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DVDs in the Works

Archive for the ‘Mystery & Suspense’ Category

Who is Orphan Black?

Orphan Black

Photo credit: © 2013 Temple Street

Coming to BBC America and Space next week, Orphan Black is a thriller with a twist. Tatiana Maslany (The Nativity) stars as Sarah, a women who grew up in the foster home system. Her life changes when she witnesses the suicide of a woman who looks just like her. Upon examining the dead woman’s effects, she assumes the woman’s identity, her more desirable apartment, her surprisingly full bank account… and unwittingly lands herself into the predicament of a law officer under department scrutiny. It appears that her new persona had a reckless streak of her own. As Sarah struggles to pass in her new identity, she discovers yet another look-alike, this one from Germany, who also loses her life shortly after Sarah lays eyes on her. It’s anybody’s guess how many clones Sarah will encounter (and Tatiana Maslany will portray) over ten episodes as she unravels the conspiracy, but it promises to combine intense psychological depth with the pace of a crime thriller.

Orphan Black premieres simultaneously in the US and Canada on Saturday, March 30, at 9pm ET/8pm CT, following the return of Doctor Who.  The US DVD and Blu-ray will follow later in the year. The status of the Canadian release is not yet known.

Young Daniel Day-Lewis at the BBC

Daniel Day-Lewis

Photo credit: © BBC 1982

Last Sunday Daniel Day-Lewis won the Best Actor Academy Award for his performance in Lincoln, becoming the first triple-winner in this category. As with so many British stars of today, we at the BBC can say we knew them when. Day-Lewis made his TV debut in 1980 on the BBC’s Shoestring series, in which Trevor Eve (Waking the Dead) starred as a West Country detective.

Just two years later, Day-Lewis had landed the lead in the BBC film How Many Miles to Babylon?, the story of a friendship that weathered class and religious differences in Ireland only to be fully tested at the front in World War I. How Many Miles to Babylon? will make its DVD debut in our new Daniel Day-Lewis Triple Feature DVD. The two-disc DVD also includes The Insurance Man, which follows author Franz Kafka on his day job, and J. B. Priestley’s first play, Dangerous Corner, in which a cascade of dark secrets are exposed following a county house guest’s casual remark. We are also releasing My Brother Jonathan, a 1985 miniseries based on the Francis Brett Young’s novel. Day-Lewis plays the title role in a bittersweet tale of two brothers, told by the one who always overshadowed the other.

All of these works were made by the BBC before the actor turned 30, and before he won his first Oscar for My Left Foot in 1989. Both DVDs will be available March 19th and may be preordered now.

Parade’s End – Now and Then

Parade’s End

Photo credit: © BBC 1964

Last summer we wrote to give you a heads-up about the new 5-part miniseries of Parade’s End. Benedict Cumberbatch (Sherlock), Rebecca Hall (Frost/Nixon), Adelaide Clemens (The Great Gatsby, 2013) and Roger Allam (Endeavour) star in this portrait of English society in the years up to during World War I.

Tom Stoppard (Anna Karenina, 2012) has made brilliant narrative sense of the four novels by Ford Madox Ford. The novelist hailed from London’s Bloomsbury group and practiced a stream-of-consciousness approach that valued psychological insight more than getting on with the story. But the insights are well worth the 900-page (or five-hour) journey.

Now the Parade’s End premiere is nearly at hand. HBO will air the series from Tuesday through Thursday next week. Parts 1 and 2 will premiere at 9pm ET on February 26, with Parts 3 and 4 following in the same time slot on February 27 and Part 5 on February 28. DVD and Blu-ray release dates have not been announced.

Looking back into the BBC Archive, we found a 1964 adaptation of Parade’s End in which Judi Dench plays suffragette/pacifist Valentine Wannop opposite Ronald Hines (Middlemarch) as Tietjens. We haven’t been able to screen this 3-part version yet, but we are convinced that Valentine was a role Judi Dench was born to play. Pictured here is an unforgettable scene that revolves around a telephone call Valentine receives on Armistice Day. Parade’s End (1964) will be available April 16th on DVD and may be pre-ordered now.

To those who are missing Dan Stevens: Besides revisiting happier moments in past seasons of Downton Abbey, may we recommend the BBC’s 2008 version of Sense & Sensibility? Stevens imbues the too-good-to-be-true vicar Edward Ferrars with a trustworthiness that Hugh Grant couldn’t quite deliver in the movie version.

To those who are missing Richard Briers even more: We are saddened to learn of the death at age 79 of this legendary Britcom actor last Sunday, February 17th. Most famous as the exasperating but lovable Tom Good in Good Neighbors, he went on to appear in many of Kenneth Branagh’s films, including a fine turn as Polonius in Hamlet. Monarch of the Glen fans will remember Briers as Hector MacDonald. He left that series after three seasons to take it easier, but remained a willing guest star in television series ranging from Kingdom and Marple to New Tricks, even Torchwood. One particularly memorable guest performance was as Sir Clixby Bream in Inspector Morse: “Death Is Now My Neighbour.” We will miss him.

