Tag Archives: entertainment

Why the Backlash against the Detective and the Time Traveller?

Given that both Doctor Who and the first episode of the second series of Sherlock gathered nearly 10 million viewers each, you would think that they must have been pretty popular. But whilst there have been positive reviews of both in the traditional media, online it is different.

Tweeters are angry at how the Christmas day episode of Who presented an unsubtle environmental message and resolved the storyline with a “men are weak, women are strong” device. They also felt that there was a forced happy ending by wimping out on the implied death of Reg Arwell, the father of the children in the story.

Bloggers are fuming with anger over the way the same writer, (Stephen Moffat for he wrote both) recreated Conan Doyle’s original Victorian opera singer, Irene Adler, as a modern day dominatrix prostitute. Even the mainstream media were furious over her nude scenes shown before the watershed. In fairness her hands and the camera angles hid anything “rude”.

Is Moffat being too stereotypical in his portrayal of the women in his stories? Or are we reading to much into it and what we actually did was to create two great stories which actually entertained huge audiences?

Think about the Christmas day episode. By the time it came on air at 7pm, most people will have eaten a huge Christmas feast, drunk wine and champagne, guzzled Quality Street chocolates and eaten them even more Twiglets. Some may even have had a second plate of turkey for supper. Brains were fuzzy. Eyes were heavy. What we did not need at this point was the usual complexity of a Moffat plot weaving different time streams and interlinked stories of incredible intricacy. We wanted a light, family oriented story that would fit with our Christmas evening stupor. It’s what we got.

Doctor Who and SherlockIn 1941 Madge Arwell receives a telegram. Her husband is missing in a presumed crashed Lancaster bomber. She takes her children to a remote country house where they are entertained by a mysterious “Care-taker”. They get transported to a “Narnia” inspIred snow filled forest where they help the trees to escape from an imminent environmental catastrophe. Only Madge is strong enough to operate the spacecraft that is their salvation. And as she flies the children home the ship becomes a beacon that her husband Reg can use to make a safe landing.

For those who accuse Moffat of wimping out on the father dying, they miss the point. The episode raises the possibility of the death of loved ones and that’s something that any child has to face eventually. But it doesn’t go all the way and for a Christmas day family episode that is exactly right. Reg Arwell was “missing” but he wasn’t dead. As it turned out he followed the space craft -time jumped over a few days and arrived at the country house. For him, he was never missing at all.

Doctor Who and SherlockSherlock’s episode was a modern re-imaging of “Scandal in Bohemia” and unlike Christmas Who, was multi-layered, complex and therefore satisfying. I suppose I can understand the critics of the modern Irene Adler being a sex worker, and that it might have been done purely for titilation. Is this indicative of our society that modern writers have to reinvent heroines of old to conform to the plastic sexuality of the Reality TV world? Actually, I don’t think Moffat had these debates with himself. I think he just wrote two great stories both of which demanded very strong female lead characters and it was the stories that decided their circumstances .

Taken separately they might appear stereotypical, but separately they were just two examples of different women. Madge was a loving mother protecting her children at Christmas, Irene was an ambitious woman using her sexuality to make herself safe in a dangerous political world.

Doctor Who and Sherlock

Doctor Who and Sherlock carried by two strong women.”

So two strong stories carried by two strong women. As for the malesĀ  I thought the leads, Matt Smith and Benedict Cumberbatch were both at the top of their game. Pages could be written on the relationship between Holmes and Watson, and even the most ardant critics must have shed a secret tear when the Doctor was reunited with Amy Pond for Christmas dinner.

Stephen Moffat served up two exquisite slices of Christmas pudding. Okay so Doctor Who might have been a little too syrupy, but I was one of those with a wine softened brain who needed something light, happy, family oriented and above all “nice” to enjoy on Christmas night. It worked for me.

We Will Rock You The Musical

We will rock you the musicalI’ve always been partial to the Mamma Mia stage musical and the almost cringe-worthy way that the ABBA songs were woven into the plot. After the first viewing where the song placement is a genuine groan generating surprise, the light breezy plot and sense of fun make it worth seeing several times just to generate a warm feeling inside.

When the film was released I loved it too – despite the cheesiness – it was just great fun.

So this weekend I saw another “juke box” musical – this time We Will Rock You – now touring the UK and spending an extended time around Christmas at the Edinburgh Playhouse.

