind-the-scenes on the reboot, including interviews with fans, the writers, politicians, Whitehall staff, and so on. Actually very good, aside from the repetitious reminders that there's a new series on Gold, donchaknow.

Thursday 17 January 2013

TV

Romanzo Criminale
2x07 Episode 7
2x08 Episode 8

Non-Fiction

Bond on Set - Filming Skyfall by Greg Williams

The fourth Bond on Set book of behind-the-scenes photos by Williams, one of the series' set photographers. Not for everyone -- the only text comes in tiny scene-setting script extracts and picture credits -- but a great visual record of the film's production.

An interview with Williams for the official 007 website can be read here. One thing you learn in it is that "the first version of the book... 800 pages and it’s now 208 pages." Considering some are half empty (for artistic reasons, no doubt), you do feel that with some judicious re-arranging they could've fit more in if they'd wanted.

Comics

The Amazing Spider-Man #699.1 by Joe Keatinge (with Dan Slott), Valentine De Landro & Marco Checchetto

Entirely about Morbius the Living Vampire, entirely setup for the new Morbius: The Living Vampire series that began a couple of weeks ago, and so entirely a pointless aside as far as I'm concerned. Ho hum.


The Amazing Spider-Man #700 by Dan Slott & Humberto Ramos

The final ever issue! Until they inevitably relaunch it at some point, of course. And it's a bumper-length 104 pages! Finally, a comic that really feels worth their cover price... except because it's longer they've doubled that, naturally. But the whole thing is more than double the length of your regular comic (more like four or five times as long, in fact), so it still feels value for money. Why can't they do this every month?

(Incidentally, this was out December 26th. I actually received it a few days early but have only just got round to it. Why I'm bothering providing my views and summary three weeks late I don't really know, but hey-ho, keeps me happy.)

The contents kick off with a 52-page main story (that's about 2½ regular issues' worth). Here, Slott wraps up stuff he's been building for a very, very long time -- and in the process, justifies (in-story at least) why this is the final issue and why it's being (well, been) replaced by The Superior Spider-Man. This whole storyline has been remarkably controversial, often without justification, but this finale does warrant it. A bit, anyway -- I mean, it's just a story. And it's comics -- nothing's permanent. Still, I can see why some were aggrieved. Personally, I enjoyed it. Also good,, Ramos' cartoony art is a perfect fit for a book like Spidey. Hope the guy doing Superior is as good.

Following the main story, the issue has all sorts of other wonders up its sleeve. There's a whole 'nother issue's worth of back-ups: Spider-Dreams by J.M. DeMatteis and Giuseppe Camuncoli (a neatly constructed, fun tribute to the entire Spider-Man legacy) and Date Night by Jen Van Meter and Stephanie Buscema (retro-styled humorousness). There are galleries of #700's variant covers (there are lots) and the main covers for all 700 issues of the title (packed 100 to a page). There's a brief preview of all the Spidey books coming up, and a whopping seven pages of letters.

Bumper indeed.


Avenging Spider-Man #15.1 by Chris Yost & Paco Medina

Following on immediately from the end of ASM 700, this reads rather as you'd expect issue one of Superior to. I guess it's designed as a bridge, then, allowing the first issue of the new book to be completely new-reader friendly -- always the point of a #1 in the comics world.

Wednesday 16 January 2013

TV

Charley Boorman's South African Adventure
Episode 1 (of 4)
[Watch it (again) on Demand 5.]

Death in Paradise
2x02 Episode 2
Death in Paradise feels like the kind of series that should have nice punny episode titles -- Nun's the Word or something. But no, it's just the UK-standard episode numbers. How dull.
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Elementary
1x08 The Long Fuse
Some good twists in this episode. Better than your average Elementary.

Romanzo Criminale
2x06 Episode 6
There may still be four episodes left, but it definitely feels like the series is moving its pieces into position for the endgame -- because, equally, there are only four episodes left.

Articles

Why companies fail - the rise and fall of HMV
by Philip Beeching (from Philip Beeching: Social Marketing and Advertising Insight)

This was actually written last August, but is even more pertinent in light of recent events. It's also a fascinating glimpse behind the scenes from the man who "worked on the HMV advertising account for over 25 years".

