Posts Tagged ‘BBC’

Review: Pulse

Monday, June 7th, 2010

BBC3 has opened its doors to give viewers a sneak peak into three new shows it has lined up.  This started with supernatural, medical horror Pulse which debuted online one week before its TV broadcast and followed up a week later with Stanley Park and Dappers, but more on those in the coming days, but today we start with Pulse.

A great starting point for any horror is to identify a common fear and then exploit it.  For many hospitals, although being a place of healing can also be terrifying, you don’t check in if there is nothing wrong with you and while you are there you have to put your faith in these doctors who supposedly have your best interest at heart, but are at the end of the day just doing their job.  So with the setting seemingly right how does this new BBC pilot play out?

Hannah resumes her training at one of the country’s top teaching hospitals, it has been a year since she broke down following the death of her mother.  Haunted by spectres in mirrors Hannah finds herself reluctantly following her in mother’s footsteps in career she is not sure she really wants to be in. Her dedication to one particular patient leads her to discover that at night strange things are going on the hospital. Hannah’s former lover and promising surgeon Nick has problems of his own, following an operation he manages to infect himself with something that he needs to keep under control with frequent injections. Hannah soon discovers that he is involved with something paranormal when she is attacked by a corpse, freaking effected by the sickness Nick  Hannah away for her own safety promising to reveal all, instead he takes his life leaving Hannah with old questions unanswered and new ones burning. Are the experiments that go in the hospital just about saving lives or is there something far more sinister.

The show is determined to pack in as many horror clichés as it can, from the rotting corpse  appearing in the mirror, girl chased down corridors, locked in a library with a stranger, no one believes her, the double twist ending, unexpected people spring out from around corners the list goes on. Horror is a rare genre for TV series, the only one I can name with a continuing storyline is the unsuccessful Harper’s Island.  It seems audience need to resolve device laden issues that come along with horror in a single episode rather than over the course of the series.  Going back to the idea of a hospital as a scary place, the shift here is that we see that fear from the point of view of the doctors; it is something we can not so readily associate with.  Hannah is warned not to get too close to the patients, in doing she is more affected when something goes wrong, but this is also what opens her eyes to the dark side of the hospital. Since Hannah is on the inside, she should start to figure things out quickly. There is a danger that Pulse could fall into the same traps as True Blood where twists are either so obvious the reveal, when it comes, is a major disappoint or so hidden that it feels like it was plucked at random.

Right now Pulse has failed to grab me, sure there is some crazy shit going on in the hospital, but if I am going to invest my time into something I need to care about the characters and their relationships.  The main character Hannah is such a loner in the first episode that she fails to have even one meaningful friendship. I assume that sooner or later the other interns will get dragged into what is going on behind the scenes of the hospital, but right now one believer and cast of sceptics or conspirators does little to perk my interest.

Created / Written by: Paul Cornell, Ben Teasdale and Tom McRae.
Directed by: James Hawes
Starring: Stephen Campbell Moore, Claire Foy, Ben Miles, Caroline Goodall, Arsher Ali, Emily Beecham, Alan Williams, Gregg Chillin, Matti Houghton, Eileen Davies
Date premièred: 3rd June 2010 – BBC3 (available on iplayer 27th June 2010)

Special Double Review – Defying Gravity and Virtuality

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

At first I was struck by how there were 2 new TV dramas that focused on multi year long space missions, but then someone reminded me that 2009 is the 40th anniversary of the moon landing and suddenly it all made sense.

Virtuality is set on board a space ship on a ten year mission to explore a distant star, the 12 man crew spend their time playing with
virtual reality and trying to figure out how they can improve the ratings of the reality show about their epic adventures. A mixed bag indeed, the pilot opens in the civil war, only with machine gun technology, no sooner has your head got to grips with that than you are thrown into space. 6 months into their mission the crew must decide whether or not to continue the mission or turn back, but with earth rabidly becoming inhospitable they might be the only hope for the human race so despite the ship’s only physician being diagnosed with Parkinsons and the virtual reality acting up and raping crew members they decide they have no choice and must continue their quest, at very least all that excitment should help with their reality show ratings.

Defying Gravity was pitched as ‘Grey’s Anatomy in space’, and is a multinationally produced show made by Fox (US), BBC (UK), Omni Film, CTV, SPACE (Canada) and ProSieben (Germany).  Set in the year 2052, man has already landed on Mars, but now they are going on a 6 year mission to visit other planets in the solar system (Optimistically hoping for 6 seasons?).  The pilot sees the selected galactic adventures launch into space before a couple of astronauts get sick and one of those goes off the deep end and ventures out for a space walk. Two replacement astronauts are sent up including the first man to land on Mars who left 2 of his colleagues behind on the red planet to die. Unlike the reality show being produced for the earth audience in Virtuality, the crew of Defying Gravity are making a documentary. With love in the air, the astronauts lucky enough to hook up are hoping that Ridley Scott was right and that ‘in space no one can you scream.’

Virtality was shopped around as a pilot but failed to find a buyer, instead the pilot played as an annoyingly open ended movie. Although there are groups demanding more episodes the presence of Defying Gravity will doubt dampen any network’s enthusiasm for picking up a nearly identical series. If you want to know which is best, that is a tough question, they both kinda suck. Virtuality is overly confusing and monotone, while Defying Gravity is just poorly written with on the nose dialogue and melodramatic situations. With its funding Defying Gravity will certainly air all 13 episodes somewhere in the world, but the prospects of a full season (22 episodes) and second series seems unlikely.

Virtuality
Written by: Ronald D. Moore, Michael Taylor
Directed by: Peter Berg
Starring: Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Kerry Bishé, Joy Bryant, José Pablo Cantillo, Ritchie Coster , James D’Arcy, Clea DuVall
Date premièred: 26th June 2009
UK Details: None available.

Defying Grafity
Written by: James Parriott
Directed by: David Straiton
Starring: Ron Livingston, Malik Yoba, Laura Harris, Eyal Podell, Christina Cox, Peter Howitt
Date premièred: 2nd August 2009
UK Details: BBC 2

Look out for our next double bill where Trauma will take on Miami Trauma.


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