Doctor Who: The War Games in Colour
Following last year's The Daleks in Colour, here's the second in what seems intended to be an annual series of Classic Who colourisation/re-edits. This time, the Second Doctor's final serial (which, coincidentally, I watched for the first time earlier this year) is truncated from four hours to just 90 minutes. More thoughts here.
[Watch it (again) on iPlayer.]
Friends
4x18 The One with Rachel's New Dress [5th or so watch]
Richard Osman's House of Games
7x80 Redemption Week 1: Friday
[Watch various episodes (again) on iPlayer.]
The Rookie
6x01 Strike Back
Monday, 23 December 2024
Fiction
A Book for Christmas by Selma Lagerlöf
The Skull (translated by Sarah Death)
This story is very nearly the best in the book, but then it takes a religious turn at the last second. I actually didn't mind the other Christianity-focused stories that are included, but this one has a nicely creepy "Ghost Story for Christmas" vibe until it's undercut with warm-hearted moralising. Oh well.
Sherlock Holmes: Crimes for Christmas by Derrick Belanger
The Adventure of the Generous Miser
December 23rd Part One: The Mysterious Carriage
December 24th Part Two: The Case
Crimes for Christmas ends with a four-parter, in order that it can conclude on Boxing Day — that's expressly the reason given in the introduction. Yeah, I know: advent calendars don't end on Boxing Day. It seems the Britishness of it as an occasion fascinates this American author, so he felt the need to stretch to it, somehow. But, as I said, advent calendars don't end on Boxing Day, so I'm reading this story in two "double-bills" so that it finishes tomorrow, as it should.
The Skull (translated by Sarah Death)
This story is very nearly the best in the book, but then it takes a religious turn at the last second. I actually didn't mind the other Christianity-focused stories that are included, but this one has a nicely creepy "Ghost Story for Christmas" vibe until it's undercut with warm-hearted moralising. Oh well.
Sherlock Holmes: Crimes for Christmas by Derrick Belanger
The Adventure of the Generous Miser
December 23rd Part One: The Mysterious Carriage
December 24th Part Two: The Case
Crimes for Christmas ends with a four-parter, in order that it can conclude on Boxing Day — that's expressly the reason given in the introduction. Yeah, I know: advent calendars don't end on Boxing Day. It seems the Britishness of it as an occasion fascinates this American author, so he felt the need to stretch to it, somehow. But, as I said, advent calendars don't end on Boxing Day, so I'm reading this story in two "double-bills" so that it finishes tomorrow, as it should.
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