My two favourite bits:

I said, "The three greatest threats to HMV are, online retailers, downloadable music and supermarkets discounting loss leader product". Suddenly I realised the MD had stopped the meeting and was visibly angry. "I have never heard such rubbish", he said, "I accept that supermarkets are a thorn in our side but not for the serious music, games or film buyer and as for the other two, I don't ever see them being a real threat, downloadable music is just a fad"

Oh dear. Also,

I got to know two young entrepreneurs from Jersey, Richard Goulding and Simon Perree who started the highly successful online games, music and video retailer, Play.com in 1998, and I remember them saying to me, "We were just waiting for HMV to turn their big guns on us but we just kept on going and getting bigger and bigger, and thinking they must be going to get their act together soon and come after us but they never did". I think this comment says it all.

Indeed it does.

Tuesday 15 January 2013

TV

Spies of Warsaw
Part 1 (of 2)
I don't mind a (shall we say) thoughtfully paced spy thriller -- indeed, I loved Tinker Tailor (both versions) and, more recently, Restless -- but this one pushed it a bit, especially near the start. It's three hours across its two episodes, and one feels like two-and-a-half might've been a better length… but then how do you split that for TV? Just two might've been rushed. Though I suppose one can only know once you see the second half.
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Yes, Prime Minister
2x08 The Tangled Web [series finale]
Finishing the old one just in time for the new reboot, which started this evening on Gold.

Films

Dredd (2012)
[#6 in 100 Films in a Year 2013]

Monday 14 January 2013

Sunday 13 January 2013

TV

Romanzo Criminale
2x02 Episode 2
2x03 Episode 3

Stella
2x01 Episode 1
Is it really a year to the day since I started the first series? Time flies.

Films

Underdog (2007)
[#5 in 100 Films in a Year 2013]

this week on 100 Films

My attempt to wrap up 2012 has begun, with two new reviews published to 100 Films in a Year this week...


Dirty Laundry (2012)

Considering it breaks both Marvel/Disney’s character copyright and WB’s music copyright, and thanks to starring Proper Actors & That it’s been relatively high-profile, it’s a miracle it’s still on YouTube after all this time. It’s a fairly effective depiction of a fan-favourite character, though, so long may it remain.

Read more here.


Rules of Engagement (2000)

most of the time it feels less like the film is aiming for ambiguity and more like it doesn’t know how to guide us well enough in what to feel. Important points aren’t appropriately established, others aren’t appropriately dealt with, and Mark Isham’s score toddles on regardless while important moments slip by.

Read more here.


Plus, new to the new blog...


Miracle on 34th Street (1947)

a great Christmastime film, requisitely magical and heart-warming. The court case finale (or "second half", more or less) is particularly enjoyable, not least The Bit With The Post Bags. I do like a good court room victory.

Read more here.


Stay (2005)

writer David Benioff sold the screenplay for $1.5 million, and it would be nice to agree with that buyer — there’s a good cast, a good director, some good ideas — but ultimately it’s 85 minutes that seem retrospectively pointless when the final ten do so little with them

Read more here.


More next Sunday.

Saturday 12 January 2013

TV

Arrow
1x05 Damaged

British Legends of Stage and Screen
1x08 Sir Ian McKellen [season finale]
I watched the one of these with Christopher Lee back in September (was it really so long ago?!), and they're very good profiles/autobiographical interviews. Apparently they're doing more, so that's nice.

Splash!
1x02 Heat 2
[Watch it (again) on ITV Player.]

Yes, Prime Minister
2x07 The National Education Service

Films

Django (1966)
[#4 in 100 Films in a Year 2013]

With Tarantino's Django Unchained hitting UK cinemas next week, it seemed a good time to finally watch the '60s original, which I've had in my collection for a good 18 months or so. There's a UK BD of it out in just over a week, which I hope (for the sake of everyone who buys it) has a better transfer than this. If it does, I may even upgrade.

Articles

This Isn't the Petition Response You're Looking For
by Paul Shawcross (from We the People)

The witty yet educational official response from the White House to a petition requesting they "secure resources and funding, and begin construction of a Death Star by 2016."

