Category Archives: TV

2010 TV 2010 TV

January 6th, 2011 by surlaroute

I’m not sure why I didn’t do this last year? Well anyway, onwards lol. As before, no particular order. I note down every new show I watch in a text file and put a star rating next to each, usually it is just whatever my highest opinion of a show is across the season, but sometimes I single out single episodes. These are all the ones I put 5 stars next to.

Doctor Who
Plenty written about this here :) Now David Tennant’s last episode was great… but this position is mostly about Matt Smith’s bold takeover. He is The Doctor.

Gavin and Stacey
This seems like forever ago now and I said at the time it really should have aired as the second half of an hour long Xmas episode, but the last episode of this was just beautiful as ever and I loved it.

South Park: You Have 0 Friends
I didn’t have as many problems with the latest series of this as some have, though I understand the disappointment in some quarters. I thought this particular episode, though, in addition to the final triple episode, more than made up for any failure in the rest of the season.

Russell Howard’s Good News
A consistently brilliant wonder of a show, the Reader’s Digest of stupidity leaks, the “it’s not all doom and gloom” segment makes me cry at least once a fortnight, and the new standup section on the Extra show has introduced me to some great comedians.

Roger and Val Have Just Got In
The BBC have been amazing with their sitcoms this year and this was one of the best. The line between comedy and tragedy has rarely been so thin, and you couldn’t ask for finer actors in the genre than Dawn French and Alfred Molina.

Must Be The Music
I was lucky to even notice this given my aversion to reality/talent shows in general, but the ad immediately grabbed my attention with the fact the acts involved actually wrote and performed their own songs… it was hit and miss for a few weeks but I could never turn it off. When Emma’s Imagination won it was one of my happiest TV watching moments of the year, it was just so right.

This is England ’86
This came out of the blue to really be the most legitimately great TV in this list. I watched the movie again directly before the first episode and loved it more than ever (if love’s the right word), so when the first episode of ’86 came across as an 80s “Skins” I worried for a moment, till I realised Shane Meadows had given another person directing duties for the first two installments. As expected, it was once Meadows got behind the camera that the whole thing really took off, with the lighthearted start basically engineered to make the contrast utterly devastating (it was amusing to see the reactions of those clearly drawn in by the Skins-i-ness to the darker scenes later on Twitter). I’m overjoyed at the news that This is England ’90 has already been given the go ahead, ‘cos this was just phenomenal.

Jamie’s American Food Revolution
This began as pretty much an extreme, very American (in terms of the TV style and technique – similar to how Gordon Ramsay’s Nightmares transferred to the states) clone of his UK school dinners project – right down to almost exactly the same dinnerlady “companion” he found at one of the schools. But it turned into something truly inspiring for me – again, with a message that transcended its surface appeal. Jamie was genuinely charging at windmills in places on this, and I wasn’t skeptical of its authenticity for a second. It had me in tears several times, just a phenomenal rare example of how effective this frankly awful genre of television can be.

Getting On
I caught up on the first series early in the year (or even late 2009 perhaps) and it left me gagging for the new one. Terrific Thick Of It/Office type stuff, and what it has to say is not, as some seem to think, just about the NHS – I’ve recognised a ton of the exasperating situations in my own ridiculous job as I’m sure others will too.

The Trip
It was fun to follow Twitter as this aired and people tried to decide if it was awesome or not (reminding me of the Nathan Barley episode when a clueless fellow actually stopped a moment to ask, “wait, is something brilliant happening?” lol). I think I’m pretty decided that the answer was, yes, this was pretty awesome. Some of the impression-offs between Rob Brydon and Steve Coogan went on a little too long but the foodie settings were inspired and the fleeting moments of real tragedy lifted it into the stratosphere.

Rally for Sanity
I was deep in my Halloween marathon as this was on but I followed it on Twitter and then watched the broadcast a few days later. But this was more about the idea than the result. It amazed me that seemingly smart people asked out loud what the Rally’s purpose was etc when clearly the point of it was simply that it happened … but even if you really wanted a message to hold in your hand, Jon Stewart gave that too in his closing monologue, and that single line which is my quote of the year, “If we amplify everything, we hear nothing.” Again, this didn’t just apply to the situation at hand, but to everything in the world today. He nailed it.

Royal Variety
I joked as this began that all I wanted was for it to be better than the last two or three years, which was a bit like asking for any given 9/11 to be better than the one in 2001. I was blown away by the show this year. Michael McIntyre, who I’ve gradually grown less amused by with each appearance since his own first appearance at the Palladium, turned out to be the perfect host. The good/bad mix was perfectly balanced, and the Les Miserables segment was just phenomenal.

