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DVDs in the Works

Posts Tagged ‘Mi-5’

Ripper Street premieres tomorrow

Ripper Street

Jonathan Hession © Tiger Aspect 2012

Matthew Macfayden (MI-5, Little Dorrit), who may be seen currently in cinemas as Oblonsky in Anna Karenina, has returned to series TV in a star turn as Detective Inspector Edmund Reid in Ripper Street. Set in London’s Whitechapel district in 1889, this is not yet another take on the Jack the Ripper case, but a portrait of a population still trying to come to terms with the trauma of the previous year. The failure of the police to apprehend the killer has made them more unpopular than ever in this generally impoverished area.

The cramped diversity and heightened emotions make for a dramatically volatile mix, one that is perhaps too strong for some. Full disclosure demands that we grant that the BBC received fifty complaints about the violence when the series premiered in Britain during Christmas week. It’s not the frank depiction of life in a squalid London neighborhood that will compel a thoughtful viewer to return to Ripper Street every week, but the more essential factors of memorable writing, evolving characters and unexpected moments of sheer wonder.

Supporting cast includes Jerome Flynn (Game of Thrones) as Detective Sergeant Bennet Drake and Adam Rothenberg (The Ex-List) as Captain Homer Jackson, an American of many talents and considerable baggage. The eight-part series premieres tomorrow in the US on BBC America at 9pm ET/PT and in Canada on Space at 9ET/6PT.  Ripper Street, which will be released on DVD and Blu-ray following the series run, may be preordered now.

The phenomenal Call the Midwife

Call the Midwife

When a series about midwives in London’s East End was pitched to us a couple of years ago, we admit that we were skeptical about its chances. Administering natal care to an impoverished clientele amidst post-WWII ruins looked like a fairly bleak prospect. Then we saw these cheerful young women on bicycles. And we saw the ratings – Call the Midwife was the highest rated BBC drama in years. And when the episodes came in, we could see what all the fuss was about. It was more than just an idea that had not been tried before; it was a drama that celebrated the human spirit with a zest we don’t often see these days.

Newcomer Jessica Raine (Garrow’s Law – S1) stars as Jenny Lee, who leaves her comfortable middle class existence to become a midwife in the slums. Upon her arrival, she is surprised to find the establishment she has joined is not a hospital but a convent of Anglican sisters. They’re a mixed lot: the sweetly vague Sister Monica Joan (Judy Parfitt, The Jewel in the Crown), cantankerous Sister Evangelina (Pam Ferris, Rosemary & Thyme) and Sister Julienne (Jenny Agutter, MI-5 - Vols 1, 2), who manages to keep everything running. Miranda Hart plays Chummy, a misfit refugee from the posh world of her well-to-do family, in a role that is quite a departure from the knockabout comedy of her Miranda BritCom seen on PBS.

Call the Midwife premieres Sunday, September 30th, on PBS. The DVD, which includes a featurette of interviews, will be available on November 6th, but may be pre-ordered now.

Inbetweeners fan alert: The much anticipated Inbetweeners movie will have its US premiere (on a limited basis) tomorrow, Friday, September 6. Click here for theater information, and information regarding special screenings with talent Q&A sessions.

Kingdom come… even Season 1

Kingdom

On this special day for London, we turn our thoughts briefly to the much anticipated DVD release of Kingdom Season One. This delightful comedy drama stars Stephen Fry as a Peter Kingdom, a small town lawyer in the Norfolk countryside. Cast regulars include Hermione Norris (MI-5), Celia Imrie (The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel), Karl Davies (Game of Thrones) and Emma Thompson’s mother, Phyllida Law (Albert Nobbs). The DVD is expected to street in the fall.

Viewer alert: We can’t wait to see what Danny Boyle, director of Slumdog Millionaire and Trainspotting, has cooked up for tonight’s Opening Ceremonies of the London 2012 Olympics, what with rumors of Mary Poppins, Voldemort and sheep. NBC’s coverage begins at 7:30pm ET.

Twenty Twelve finale: For those night owls who have followed this mockumentary on the foibles of the London 2012 deliverance team, the final two episodes on BBC America air Saturday night beginning at midnight ET. If you already know who shot Ian Fletcher (Hugh Bonneville), these are not to be missed. The complete series is slated for DVD, but the release date is still to be announced.

The final Sarah Jane Adventures

Sarah Jane Adventures

As the Doctor Who community speculates over the announcement that Jenna-Louise Coleman will be the Doctor’s next companion, we turn our attention to Elisabeth Sladen, whose seasons on Doctor Who as Sarah Jane Smith from 1973 to 1976 redefined our expectations for all the companions who came after. The Sarah Jane Adventures spin-off series, which followed her successful reunion with the Doctor in 2006 opposite David Tennant, delighted her long-standing fans as well as a new generation. Sadly, Elisabeth Sladen died last April while Season Five was still in production, but six of the planned episodes were completed, and subsequently aired in the UK last fall. The DVD includes three two-part stories and a memorial piece, Goodbye Bannerman Road.