Collection Count

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

I should've had three new things this week. Not a one has turned up. That's mainly down to Hut Group companies, as ever.

So:

Number of titles in collection: 1,522 [no change]
Of which DVDs: 1,146 [no change]
Of which Blu-rays: 376 [no change]

Number of discs in collection: 3,836 [no change]
Number of films in collection: 1,601 [no change]
Number of TV episodes in collection: 5,700 [no change]
Number of short films in collection: 374 [no change]

See you next week, faithful reader.

Friday 11 January 2013

TV

Elementary
1x07 One Way to Get Off


The Graham Norton Show
12x11 (4/1/13 edition)
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]


Live at the Apollo
8x03 Episode 3


Romanzo Criminale
2x01 Episode 1

I watched most of Romanzo Criminale's first series over a single week back in June. It shows how good it was that I'm shocked to find I watched it all so quickly -- it's a sprawling crime epic that in my memory goes on much longer than just one week. There's something in that about significance vs. actuality when it comes to memory.

Anyway, Sky Arts embarked on a repeat run of the second season last Saturday, and considering I've had the whole lot sat on my V+ box since it first aired months ago -- plus that it's seven months since I finished the first series -- it seemed like I really ought to get round to it.

Articles

Orwell, covered up
by Mark Sinclair (from Creative Review)

Penguin are re-releasing six George Orwell novels with new covers. The most interesting is Nineteen Eighty-Four, and this is a quick article about its creation (and the other five for good measure).

The new editions are out now -- here's the new 1984 on Amazon, for instance.

Thursday 10 January 2013

Wednesday 9 January 2013

TV

Death in Paradise
2x01 Episode 1
Hurrah for the return of DiP, and in an even-better post-Christmas slot -- just when people need cheering up, rather than when they're all prepared for and happy about the winter months. Not that I ever feel the urge for sun & sand, but some do, so hopefully this second run of the light, fun detective drama will be even more successful.
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Magazines

Doctor Who Magazine #456

I've never stopped buying DWM, but I haven't read a significant amount of an issue for months, perhaps even years (due to a particularly festive season, the preceding bagged Christmas issue remains unopened). Somewhere between a New Year's Resolution and It's The 50th Anniversary Goddammit, however, I have dived into this one and read it almost cover to cover.

This issue has a not-all-new-but-tweaked look for the 50th anniversary, appropriately tying into the not-all-new-but-tweaked stuff that permeated the Christmas special (titles, music, logo, TARDIS, Doctor, etc etc). Revving up for the anniversary, the issue includes a fairly thorough summary of the tonnes of merchandise I'll be spending a small fortune on this year (though it neglects to mention the recently-announced Puffin short stories (more here), which I therefore presume were being kept A Big Secret). Lots of it is rather exciting, even if I still dispute some of the choices for the anniversary collection of 11 tie-in novels. Big Finish are doing a helluva lot of stuff, while BBC Books seem to have missed a trick by not doing some kind of big behind-the-scenes book. On the one hand, they may just not have announced it yet (the article ends with a "and there's more to come" note); on the other, they've done a couple down the years so maybe there's no point; though, adjunct to that, the last I remember was for (I think) the 40th, so maybe an update of that to include the Ninth to Eleventh Doctors is the least we're due.

There's also the first part of a new comic strip, Hunters of the Burning Stone by regular DWM comic strippers Scott Gray and Martin Geraghty. This is set up elsewhere in the issue as being part season finale, part anniversary celebration (though at six parts it will be finished by the middle of the year, nowhere near the anniversary itself). I always feel like I should be reading DWM's strip, especially as it's only around 10 pages once per month, but again I haven't for years. This instalment doesn't do much to convince me otherwise to be honest, full as it is of dense because-we-can sci-fi-ness. Great final page though.

Articles

Baftas: Lincoln leads but Spielberg snubbed
(from BBC News)

And a fair few well-deserved nods for Skyfall too. Whether it wins anything or not is another matter, but fingers crossed. The full nominations can be read on BAFTA's site, here.


Jersey retailer Play.com closes direct retail business
(from BBC News)

Bit of a surprise, this -- Play always seem to be doing so well. But it was also kind of inevitable, with the tax loophole closing, something Play was always based around.