The Nativity
Perhaps it was because I’ll pretty much down anything in the Christmas season, but I was more excited to see this than the BBC’s similar mini-series of The Passion a few years ago – even despite having been certain that Catherine Hardwicke’s recent movie was about as definitive as it gets. It didn’t hurt that one of my favourite actresses Tatiana Maslany was playing Mary. I thought this was a frankly perfect version of the story. It didn’t add anything that wasn’t there in Hardwicke’s movie, and all I really missed from there was a short suggestion about the significance of the myrhh gift. So not really earthshattering or essential at all, but it did what a Nativity story ought to do in my entirely unreligious opinion, leaving me at the end of each half hour with an immense, frankly almost unsettling sense of inner peace – and that’s something that prime time television can rarely claim to offer…

Honorable mentions
The usual titles that are included by default on this list but don’t need singling out: The Daily Show, Colbert Report, Simpsons/Cleveland/Family Guy/American Dad, all continued to make me laugh as much as I expect (and occasionally more). Sky’s Little Crackers over Christmas, the 5 or 6 I saw at least, were a fantastic idea. Terry Pratchett’s Richard Dimbleby Lecture was something everybody should see, immensely moving. The election debates were exciting if now just part of a horrible memory. Rev was a sitcom I hope gets a second series because it seemed to have enormous potential. Nick Frost was fantastic in Money. Karl Pilkington in Ricky Gervais’ An Idiot Abroad had some huge laughs. Mark Gatiss’ History of Horror and the rest of the League of Gentlemen’s Psychoville added great excitement to an already great Halloween for me. It was great to see Robert Llewellyn’s Carpool transfer to “proper telly” from its web roots, and at the very end of the year Just William (its first episode at least) surprised the heck out of me.

Disappointments
The TV chefs: Heston Blumenthal, Nigella, and Gordon Ramsay frankly all became shameful parodies of themselves this year. And though Jamie Oliver got a mention above, even he let himself down with his horrendous Christmas Lock-In. Sophie Dahl was worse than all these put together, though, it must be said. I’m determined to find new TV cooking shows to watch in 2011. Harry & Paul’s new series was just shocking, as was Stephen K Amos’, and the less said about Ruth Jones’ Christmas Cracker – which I was really looking forward to – the better. I had hopes for Claudia Winkleman taking over Film 2010 but frankly the new format is an embarrassment to the BBC.

Old stuff
I watched a ton of great old stuff this year in addition to the massive Doctor Who binge – the complete Curb Your Enthusiasm (can’t wait for the new series), The Naked Civil Servant and An Englishman in New York (both of them fantastic as each other – the latter probably the best TV of 2009), Cosmos (I’d seen parts of it before but not the whole thing – if you think Brian Cox’s current TV offerings are amazing you owe it to yourself to seek this out), All You Need is Love (fantastic, epic music documentary), Edge of Darkness (after watching the Mel Gibson movie which I loved… also brilliant, but very different), Alfred Hitchcock Presents… (still in the process of watching these following on from my Hitchcock marathon… some absolute gems amongs the hundreds of stories here).

Doctor Who Doctor Who

December 29th, 2010 by surlaroute

I spent half of this year, beginning after the end of Matt Smith’s first series in the role, kind of obsessively devouring the complete history of this show (on the TV, at least: radio and books may follow in the new year lol… yes, it was that good of an idea, I am officially a little obsessed). So it’d be remiss, to say the least, of me not to try writing a little something about this most wonderful of shows.

I thought about how best to do this first post on the show (for I’m sure there may be further, more detailed posts, as I get more organised and revisit individual stories in years to come), and I decided to just spend a little time on each Doctor, companion, pick a favourite episode or two for each, etc… basically just let the thoughts flow over some basic structure and see what happens… so here goes:

William Hartnell

When I sat down to watch the first ever episode of Doctor Who – actually in between the two last episodes of the last series, as the idea for this crazy marathon first blossomed – I really wasn’t sure if I’d go through with it. It’s perhaps enough to say that “An Unearthly Child” was good enough to make me launch into it wholeheartedly. It’s perhaps the finest first episode of any long-running show that I’ve ever seen, introducing all the basic elements that would eventually become practically archetypes as the years progressed. The main story (“10,000 BC”) of the first 4 episodes might be as flaky as anything else in Hartnell’s years, but the very first 20 minutes, introducing The Doctor himself, Susan, Ian, Barbara (his first companions), The TARDIS, is just flawless myth creation.

Yes, I just called the Hartnell years stories flaky, lol. Let me just repeat that I flew through the complete Doctor Who in just half a year, so to be fair I didn’t give a lot of it nearly the attention it deserved, and these are first impressions only, and I’ll happily come back and watch any episode again because rest assured, I am in love with everything this show is. Hartnell was a terrific Doctor, certainly in my top 5. There were a lot of “historical” stories under his reign, however, and worse than that many of his episodes are missing entirely (damn the BBC junking policy!) so I had only reconstructed versions to enjoy (a sidenote on reconstructions, though: I was overall impressed by them, the audio survived and it seemed they had a hell of an onset photographer… as if further testament were needed as to this show’s jawdropping adherence to continuity…)

Of the companions in these years, few struck me as particularly memorable. Susan grew on me certainly, in that strange way the companions often do. The thing about this show is that it’s as much about the companions as it is The Doctor – if not, as Russell T. Davies wisely realised with Rose, more so. There are monsters and aliens and crazy happenings, and sometimes the companions or even The Doctor can be annoying; but suddenly we find it’s time to say goodbye and we realise we don’t want them to go, and that’s what The Doctor fights for, what it’s all about. So when Susan chooses to stay with a boy she’s fallen in love with, I felt that for the first time. Dodo was a particular example of the “irritating but grows on you” companion for me, too; and Polly is the other more memorable companion of this Doctor, who would stay with him into the Troughton years.