Don’t forget, Frozen Planet continues this Sunday at 8 pm on Discovery in both the US and Canada.

Good news for Foyle’s War fans: The popular detective series starring Michael Kitchen is being revived for an eighth season, airing on ITV1 next year and hopefully coming to DVD soon after.

Opening this week in cinemas: Rachel Weisz (Page Eight), Tom Hiddleston (Wallander) and Simon Russell Beale (MI-5 – Vols 9 & 10) star an acclaimed new adaptation of The Deep Blue Sea by Terence Rattigan. Our nine-play DVD The Terence Rattigan Collection includes the BBC’s 1994 version, which starred Penelope Wilton (Downton Abbey), Colin Firth and Ian Holm.

MI-5 Volume 10 marks its final season

MI-5: Volume 10

After ten years of undercover scenarios ripped from the headlines and our deepest fears, MI-5 is coming to a close, with its last season currently airing opposite Downton Abbey in the UK. Many of the long-time followers of MI-5 have wondered whether this season will at long last bring the relationship between Harry (Peter Firth) and Ruth (Nicola Walker) to a satisfactory resolution. Security remains high on that front, but we did find this tidbit in Radio Times:

“The romance was never scripted,” admits Firth. “It was her and I flirting in takes, holding looks too long, lingering over lines. The writers picked up on that and it just grew from there. Nicola Walker, who plays Ruth, is a bit unpredictable – you never know what she’s going to do – but she’s an utter joy to play alongside.”

To commemorate the series history, the MI-5: Volume 10 DVD extras include Top Ten MI-5 Moments chosen by the cast and crew and Harry’s Game, devoted to MI-5’s most constant character. Look for the DVD earlier next year.

Whitechapel – The Ripper Returns

Whitechapel

Many of London’s visitors first see Whitechapel on a Jack the Ripper tour. The three-hour itinerary through a maze of dark alleys and cramped yards does much to reinforce the neighborhood’s infamy. The launch story of Whitechapel puts the location to good use as East End police detectives investigate a series of modern-day murders that replicate the Ripper cases in MO, timing and location. Rupert Penry-Jones (MI-5, The 39 Steps, Persuasion) stars as Detective Inspector Chandler, who is being groomed for higher placement once he pays his dues for a few months on the mean streets.  Detective Sergeant Miles (Phil Davis, Sherlock, Collision, Bleak House) has seen it all before, and can barely contain his hostility toward the new man. His hostility finds a second target when a published “Ripperologist” tour guide, Edward Buchan (Steve Pemberton, The League of Gentlemen, Poirot: Death on the Nile), points out all the similarities between the cases and the Ripper murders. “So all you’ve got to do now is solve the unsolvable and catch the most famous serial killer that ever lived,” Miles taunts. Will over a hundred years of forensic advances make a difference? The DVD will be available in November after the three-part story runs on BBC America’s Dramaville. The Canadian broadcaster is as yet unknown.

Dramaville will run Whitechapel’s second story, which harks back to the Kray Brothers gang of the Sixties, from November 16 – 30, but sadly we know of no plans for a DVD of that three-part story. With a proper six-part season in the works for next year, we can still hope.

FAN ALERT: Doctor Who Series Six – Part Two premieres on BBC America and Space this Saturday night, August 27th.

The Hour

The Hour

If you wistfully remember when BBC America used to air miniseries, we are happy to announce that drama with a capital D is returning to the channel on August 17 with The Hour, a brand-new, sexy Cold War thriller set when BBC TV news was in its infancy. (The Canadian broadcaster is not yet announced.)

Ben Whishaw (whom we loved as Keats in Bright Star) stars as a brilliant journalist Freddie Lyon, who yearns to bring TV news beyond its feeble mimicry of newsreel style. (After all, newsreels were boring for a reason: to clear the theatre before the next feature.) Freddie’s friend and colleague Bel (Romola Garai - Emma, Glorious 39) seems a surprising choice as producer for the BBC’s first regular television  news hour. Her remit is no less daunting than to reinvent TV news. Anchoring The Hour is Hector Madden (Dominic WestThe Wire, 300), who appears to have landed the job through good looks and connections.

Ferreting out hard news in the calm, conformist atmosphere of 1950’s Britain presents a challenge, but there may be a story behind the engagement party footage of a palpably unhappy socialite, or the shocking murder of a college professor. When the woman in charge of the international news desk (Anna ChancellorMI-5 [Vol 4, 5], Fortysomething) says something’s afoot in Egypt, everyone thinks it’s an obvious ploy to load up the program with her own specialty. But the Chinese curse of “living in interesting times” is about to kick in, and a perfect storm is brewing between journalists needing to fill a daily hour and a government wishing to keep a tighter lid on secrets.

The era is brought to life by production designer Eve Stewart (Upstairs Downstairs), recently nominated for an Oscar for her work on The King’s Speech. The cast also includes: Burn Gorman (Torchwood, Bleak House), Tim Pigott-Smith (The Jewel in the Crown, North & South), Julian Rhind-Tutt (Green Wing, Reckless) and Andrew Scott (Sherlock, Lennon Naked).