Whilst it does not have the same – tear jerking mother and daughter hugging each other with joy girlie nights out appeal of Mamma Mia – it does have the same cringe inducing moments when you stare at the stage with your mouth open astonished at how they have made the jump into “I want to Break Free” or “Who wants to live forever”. But the look of astonishment soon becomes a smile because this is great fun.

We are in the future and all music is computer generated rubbish (quite prophetic given that Simon Cowell seems to be taking us in that direction) – and people are fed a daily assault of radio, TV and Internet Ga Ga.

Enter hero Galileo Figaro who has dreams of past times – manifested by him constantly quoting from great old rock songs such as; “The day the music died” ; and ; “Underground over ground Wombling free” – who wants to set the world free and bring back the heart of rock.

Along the way he meets many interesting characters. Scaramouche (or “scarybush” as she becomes known) – is Galileo’s love interest (he is nicknamed Shagileo after they first get together) – provides biting wit and outrageous sarcasm. The rebels include Britney Spears – a great big Jamaican, and Meatloaf – a girl in bodice and stockings and suspenders. Together they team up with Pop (played by him that used to empty bins on Corrie and was called Curly even though he had flat hair) – and defeat the evil Killer Queen and her henchman Kashoggi.

We will rock you the musicalKashoggi played by Darren Day stole the show for me – playing the beautifully suited villain as an east end thug along the lines of Brick Top. Killer Queen was Brenda who was a semi finalist in an X Factor a couple of years ago.

But of course the real stars of the show are the songs. Great versions, suitably updated where necessary. Loud. Pounding. Over the top. Just like being at a Queen concert actually. In fact the whole musical is effectively a build up to a live version of Bo Rap sung by the whole cast. And it’s a great finale.

Just as Mamma Mia has enduring appeal because of the awesome track list – so We Will Rock You The Musical has similar longevity. I can see myself going to see this one again and looking forward to the day they make it into a film.

Lost in 24

In a doom and gloom world of recession, panics over swine flu and grubby members of parliament filling their own boots at the expense of tax payers, it is great to find an escape in popular culture.

This year, 24 has been outstanding.

Of course the plot’s total nonsense – and we all know that in congested cities like Los Angeles and Washington DC it is not possible to traverse the distances in scant minutes. If 24 mirrored reality the terrorists would have won by the end of episode two whilst Jack Bauer was stuck in a traffic jam miles from the action.

But I have found myself holding my breath on many occasions in the last 22 weeks and now I only have to hold it again for a week until the 2 hour season finale. Will Jack get his stem cell donation from his daughter Kim? Will he have to turn traitor to save her life first?

As if a week wasn’t enough to wait – I now have 9 months to wait for the next season of Lost having just seen the end of series five. As expected it ended as Juliet detonated the nuke that will either save everyone on the island or, more likely, introduce all sorts of other complications. Flash backs, flash forwards, dead people coming back to life and then being found dead in one place whilst they are still alive in another. Total nonsense again but also unmissable.

Of course 24 has given us a great new internet acronym. WWJBD.

I just wonder – if faced with the gloom of world recession, panics over swine flu and especially grubby members of parliament filliong their own boots at the expense of tax payer – just What Would Jack Bauer Do?

Appreciating the Apprentice

I can usually take reality TV or leave it. I have long since tired of the parade of egotistical idiots emprisioned in the Big Brother House, or the Z list celebrities camping out in the jungle and subsisting on live insects and foul smelling vegetables.

But The Apprentice is in a different league. True the candidates are taken from further down the food chain with each successive series, but there is something totally addictive about watching them screw up in the most maginificent ways with tasks which in reality should be a push over for anyone with even an ounce of business acumen.

The problem is most of them do not have even an ounce of business acumen, and even those that do are so busy trying to shout over each other that they always miss the bleeding obvious, lose the task, or win by making less of a loss than the others. Then they face the wrath of Sirallan and that is when the fun really starts.

The episode where they had to create a marketing campaign for a breakfast cereal was perfect for me and my marketing back ground. The team that created the Treasure Flakes campaign did a very good job considering the time they had to produce a TV add, packaging and strapline. The Pirate Parrot was funny and on the cereal box the idea of making the fruit into pieces of treasure really appealed to the kids.

The other team did Pantsman!

What were they thinking? How could they let Phillip talk them into it? Was it not obvious that they were handing Sir Alan a put down beyond the dream of most script writers?

Still it took Phillip two more weeks to fall on his sword when he proved that his selling skills were just about up to the same standard as his marketing skills.

Complete PANTS!