My other favourite story of Hartnell’s Doctor was one his very last – indeed the last that survives in its entirety. “The War Machines” was a terrific story in itself, however, signalled by far more modern titles than previously, and a very down-to-earth setting in contemporary London, with the BT (then Post Office) Tower playing a pivotal role in a story ahead of its time about artificial intelligence gone awry.

(Peter Cushing)

I know, I know, the Peter Cushing movies aren’t “canon” (by the way, I despise that word), but I included them in this crazy endeavour and I’m glad that I did. Cushing was a terrific Doctor, I thought, almost a shame he didn’t get the screen time of the TV Doctors really, and these movies are notable for their production values compared to the TV show, and on a personal note, I just adore Roberta Tovey as a much younger Susan. I wrote a bit more on the movies here.

Patrick Troughton

Troughton’s years suffer like Hartnell’s from too many missing episodes, though fortunately he would return in a few later multi-Doctor stories (in colour, too) for us to get a greater sense of his take on the character. He seemed like a wonderful Doctor, so the missing stories are a great shame, but even sadder for me is that these years contained perhaps my favourite of his companions across the entire run, old and new – Deborah Watling as Victoria Waterfield. I’d seen Watling play Alice in the original BBC Wednesday Play version of Dennis Potter’s Dreamchild (Alice) and couldn’t wait to see her in this. Despite the limited number of her episodes available in full, she grew on me in the biggest way. I can watch her farewell over and over and cry just as much every time, even though it does only exist in the form of offline audio and stills. She was just so soulful, it fills me up just to think about her.

Mention should be made of Jamie, who stayed with The Doctor a long time. It’ll become clear that I’m more into the female companions so I won’t try to hide it, lol. I feared Jamie would be a hard one to put up with but I’ll admit, he had his moments – like any of the less likeable companions (and we’ve all got our hangups)… simply the longer they hung around, the more you learned to put up with them for the sake of the show, and there’s great dramatic currency in that.

Of Troughton’s stories, for my faves I would pick “Tomb of the Cybermen”, if only because it’s the only Victoria story that exists in its entirety; and Troughton’s last story, the simply epic “War Games”, which introduced a phenomenal number of elements that would become part of the show’s very essence.

Jon Pertwee

As the show turned colour, entering the 70s with Pertwee’s Doctor, the whole thing began to feel a lot more familiar to me. I’m almost certain some of Pertwee’s stories would’ve been repeated in my childhood, either off the back of whatever current Doctor was playing or Pertwee’s other big TV role, Worzel Gummidge (which I guess itself was running on repeats in my childhood, as it ended in 1981, when I was just a baby lol).

Though I loved Pertwee as a Doctor, I can’t say much for his stories. “The War Games” had left the Doctor banished to Earth with his knowledge of how to operate the TARDIS wiped – about as tight a writing corner as he’d ever be written into, and as such partly to be admired. But they never really successfully wrote themselves out of it, and I find almost all of Pertwee’s stories dull save for the first multi-doctor episode which in addition to that gimmick (which I personally love: I hope they do another multi-doctor story, for the 50th anniversary perhaps?) is also a great story.

I loved all of Pertwee’s companions, but of course the best known was Sarah-Jane. I can’t say I expected to feel much for Sarah-Jane. When she returned briefly in Tennant’s time (before going off to do “The Sarah-Jane Adventures”), my excitement was honestly more for the return of K-9 than her lol. But again, there’s that companion effect, and boy did she grow on me.

Another important addition to the show during this time was The Master, and I’m not sure there was ever a better person in this part than Roger Delgado. I felt Anthony Ainley grew into the part admirably, eventually, but at first seemed like a strange plastic version of Delgado’s frighteningly dapper incarnation. More recent incarnations simply haven’t had enough screen time to make a real judgment.

Tom Baker

I tried watching a fair few of Tom Baker’s stories some years ago as they repeated on UK Gold or some such channel, and the slowness of the 4 episodes per story format was a bit of a shock to me at the time. Coming to them this time after the earlier more common 6 episodes or more per story made them feel a lot easier. Dare I say it again, however, very few of Tom Baker’s stories gripped me on the story front. Again it was more about the companions for me – though I did find Baker a much more interesting Doctor than remembered – and I think it’s safe to say that Baker had the most consistently fascinating batch of these, to name only the best (in my opinion): Leela, Romana II, Adric, Nyssa, and Tegan.

Yes, I included Adric there. I’m aware that he’s one of the least liked companions in all Doctor Who history (oh, just you wait…) It was the nature of his departure from the show (under the watch of Peter Davison’s Doctor – which I won’t spoil but you can probably guess). I may have been 30 years late seeing it but I still didn’t see it coming at all. It’s an important moment for The Doctor because it shows that he’s not infallible.

Lalla Ward as Romana II is a companion that seriously jostles with my absolute faves for the top spot. My love was cemented in the “City of Death” episode, one of my favourites, with astonishing location shooting in Paris, and a bizarre costume choice for Romana that gives her the look of a runaway St. Trinian.

The other episode that really stands out for me out of Baker’s stint as The Doctor in terms of pure story is, as with Troughton, his very last before regeneration, “Logopolis”. The whole story concerns decay as The Doctor knowingly nears the end of life as he knows it, and the regeneration at the end is just beautiful.