Look for The Hour on DVD and Blu-ray this fall.

The Browning Version…and much more

That Browning Version

Some years ago when we released the The Judi Dench Collection, queries began to come in about The Browning Version, the 1985 BBC teleplay starring Judi Dench, Ian Holm and Michael Kitchen. How could we have left that out? At the time there was a holdback on script rights, so it could not be included. As rights to The Browning Version became available, our colleagues in London pointed out that this year marks the centennial of its author’s birth. Playwright Terence Rattigan’s name recognition over here is largely limited to theatrical circles, but in England he is one of the top playwrights of the 20th century. Next Broadway season promises to revive his memory in the US, or at least the tri-state area. Frank Langella has signed up to star in Man and Boy this September, and there are already hints that Benedict Cumberbatch (Sherlock, Small Island, The Last Enemy) will headline After the Dance in Spring 2012.

As luck would have it, the BBC Archive is a treasure trove of star turns in Rattigan plays. In addition to anchoring the impeccably cast The Winslow Boy, Ian Holm (King Lear, The Lost Boys) stars in The Deep Blue Sea with Penelope Wilton (Downton Abbey, South Riding), Colin Firth (The King’s Speech, Pride & Prejudice) and Stephen Tompkinson (Wild at Heart). Eric Porter (The Forsyte Saga, The Jewel in the Crown) takes the lead in two of Rattigan’s most revived works, The Winslow Boy and Separate Tables, the latter opposite Geraldine McEwan (Marple, Mulberry, Mapp & Lucia) and Annette Crosbie (One Foot in the Grave, Little Dorrit).

Heart to Heart offers Kenneth More (The Forsyte Saga) opposite Sir Ralph Richardson (Time Bandits, The Fallen Idol) with support from a young Jean Marsh (Upstairs Downstairs). Other plays include: French Without Tears with Michael Gambon (Emma, The Singing Detective) and Anthony Andrews (Brideshead Revisited – 1981, Danger UXB) and Nigel Havers (The Glittering Prizes, The Charmer); and After the Dance with Anton Rogers (Fresh Fields) and Gemma Jones (MI-5, Volume 6-7). In a rare foray from the modern world, Adventure Story tells the story of Alexander the Great, played by Sean Connery (Anna Karenina), with support from Margaretta Scott (All Creatures Great & Small) and William Russell (Doctor Who-1963-65).  The DVD set is expected to come out this fall.

Outcasts is serious science fiction

Outcasts

When we learned that Kudos, the folks that brought us MI-5, Hustle and Life on Mars, were planning to try their hand at sci-fi, we rather expected a romp in space. The very idea of humans embarking in spaceships to continue life as we know it on some amenable planet out there used to be imbued with optimism and faith in a can-do attitude. Nowadays we’re more aware of the possible complications. Remember how chaos theory took the much of the joy out of meeting real live dinosaurs in Jurassic Park? In the opening episode of Outcasts, it becomes clear from the point of view of Mitchell Hoban (Jamie Bamber, Law & Order UK, Battlestar Gallactica) that mistakes have been made, and President Richard Tate (Liam Cunningham, Shooting the Past, Clash of the Titans) already has secrets to suppress. Our trailblazers seem to be on the road to dystopia, but dystopia is not a dirty word in science fiction. Series fans concede that it’s a slow burner, but the pay-off is worth it. Eric Mabius (Ugly Betty, The L Word) and Hermione Norris (MI-5, Wire in the Blood) also star. Watch for the premiere Saturday, June 18, on BBC America, and for the DVD, which will follow soon after the series run. Canadian broadcast details to follow when confirmed.

Don’t forget to watch the Doctor Who series premiere tomorrow night on BBC America and on Space in Canada.

Here’s to 2011!

I don’t know how you are feeling by this time of the year but we’re beat! 2010 was a busy year, filled with successful new launches like Sherlock, Luther, and Life, but we certainly felt like we were all working twice as hard just to stay in place. As it quiets down I thought I’d take a look at the slate we’ve put together next year and share just a few of the things we’re looking forward to sharing with you in the upcoming year:

(1)    Human Planet.  For the first time our Natural History Unit has turned its world class cameramen and story tellers on the most successful animal on the planet—Humans.  What I’ve seen so far looks great!

(2)    More Sherlock!  ‘Nuff said.

(3)    Hamlet at Elsinore.  This much requested version stars Christopher Plummer in the title role.  Sir Michael Caine mentioned at a recent screening we attended that this was the best Hamlet he ever saw (he was also in it) and he wished it would come to DVD.  Your wish, Sir Michael, is our command.  There is also a new Macbeth starring Patrick Stewart, which is airing now in the UK.

(4)    More Primeval!  More MI-5!  More Being Human!  I’m getting a bit overexcited here, aren’t I?

(5)   And finally, our first BD releases of Top Gear (Series 14 and 15).

I don’t want to spoil all our surprises—we’ll have over a 100 new titles next year—but since we’re taking the next week off, we wanted to give you this exciting dose of DVD news to start off what we hope will be a great New Year!

Happy Holidays!