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.

Top Gear and Bond 50

Top Gear Bond 50

Ellis O’Brien © BBC Worldwide 2012

Regular viewers of Top Gear would have seen the 50 Years of Bond Cars special this week, but if you’re a more casual follower of Top Gear than of the James Bond franchise, then you may have missed it. Not to worry, BBC Canada will re-run the special Saturday, November 17, at 9pm ET, and BBC America will re-run it this Monday, November 19, at 7pm ET/PT. With a generous allotment of footage from past films and Skyfall, Richard Hammond presents his favorite Bond cars and interviews Daniel Craig and Roger Moore about their favorites. Both are surprising choices. Goldfinger director Guy Hamilton and a former Stig who trains Bond stunt drivers add their insights as well. But it wouldn’t be Top Gear without those don’t-try-this-at-home stunts. One is a marginally successful attempt to bring an invisible car into the real world, and the other puts the Lotus Excel to the submarine test.  We’re pursuing a bit more of the star interview footage for the DVD, planned for March 2013.

Benedict Cumberbatch in Parade’s End

parades end

As the premiere of NBC’s Elementary has left Sherlock fans longing to see more of Benedict Cumberbatch, we are proud to report that more Sherlock is expected next year. In the mean time, British fans have been treated to Cumberbatch’s star turn in the five-part miniseries Parade’s End, and we can look forward this sumptuous mini-series on HBO. Novelist Ford Madox Ford (whose The Good Soldier was adapted some years ago with Jeremy Brett) presents us with a young man who marries a spectacularly unsuitable wife (Rebecca Hall), and thereafter struggles to do the right thing despite unhappiness, scandal, true love and eventually World War I. The production has all the necessary elements to the period – the gorgeous country houses, antique cars carrying us through sweeping landscapes, and most notably, heart-breakingly lovely frocks.

Viewer Alert: Upstairs Downstairs: Season Two, which pitches the residents of 165 Eaton Place into the emotional turmoil of the months before World War II, premieres on Masterpiece this Sunday, October 7th, and is available for pre-order now.

Don’t miss Chummy! This Sunday’s episode of Call the Midwife marks the arrival of Miranda Hart (Miranda) as Chummy, who brings a most infectious optimism to the proceedings.

Foyle’s War returns next summer!

Foyle's War

A press release received today from Masterpiece Mystery! confirmed that more Foyle’s War is truly in the works. Three new films starring Michael Kitchen and Honeysuckle Weeks are set to premiere next summer. Now a Senior Intelligence Officer, Christopher Foyle has moved from the sidelines of World War II into the dawn of the Cold War in 1946-47. Sam has married the local Member of Parliament, and her entry into local political circles may put her in a position to serve in a new capacity. The new season DVD is expected to follow soon after the airing on PBS.

Wallander premieres Sunday night

Wallander

Masterpiece Mystery launches its season finale with Wallander this Sunday, September 9th, at 9pm ET. This follow-up to Kenneth Branagh’s Emmy-winning season packs quite a punch, especially “The Dogs of Riga,” which plays more like a spy thriller than a police drama.

Romola Garai Fan Alert: Subscribers to Encore will have an opportunity to see The Crimson Petal and the White over Monday and Tuesday nights, September 10th – 11th, from 8-10pm ET. In this sumptuous thriller from the mean streets of Victorian London, Romola Garai (Emma) stars as Sugar, a notorious prostitute who longs for a better life. Look out for Gillian Anderson (Bleak House, The X-Files) as the monstrous madam Mrs. Castaway, and Chris O’Dowd (Bridesmaids) as a feckless heir to a perfume business and husband to a wife who is slipping into insanity. The DVD comes out Tuesday, September 11th.

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.

Daniel Craig simmers in The Ice House

The Ice House

Nearly fifteen years ago The Ice House aired on Mystery! and introduced us to a young actor named Daniel Craig. He was not yet a star, but his intensity as McLoughlin, a police detective dealing with the pressures of a difficult case, marked him as one to watch.

When a body is discovered in the ice house at Streech Grange, McLoughlin’s more experienced partner Inspector Walsh (Corin Redgrave, The Forsyte Saga) is already convinced he knows the victim and the killers. The corpse must be David Maybury, who went missing ten years before. David had been unhappily married to Phoebe (Penny Downie, Hamlet [2009]), who still lives on the estate with two women (Kitty Aldridge, House of Cards Trilogy and Frances Barber, Doctor Who [S6]).  The local villagers share the notion that the three women are murderers, Lesbians and perhaps even witches. Equally hostile to outsiders, the women of Streech Grange are none too helpful to the police with their inquiries. But something special happens in the scenes between Daniel Craig and Kitty Aldridge that sets The Ice House apart even after all the complexities of the mystery are settled.

Doctor Who fan alert: Series Seven premieres tomorrow, September 1st, on BBC America and on Space in Canada at 9pm ET.