Peter Davison

The Eighties Doctors were a strange bunch and none of of them really brought back cosey memories of any childhood love/fear I may have had for/of the show (though I’m certain it existed). By far the most exciting thing during this period was the new arrangement of the theme tune, lol. Incidentally, that theme tune – it occurred to me that by watching the complete thing over this half year, I’ve heard that theme tune at least 700 times, and you know what? I still get excited when I hear it. That’s some great music lol.

Really, the main companions that accompanied Davison along the way were Nyssa and Tegan, heldover from Baker, and later Peri would join him. Tegan was an interesting one, very much a model for later companions in the way she was plucked out of space/time almost by accident before embarking on a very by-the-numbers existence as a flight attendant, finally to find herself a real fighter at the Doctor’s side. Her first farewell moved me immensely, as she simply fails to catch the TARDIS in time for departure. “I thought you were going with the Doctor?” someone asks her, and she sadly answers, “so did I…”, and suddenly I had that feeling you get so often when watching this show… that you didn’t know how badly you wanted them to stay until it’s too, too late…

As with Pertwee, I couldn’t really single out a single story at this stage (please, please, I repeat, don’t take this as an outright judgment on the quality – I am aware that I have merely skimmed the surface in this first pass!) so for my favourite (ie, the first one I’ll buy on DVD next year as I begin the long process of devouring extras and commentaries and what-not lol) I would pick the multi-Doctor story, “The Five Doctors”. It was kind of terrible, with two of the Doctors involved not even “really” taking part… but still, like I said, I personally love the gimmick.

Colin Baker

I’m certain that by this point (Baker was Doctor from 1984-1986) I must have begun watching the show and becoming a fan for the first time in my pre-teens (though I consider “my” Doctor, the one I remember most prior to the new series, for better or worse, to be McCoy). Nothing much about Baker’s tenure struck me until “Vengeance on Varos”, a story that comes out of nowhere and was frankly ahead of its time. The Doctor and Peri find themselves part of a TV show where people are killed for entertainment – it sounds more like a story from the new series than old, right?

Peri was a funny old companion. The first thing that must be mentioned is the bizarre accent she has. I’m careful to say bizarre instead of “bad” because really, it’s so all over the place that in the context of Doctor Who it could frankly be genuine lol. But again, I have to say, she’s a companion that grew on me; and her departure is one of the most disturbing of all (at least, at first), even more so due to the initially cold way it is delivered in the epic, series-long storyling “Trial of a Time Lord”, the other “episode” I would pick as a favourite out of these years of the show (I’m pleased to see that the entire arc is available in a well-priced DVD box set). It’s still as slow moving as anything in the show’s initial 26 year run, but as a whole you’ve kind of gotta love it.

Sylvester McCoy

Like I said, this was “my” Doctor. Or at least I thought. And I looked forward to seeing Ace as she was one of my earliest crushes, I thought for sure she would be my favourite companion. But the McCoy years begin as the flakiest of all the 80s Doctors, in that odd period of the late 80s that was neither here in the postmodern nor there in the down-and-dirty 70s. As Ace first appeared, I was almost sad to see Mel – played by Bonnie Langford, yes, another candidate for “worst companion EVER!” – leave. I kind of loved Mel. She was tiny, bubbly… and yep, I even loved the voice. By contrast Ace seemed with her badge-adorned jacket and love of blowing things up like something constructed deliberately to please.

There are a couple of stories early on in McCoy’s tenure that I enjoyed: Dragonfire for the changeover of Mel/Ace, and Remembrance of the Daleks, for… well, for the Daleks let’s be honest :) But finally in the last couple of McCoy’s stories I found something to hold on to. Something very interesting happens in these last two stories, particularly “Survival”, and it’s yet another embodiment of that “don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone” theme that seems to run through every single aspect of Doctor Who.

“The Curse of Fenric” is Ace’s story through and through, with an emotional climax that humanises her completely. “Survival” builds to a climactic duel between The Doctor and The Master in which The Doctor screams that “If we fight like animals, we die like animals!” and the simply heart-melting closing monologue (I guess they knew it was the last for a while):

“There are worlds out there where the sky is burning, where the sea’s asleep and the rivers dream, people made of smoke and cities made of song. Somewhere there’s danger, somewhere there’s injustice and somewhere else the tea is getting cold. Come on, Ace, we’ve got work to do.”

It left me on a high, anyway, though I’d fallen unconditionally in love with the show long before.


Paul McGann

If anything McGann’s Doctor seems to me to count even less than Cushing’s “non-canon” (did I mention I hate that word) one, though I understand his Eighth Doctor is more noted for radio plays etc that I haven’t yet encountered. I have a bit of a soft spot for the movie, and it’s a great stopgap over what would otherwise be an even more jarring transition between old series and new, giving us the regeneration of McCoy into McGann but introducing thoroughly more modern production values etc. It has its place I’m sure.


Christopher Eccleston

It was only midway through “Dalek” (my favourite episode of Eccleston’s season, and possibly my favourite single episode of Who ever, incidentally) that I realised, in fact, I hadn’t seen a good half of this series of Doctor Who ever before. I forgot that though I was excited to see “Rose” when it leaked on the internet, I then kind of zoned out of the whole thing until the second half of the “Empty Child/Doctor Dances” story. So it was kind of an experience to finally see this whole season as a whole.