Lots of misreporting around the web on this though: Play aren't being forced to shut down, they're choosing to, meaning you don't need to worry about outstanding orders or refunds; indeed, they'll be selling stuff until the end of March; and then after that, they'll still be there, as an ebay/Amazon Marketplace-style site for people to sell stuff through. Be interesting to see how long that lasts, with at least two so-obvious alternatives available.


Relatedly:

French mourn Virgin's 'funeral march'
by Robert Plummer (from BBC News)

Interestingly different reaction to record store closures from our friends across the Channel. Perhaps they'll be more inclined to do something to stop the tax-dodging multinationals because of it.

Tuesday 8 January 2013

TV

Bond's Greatest Moments
Sky's countdown of the 22 greatest moments in the official James Bond films (one per film), as voted for by readers of their website. A surprising list in places, which went some way to make up for the often incredibly irritating talking heads they'd chosen.
[If you have Sky, you can watch it (again) on Sky Go.]

Face the Clock
1x01 (7/1/13 edition)
This sounded like a good idea for a game show -- contestants must answer questions against the clock to amass prize money, but if they're the one doing the answering when the clock runs out they lose it all; twist is, neither they nor surprisingly-camp question-master Rory Bremner can see the clock -- but it makes one fatal misjudgement: the length of time varies, at random, from round to round. So not only do the contestants have no idea how long is left on the clock, they don't have a clue how long the clock was in the first place. That removes any element of skill or prediction and just makes it blind luck whether they're still in command at the end, which makes it considerably less fun.
[Watch it (again) on 4oD.]

Live at the Apollo
8x06 Episode 6 [season finale]
Or "The Middle-Aged Men Episode". Can't quite tell if that was deliberate booking or unfortunate thematic repetition...
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Miranda
3x03 The Dinner Party
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Person of Interest
1x19 Flesh and Blood
Resuming all these things post-Christmas-telly (see also: Elementary yesterday).

Monday 7 January 2013

TV

Animal Antics
1x01 Episode 1
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Britain's Brightest
1x01 Episode 1
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Elementary
1x06 Flight Risk

Films

A Trip to the Moon (1902)
[#2a in 100 Films in a Year 2013]
aka Le Voyage dans la lune, Georges Méliès' seminal sci-fi short, in the 2011 restoration of a rare hand-coloured print. And to accompany it:

The Extraordinary Voyage (2011)
[#3 in 100 Films in a Year 2013]
Shown alongside the restored short (and included on Park Circus' UK DVD released last November), this just-over-60-minute documentary describes Méliès' life and work (with specific focus on A Trip to the Moon), before moving on to the cover the various attempts at restoring his most famous work.

Sunday 6 January 2013

TV

Celebrity Mastermind
2012-13 Episode 10 (of 10)
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Films

It Happened One Night (1934)
[#2 in 100 Films in a Year 2013]

this week on 100 Films

No new reviews to the blog this week, because it's just turned 2013! I know, it has been for the best part of a week, but as this is the first 100 Films update since the year began there's a few bits & bobs to report.

So first among firsts, there's the December update, revealing not only what I watched in December, but also the final total for 2013. Then there's some statistics about the site, helpfully provided by WordPress.

Next, the first of my big looks back at 2012. That has the full list of everything I watched, as well as the always-fun statistics. This year there are more of the latter than ever before, complete with numerous graphs. Exciting!

Finally, my final post looking back at last year, 2012 In Retrospect. There you can find my ten favourite films I saw for the first time last year, alongside some honourable mentions, the worst five, and fifty new ones I missed.


No new reviews, as I said, but nonetheless some old reviews were new to the new blog...


Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (2010)

Like On Stranger Tides, it suffers from a surfeit of ideas that are equally undeveloped. There’s an adventure story that wants to reach an Indiana Jones-esque style but fumbles it. It often feels like the genuinely important bits of plot and character development are quickly brushed over, instead spending inexplicably long stretches on barely-relevant asides.

Read more here.