Rose is, of course, one of the greatest companions the Doctor ever had. With the initial Rose arc, Russell T. Davies clearly realised what had been proven to be great about the companion archetype over and over in the show’s history, and boy he went with it. It doesn’t matter that we don’t see McGann regenerate into Eccleston, not just because it’s almost a reboot of the show, more because we re-enter the Doctor’s world through Rose‘s story.

By the way, though I singled out “Dalek”, it’s impossible for me really to pick favourites from the new series. I intend to buy whole collections of these immediately on DVD and Blu-ray because it was the sweeping story arcs that really made them such an astounding success.

Eccleston struck me as an even better Doctor on this “re-watching” (I’d not seen a single episode of the new series more than once until now, it’s worth saying) than he did the first time. From his bizarre delivery of the line “Run for your life!” in his first episode to his final words in his last, “You were fantastic, and y’know what? So was I…”, he seemed to channel almost all previous Doctors exactly according to what best fit the situation at hand. I could watch any of his episodes over and over… though the same can be said for just about any of the new series, lol.

David Tennant

The big one. This was the era when Doctor Who became simply so consistently brilliant that its very consistent brilliance almost became a bore week after week (I really don’t mean that badly, it’s just the only way I’ve ever been able to articulate its brilliance lol). Tennant carried the Rose arc to its profoundly moving closure, with that jarring yet hilarious conclusion that led into the Catherine Tate Christmas special, in itself a kind of deserved break for The Doctor in which respects were paid to Rose’s memory constantly, as if the writers knew exactly how much this companion had meant to us. Rose echoed into the next companion, Martha’s, time on the TARDIS too. It made the adoption of a whole new character that much easier to bear and adjust to, and as always, she too grew on us – the whole third season, in fact, is arguably really all about Martha earning the right to replace Rose, and she goes above and beyond, but finally turns him down because he will never love her like Rose.

Tennant had “pseudo-companions”, too. “The Girl in the Fireplace” is an episode, if any, that deserves to be singled out (and it has been, often) – a profound, heartbreaking story by Steven Moffat that practically serves as a template for his first season arc with Matt Smith’s Doctor and Amy Pond. Post-Rose we had Joan Redfern in the emotionally epic Human Nature/Family of Blood 2-parter, Sally Sparrow in the lean, mean, “Blink”, and of course, the whole River Song thing that’s still to come. These “companions that never were”, when as successful as these, are somehow even more powerful than the more longterm partners, for all the same reasons: they grow on us, they grow in themselves, and deserve to see what The Doctor can show them as much as anyone else… and just at the moment when we think we can’t live without them, they’re gone.

Like I said under Eccleston, the new series has been more about great arcs than great individual stories, but that’s not to say all arcs are great as each other. There was certainly a lot of air in the middle of Tennant’s – um – tenancy as The Doctor… the Mr. Saxon arc of Season 3 perhaps being the worst offender, hitting a low point with “Daleks in Manhattan/Evolution of the Daleks” and its frankly silly looking human Dalek, a story that takes none of its characters anywhere particularly interesting. But maybe, again, this weaker arc was intentional, like the humour of that Tate Christmas special, we just needed some downtime after the powerhouse that was Rose?

Strangely, Tennant’s tenure picked up exactly at the time when it seemed most likely to fail, as Catherine Tate came onboard full time as companion. Now, I loved Catherine Tate’s comedy but I don’t think there was a soul whose heart didn’t sink a little at the announcement of her as the new companion. Martha following Rose was enough work at getting an audience to love again, but bringing Donna back was a whole other challenge for the writers and I think it’s a huge factor in the show’s current goodwill that it totally paid off. Tate was subdued, emotional, and finally brilliant as a companion, proving really that this show can literally do anything.

And then there were the specials… the first few of which I must admit seemed unfocussed. “The Waters of Mars”, however, is a wonderful story that made clear the intention of the specials that culminated in what was always going to be a painful regeneration for the audience, let alone the Doctor himself… Tennant’s Doctor simply became too cocksure as these specials rolled on… Doctor Hubris, as it were… and one last element of his mythology that I simply adore began to feature more and more prominently: those stories when his enemies directly call him on his own failings… his loneliness… the fact that people have died because of him too…

Matt Smith

If replacing Rose as companion was hard to take, surely replacing Tennant as Doctor was even more scary a prospect for even the loosest and newest fans of the show. It was as I watched Tennant’s last episodes just a few weeks ago that I realised they only aired a year ago, yet Tennant’s Doctor already feels like another life ago. Matt Smith could have taken an entire series, like Martha, ingratiating himself in the role… but he did it all in the first episode. At the end of “The Eleventh Hour”, he simply WAS the Doctor. And as I’ve already said, by the time “The Pandorica Opens” rolled credits, he had inspired me to go full Whovian. Some of the stories on the way were, if I’m honest, even weaker than some under Russell T. Davies… but the Amy Pond arc was made that much more prominent, making the failings of any individual stories far less of a problem.

So that’s where we are now… I don’t feel right saying much about the Christmas special as I’ve only seen it once, and it was on Christmas Day, and I was tired and drunk as ever lol. But I liked it – it was a mess, but a warranted (due to the sheer scope of the story and the time in which it was told) and beautiful one. The song is still in my head days later on, and the trailer for the new series looked phenomenal.

What I love the most about Doctor Who was something I already said even before this insane watching spree… it’s that it’s a show that can simply do anything – it almost fits into the same genre as those anthology type shows I also love, like Alfred Hitchcock Presents, The Twilight Zone, The Outer Limits, or Masters of Horror, with the exception being of course that it has total continuity of characters. What I’d add to this that I realised more as I watched this past half year is – not only is it able to do anything, but more importantly, it does do anything, and it always makes perfect sense in terms of its own pseudo-science, characters, story, and continuity. Even at the latest Moffat maddest, like the timey-wimeyness of “The Pandorica Opens”, there is a truth embedded into the madness that makes it simply one of the most important things on television today. What The Doctor represents is to me a good as great as any of the world’s religions, and frankly, frequently even more compelling as an option.

There is so much more to write about, but I’ve broken 4000 words here so I have to stop for now. Again these are all just my first thoughts only a week after finishing watching the whole nearly 50 years of the show so don’t even bother having a go at me ‘cos I missed something, I’ve no interest in being right or comprehensive or giving a sh*t about (I vomit at the word) canon. I just love the show, more now than ever, and I’m sure I’ll love it more still.

2008 TV 2008 TV

January 5th, 2009 by surlaroute

Well how bizarre, I just looked at last year’s post to see how I’d formatted it and such and I saw the total shows I watched of 149 – this year’s according to the list is 148, hehe. Anyway, it goes without saying that I haven’t posted as much as I’d like in this section over the past year, but we can only move forwards and hope for better :)

This is just me going through that list and picking out the things I gave five stars to.

1. Outnumbered – one of the best things I have watched on TV ever. Ramona Marquez could save the world.

2. A Colbert Christmas: The Greatest Gift of All – expectations were through the roof and it completely trumped them.

3. Summerhill – like BBC Four was reading my mind all over again. Couldn’t be timelier.

4. The Sarah Connor Chronicles – more and this and Summerhill here

5. Dead Set – “Does this mean we’re not on telly anymore?” It’s sad that there are Big Brother fans who watched this, that calls them zombies to their very stupid faces, then probably went back as soon as the “celebrity” version kicked off this past week … but Charlie Brooker did it better than Peter Kay and in any case, if you strip away the reality TV element here, it’s frankly a better zombie movie than some that have been released in cinemas. This is one of the few TV productions this year that will last.

6. Sunshine – Steve Coogan is always brilliant, but he outdid himself here.

7. The Oscars – they got it right, they got it right, they got it right :)

8. The Olympics Opening Ceremony – fake but who cares? It made me feel like a kid.

9. The US Election – I guess everything related to it comes into this, so we get to include Colbert and Stewart (who, like South Park etc really go without saying as they’re always consistently must-see to me) … but I really mean the night itself which I stayed up for, frankly wondering why I was bothering, but I’m glad I did. There are things to be cynical and skeptical of in this whole thing, but when Obama made his speech, it felt good, and I cried. And it has to be said that McCain’s speech was pretty good too.

10= Doctor Who – The Doctor’s Daughter (this is the episode I noted in my list but to be honest I don’t remember much of it – though I think it was the whole idea that the Doctor had caused deaths in his adventures etc, and the whole gun thing too)
Gavin and Stacey – The Christmas Special (just because it’s the freshest in memory but the second series was perfect too – I really didn’t think they’d keep it alive after the end of the first but they’ve outdone themselves)
iCarly – iHatch Chicks (if you ever want to watch just one episode of this great kids show, watch this one, lol)
Torchwood – VERY specifically, the episode “Adrift”. The series as a whole has gone down the toilet, but this episode was just fantastic. I don’t think I cried so much all year.
Trick or Treat – the one with the kitten. Again, there are things to be cynical and skeptical about, but this show isn’t the place for those things, lol – and that episode took my breath away.
Tribal Wives – this got dull in the end and I tuned out, but the first episode was wonderful.

Honorable mentions: Songbook, Lucy Davis in Reaper, Dom Joly’s Complainers, a number of other childhood related things on BBC Four, Marco’s Great British Feast, Harry & Paul, This American Life (I just didn’t get to watch it all yet), Lead Balloon, Massive and Elvis Costello’s Spectacle. Disappointments: sadly, most of what was on at Christmas, including Shooting Stars. Gavin and Stacey was genuinely the only treat there.

Alice in Wonderland [1966] Alice in Wonderland [1966]

May 4th, 2008 by surlaroute

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This one is fascinating – another TV production, this time by the BBC for the “Wednesday Play” series, and boy does that show: the word “pretentious” certainly comes to mind but I for one won’t be using it because this is one of the best adaptations of the book that I’ve yet seen. It begins by perfectly recreating the part of the story that has always been the most strongly evocative part to me: the simple, lazy image of Alice and her sister on the bank on a hazy Summer afternoon (“All in a golden afternoon …”). From there it launches into some of the most surreal, dreamlike progressions I’ve ever seen on film. It captures some part of the book that few other adaptations would dare. Through clever editing, it’s the closest and most prolonged replica of the dream experience I’ve seen.