The Princess and the Frog (2009)

It’s beautifully done: backgrounds are gorgeously painted, character animation is fast and fluid. There are some stunning individual shots, like when the fireflies become involved in creating glorious lighting and patterns in the bayou, for instance. There’s a nice use of different styles when appropriate too

Read more here.


Robin Hood: Director's Cut (2010)

Origin stories are all the rage at the moment, and so Ridley Scott follows in the footsteps of Batman Begins and Casino Royale with his Darker And Grittier™ take on the beginnings of Robin Hood. No lurid green tights or Merry Men here — this is Robin of the Hood as he really was (maybe). Sadly, Scott's potentially worthwhile effort has become distracted and wandered too far down the wrong path.

Read more here.


And that's all for now. More next Sunday!

Saturday 5 January 2013

TV

Celebrity Mastermind
2012-13 Episode 9 (of 10)
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Numb: Simon Amstell Live at the BBC
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

QI
10x12 Justice (XL edition)

Ripper Street
1x01 I Need Light
This seems to have had some mixed reviews, but I thought it was brilliant. Dark, but appropriately so.
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Splash!
1x01 Heat 1
[Watch it (again) on ITV Player.]

Films

Underworld: Awakening (2012)
[#1 in 100 Films in a Year 2013]

The latest (fourth) entry in the surprisingly-durable Underworld series comes to Sky Movies yesterday. I don't have that yet (as usual, I'll get it in the next month or so for the Oscars), but I happened to buy the BD cheap in the sales, so it seemed a good idea to watch it right away and try to review it while it's still on telly. We'll see how that goes...

Collection Count

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

Number of titles in collection: 1,522 [up 1]
Of which DVDs: 1,146 [no change]
Of which Blu-rays: 376 [up 1]

Number of discs in collection: 3,836 [up 2]
Number of films in collection: 1,601 [up 1]
Number of TV episodes in collection: 5,700 [no change]
Number of short films in collection: 374 [no change]

See you next week, faithful reader.

Friday 4 January 2013

TV

Apparently it's Comedy Reviews Of The Year Day here... plus Celebrity Mastermind (of course) and another Little Cracker.

Celebrity Mastermind
2012-13 Episode 8 (of 10)
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Charlie Brooker's 2012 Wipe
For some reason this isn't on iPlayer online (though if you look, it's there but won't work), but if you have a service like Virgin Media you can find it on there.

Have I Got News For You
44x11 Highlights (extended repeat) [season finale]
[Watch the extended version (again) on iPlayer.]

The Last Leg of the Year
The Paralympics were generally pretty awesome, but The Last Leg was nonetheless one of the best bits. And here it is for a review of the year -- which, as per every review of the year I've seen (and I've seen a few) means: Jubilee, Olympics, Paralympics, Gangnam Style, the Jesus 'restoration', and one or two sundry other bits. Which isn't a bad thing, just, y'know, that was the year, so...
[Watch it (again) on 4oD.]

Little Crackers
3x10 Of All the Trees
Being Katy Brand's.

Thursday 3 January 2013

TV

Celebrity Mastermind
2012-13 Episode 7 (of 10)
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Little Crackers
3x08 The Ten Year Plan: Fringe to Hollywood
Being Omid Djalili's.

Superstars 2012
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

Wednesday 2 January 2013

TV

Celebrity Mastermind
2012-13 Episode 6 (of 10)
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Miranda
3x02 What a Surprise
Such fun.
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]

That Dog Can Dance!
Awww.
[Watch it (again) on ITV Player.]

Tuesday 1 January 2013

TV

2012: A Funny Old Year
Well that was spectacularly mediocre.
[Watch it (again) on ITV Player.]

Castle
2x24 A Deadly Game [season finale]
Great episode. Hope C5 don't make it too long before they embark on season three. I mean, I could download it (they're on, what, five now in the US?), but...
[Watch it (again) on Demand 5.]

Celebrity Mastermind
2012-13 Episode 5 (of 10)
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]

Little Crackers
3x01 Baby, Be Blonde
Being Joanna Lumley's.

Restless
Part 2 (of 2)
Great conclusion, even if it was a tad dense and confusing in places. I'd quite like to read the novel now, too.
[Watch it (again) in HD on iPlayer.]