I wouldn’t have thought it, as I’m quite attached to the innocent and gracious image of Alice in the blue dress with blonde hair in a bow etc, but I quite like this Hermione-haired, black-dressed, aloof version as played by Anne-Marie Mallik, too; I love how she’s always walking away from people with a “hmph!” flick of her hair. The look she almost gives the camera as the caucus-race “winners” gather around uttering, “prizes, prizes, prizes”, quite like zombies droning, “brains”, lol, is quite priceless, it’s the look of a person bemused by the herd-like behaviours of society.

In short, what it lacks in colour, effects, costumes and comprehensiveness, it makes up for entirely with the feeling it gives by the extraordinary stillness, both in the image and in the soundtrack, Mallik’s whispery distant voiceover, and that very BBC “Play for Today” type score (excepting the odd moment when it, like the imagery, goes a little mental). At 70 minutes, there’s no excuse to pass up the chance to see it.

Alice in Wonderland [1999] Alice in Wonderland [1999]

May 4th, 2008 by surlaroute

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I love Tina Majorino in just about anything so I kind of knew that I’d be comfortable through most of this despite some bad comments about it (Martin Gardner calls it “undistinguished” and “boring” in “The Annotated Alice” and considering how great his insights are in the margins of that volume, I couldn’t well not believe him). With the book very fresh in my mind (I just finished reading it minutes before putting this on), I was pretty dazzled by how faithful it is to the text (to “Wonderland” at least; I can’t speak for the episodes towards the end I’m assuming are from “Through the Looking Glass”, which I’ve not yet read). That, however, turns out to perhaps be the production’s singular problem. There’s a fine line between being faithful and too damn literal, and this certainly crosses that line eventually.

As expected, I found Majorino delightful as Alice (I don’t like the yellow dress though :P ) – her English accent is a little too clipped at times but mostly it’s perfect, as is she. The rest of the cast is certainly impressive (how often do you find Ken Dodd, Martin Short and Gene Wilder in the same place, lol?) but often just plain annoying; for me nothing much compares to the fantastic supporting cast of the Fiona Fullerton version. The visual effects are fairly clunky at times and the production and costume design etc (I already mentioned the yellow dress) is some of the most garish and unappealing I’ve seen in any artwork based on the story – towards the end, in fact, it almost looks like they’re running out of money by the scene. For Majorino and the details in the script, however, it’s certainly worth seeing if you’ve read and enjoyed the source material.

Summerhill and The Sarah Connor Chronicles … Summerhill and The Sarah Connor Chronicles …

January 29th, 2008 by surlaroute

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… Two TV productions that couldn’t be more different, but they pretty much constitute my personal highlights from the month of January in television and bode almost forebodingly well for the next 11 months.

I’ve seen the first half hour of Summerhill twice now – the 2-hour feature was split into 4 half-hour episodes for broadcast on children’s television, a choice completely – even beautifully in these times – in keeping with the overall message in the production about children’s rights, about children being fully capable of the same decisions grown-ups are allowed to make, etc. Like I wrote on tumblr, I don’t even know if real children watch children’s television anymore, but it’s nice that its there for them if they want to.

I couldn’t wait to see the remaining 90 minutes tonight and I was not let down at all. I’ve half the mind to finally switch to including British TV movies in my definition of “movies” therefore really this post should possibly be in the movie section as I imagine it will turn out to be a more fulfilling 120 minutes than at least 50% of the dross I’ll subject to myself before December is out. It was a beautiful idea to start with, almost a shame it’s taken 8 years to make something of it, the music is gorgeous, the cast firing on all cylinders from the cute Holly Bodimeade to the supporting cast of the inspectors, Geraldine McNulty as the headteacher, and yay Martin Ball (sorry, such a whore for mentioning people I’ve seen live on stage :P ). It’s pretty much the benchmark for television this year … like I said, forebodingly early.

Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles came as a total surprise to me. Though I loved Terminator 3, I’ve still not got around to seeing it a second time since the first time, and in that time I’ve allowed my opinion to somewhat slide to the point where I approached this series with as much trepidation as excitement. It turns out that comparison to the second sequel to James Cameron’s original doesn’t bear pursuing; all three of the first episodes of this show quite comfortably compare to the best of the movies, Judgment Day – and given that both Linda Hamilton and Edward Furlong have for obvious reasons been recast, that’s really quite a thing to find myself saying. Each episode seems to follow that great direction in Cameron’s screenplay to T2, “OKAY, BUCKLE YOUR SEATBELTS, HERE IT COMES…” and seriously, for a TV show, the brilliance of the pace cannot be understated, it’s truly overwhelming. Lena Headey, Thomas Dekker and Summer Glau are a perfect threesome, so good that I didn’t question the recasting from the classic movies for a second (okay, I didn’t do for “Rise of the Machines” either, but kudos is still due). I can only hope it keeps up the pace. The worst I’ve heard on the IMDb message boards is that it’ll be cancelled after 2 seasons – like omg! lol. Two seasons sounds like a hit to me :-P

Two Pints Live! and the first of ’08 Two Pints Live! and the first of ’08

January 15th, 2008 by surlaroute

Last night I almost missed the first “Live!” episode of the new series of Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps, one of my favourite TV series ever, so shame on me (for almost missing it, lol, not for loving it silly :P ) – actually I did miss it, but luckily BBC3 repeat most things the very same night 2 hours later, lol. It was weird, to cut a long story short, and I don’t think I liked it. I don’t know the full behind-the-scenes story but it looks like Ralf Little didn’t want to be involved so writer Susan Nickson (who I’ve often regarded as a genius) decided to acknowledge the “jumping the shark” moment in a cheesily hilarious self-referential series rejuvenation fest, right down to the live transmission gimmick – which in itself was actually disappointing because all those involved are so talented that there weren’t any of the classic out-take moments we’ve seen in one or two specials. On top of all that, it plain wasn’t that funny. I don’t know if I’ve grown out of it (likely story, lol), if it was just bad, or if it’s just Nickson being perfectly juvenile in making sure this series is the last. We’ll see how the rest pan out – for all I know, Jonny will make a Patrick Duffy like return. Though I don’t know if that would just be rubbing salt in the wound.

I caught up with “Jamie’s Fowl Dinners” tonight, from Friday. Not what I expected at all. His “School Dinners” show was presented as a shocker, but though it was brilliant there wasn’t anything so confrontational as, say, Morgan Spurlock’s “Super Size Me”. But this … it’s like Gunther von Hagens’ “Autopsy” meets the TV chef. I find something glorious about the grand guignol style of education, and if nothing else, this was certainly better than his “At Home” series which I never really wrote about but gosh, what a bore.

Other potential goodies of the past couple of weeks include Fairytales – the BBC’s retelling of 4 classic fairytales, starting with Rapunzel. It wasn’t anything special, but I adore the concept and I wish the series could’ve been longer, plus unexpected transgender elements are always welcome here :)

Torchwood later this week, of course … v. excite! But the best news which I only came across while writing this is that tomorrow night a new series of Shrink Rap begins … the first guest, Chris Langham. Wow.

2007 TV 2007 TV

January 1st, 2008 by surlaroute

I’ll stick to the way I did it last year, a very restrictive top ten. I’ve watched 149 separate shows this year … I’m not sure what that means since it’s the first year I’ve kept count. It sounds like a lot, but it sure didn’t feel it, and there’s a bundle of shows I wish I’d had time for but didn’t. Anyhoo, these are my picks, and like I said, 10 is very restrictive – there’s probably at least another 20 I wish I could include here.

The Simpsons / Family Guy / South Park – I don’t normally include them, but this year they’ve really outdone themselves. The Simpsons for doing the 20 year thing so well, not to mention actually being better in the the 3-4 episodes that bookended the movie than the movie itself; Family Guy for a lot of things but it’s the Gene Kelly / Stewie scene that sticks in my mind the most; and South Park, for the Imaginationland trilogy and the extraordinary image of Stan’s dad rising up on that enormous poo LOL.

Doctor Who – for getting over Rose perfectly. For “Blink”. And for just being so bloody brilliant.

Shrink Rap – probably the most obscure one I’ll mention here. I absolutely loved this little series of interviews and I hope Channel 4 haven’t given up on the concept. In short, a psychiatrist took the role of regular chat show interview, participants including Sarah Ferguson, Stephen Fry, Robin Williams and David Blunkett. I think even if the interviews had been terrible I would’ve still been taken by the set-up. But they were, all of them (even the Sharon Osbourne one), unmissable stuff.

Children’s TV on Trial – the best season of programming ever. An hour on every decade since the fifties, and a handful of supplementary docs. So great.

Challenge Anneka – the “Over the Rainbow” album show. It was so corny but it always was. It’s the fact that this one made me forget my modern cynicism about such shows for once. By the time all the children got to singing I really didn’t care how it was brought about. It was just pure goodness and making people happy. I love Anneka.

Paris – Sandrine Voillet’s tour of Paris was way too short in just 3 hour-long episodes, but it was ample substitute for my not going there personally as planned, not to mention giving me a few pointers of places to go when I finally do get there again.

Liverpool Nativity – it wasn’t as good as the Manchester Passion, but it was damn close.

Extras – I try and write what I think about this and my eyes just roll back in my head remembering all the beautiful moments it had. It was just perfect, that’s all that can be said. It wasn’t just the best 90 minutes of TV of the year, it’s something people will be able to look back on like a time capsule that captures at least 5 years of television, and I just know that it was all calculated on Ricky Gervais’ part. Just on the sheer quantity of cultural references it counts as the show of the year. Andy’s epiphany in the BB house and the Truman Show-like ending lifted it way beyond everything else mentioned here. I bawled … bawled, seriously. That makes it good.

Honorable mentions: Hell’s Kitchen, Peep Show, The Sarah Jane Adventures, Fear, Stress and Anger, iCarly, This American Life, Gavin and Stacy, Saxondale, News Knight, Heston Blumenthal, Russell Brand’s Ponderland, The Genius of Photography, The Late Edition, Autopsy: Emergency Room, The Mighty Boosh, The History of Mr. Polly, Kitchen Nightmares and The F Word … see, I told you I could easily come up with another 20 LOL. If anything there’s simply been too much TV this year.