Showing posts with label leo woodall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leo woodall. Show all posts

Monday, 17 March 2025

Screen: March TV Roundup

Watching TV episodes in my downtime helps me clear my mind, and there has been a wide range available over the past few months. For obvious reasons, I prefer the light-hearted stuff, a bit of escapism. But diving into something serious is even more satisfying. Starting here with the new shows...

The Residence
Nodding immediately to Agatha Christie, Sherlock Holmes and Benoit Blanc, this snappy whodunit is gloriously anchored by Uzo Aduba as Cordelia Cupp, aka the greatest detective in the world. And it has a killer premise, spiralling around a murder in the White House on the night of an Australian state dinner (complete with Kylie!). The terrific cast includes Giancarlo Esposito, Susan Kelechi Watson, Randall Park, Bronson Pinchot and Ken Marino. The show's tone might be a bit glib for its own good, which leaves everything feeling somewhat pointless and silly. But it's so much fun that we end up hoping that Cordelia will be back for an all-new mystery very soon indeed. (Netflix) 

Paradise
The first episode of this thriller series is beautifully constructed, presenting the show's premise right at the very end with a twist that confirms our queasiest suspicions. From here the tension builds steadily, growing increasingly suspenseful until the climactic showdown in episode 8. Sterling K Brown is superb as the thoughtful, tough-minded hero, squaring off against the formidable control freak played by Julianne Nicholson. Plus a wonderfully steely and charismatic turn by James Marsden as the US president. Surrounding characters also have plenty of spark and energy, even if the plot can't help but dip into cliches along the way. And the ending is great. Bring on season 2. (Disney)

Prime Target
A veneer of intelligence lifts this thriller above the fray, and it helps that the cast is so good. Leo Woodall is a terrific lead, diving into his role as Cambridge maths nerd Edward, who can't quite understand why his research is threatening the entire world order. Neither can we, for that matter. But never mind! It's fun to watch these people run around trying to discover a new mathematical system while various vicious shadowy baddies try to stop them. Standouts in the cast include plucky young spy Quintessa Swindell, dodgy boss Martha Plimpton, tenacious scholar Sidse Babett Knudsen and floundering mentor David Morrissey. Plus ace veterans Stephen Rea and Joseph Mydell. (Apple)

Dexter: Original Sin
Produced in the style of the classic series, this prequel traces the young Dexter (Patrick Gibson) as he plots his way through his new life as a vigilante killer and police forensics officer. It's all rather bound to the original show's mythology, often straining to pay unnecessary homage to it, especially in younger versions of larger-than-life characters and the setting up several already iconic moments. It's still gripping enough to paper over the many plot and logistical holes. Excellent actors include Christian Slater as Dexter's dad Harry and Molly Brown as his hothead sister Debra. So having Sarah Michelle Geller and Patrick Dempsey on hand feels like a bonus. (Showtime)

The Madness
Colman Domingo offers a towering performance in this limited series about a news-network pundit who is thrown into a convoluted mess when he witnesses a grisly murder and then is framed for it. The central idea here is disinformation, as shady powers behind the scenes are manipulating the media, public attitudes and elections. And while there are some strong points here about the imbalance of influence billionaires can have, this is little more than the plot's MacGuffin. Domingo is the reason to watch this, along with terrific supporting roles for Marsha Stephanie Blake, Gabrielle Graham and Thaddeus Mixson, plus the superb John Ortiz and Alison Wright. (Netflix)

Black Doves
With its snappy plotting, messy characters and slick production values, this British spy series is a lot of fun as it follows sleeper agent Helen (Keira Knightley) while she tries to unpick the knotted truth about the death of her lover (Andrew Koji). Her cohort is the always fantastic Ben Whishaw, who adds all kinds of witty detail to his fixer character, while Sarah Lancaster provides her own unnerving steeliness as Helen's puppet-master handler. This is also a slickly made thriller, with pulse-racing action, humour and a glorious use of London locations. So even if the plot feels rather familiar, the show is hugely watchable, keeping us hooked through each Killing Eve-style twist and turn. (Netflix)

T H E   S T O R Y   C O N T I N U E S

Squid Game: series 2
The way the writers get back into this story is ingenious, although how they choose to end this seven-episode run feels like a cheat. Rather than set up a cliffhanger, they simply cut away in the middle of a scene, leaving us hanging until the concluding third season this summer. But they've got us hooked. This show is a riveting thriller that isn't afraid to get seriously nasty. Lee Jung-jae is a superior lead actor, sympathetic and often startlingly unpredictable, while both Wi Ha-joon's cop and Lee Byun-hun's puppetmaster get a chance to deepen their roles intriguingly. Best of all, it's impossible to predict where things might go next, as this game-to-the-death keeps throwing brutal twists into the mix. (Netflix)

Shrinking: series 2
Even sharper than the first season, this comedy rockets forward with much more complex plotting and characters who are layered and thoroughly engaging. Everyone in the cast is first-rate, with particularly strong storylines for leads Jason Segel, Harrison Ford and Jessica Williams, each of whom gets the chance to add depth to their therapist character, both in sessions with clients and in their often absurdly ridiculous personal lives. This allows the show to blend nutty humour with some earned emotions, and it also brings to life some strong supporting characters, most strikingly the one played by show creator Brett Goldstein. (Apple)

A N D   S O   I T   E N D S

What We Do in the Shadows: series 6
After the writers strangely copped out in last season's ending, this nutty comedy hits the ground running as these Staten Island vampires face a range of crises with their usual overconfident ineptness. The superb Kayvan Novak is at the centre this time as he struggles with his identity as an alpha-vampire, while Natasia Demetriou, Matt Berry and Mark Proksch shamelessly steal scenes as his constantly disruptive and outrageously dim-witted makeshift family. Enjoyably, Harvey Guillem's Guillermo is even more quietly in control this season. This is the kind of show that could run forever, so it's notable that they opted to go out on a high. (FX)

The Sticky
The great Margo Martindale stars in this series about maple syrup farmers in Canada who go to war over their sticky product, leading to an elaborate heist that plays out like something from a Coen brothers movie, mixing jagged humour with vicious violence and general unpredictability (enter Jamie Lee Curtis!). Based on a true story, it's packed with colourful characters who are wonderfully untrustworthy, so the whole show feels like it will explode into chaos at any moment. It often does, simply because these people think with their emotions. And as a story of little people taking on a big, bad conglomerate, it's easy to know who to root for. (Prime)

C A T C H I N G   U P

Industry: series 1-3
With a fresh, unblinking approach, this British series came highly recommended, and I have enjoyed catching up on the episodes. While the writing is far too dense, and often downright smug, the cast adds nuance to the characters, bringing them to life amid the messy goings on in a London financial office, plus a blinding flurry of drugs and sex out of hours. Most intriguing is that no one is remotely likeable, but they manage to be sympathetic even if pretty much everyone tips way, way over the top along the way. Notably strong work from Marisa Abela, Ken Leung, Harry Lawtey, Myha'la and David Jonsson, with great guest turns by Kit Haringon and Jay Duplass. (BBC)

Alpha Males:
series 1-3
I'd never watched this Spanish series, but a new season coaxed me to start from scratch. And the half-hour episodes zip along amiably. Each character is somewhat cartoonish, but this allows the writers to explore gender issues without taking things too seriously. They also offer some surprising nuance, puncturing political correctness as everyone becomes increasingly confused about how they are meant to treat each other. Both the male and female leading characters are likeable, funny and so deeply flawed that they're almost frighteningly easy to identify with. The rapid-fire dialog is hilarious, and the plotting is gleefully bonkers. (Netflix)

Fake Profile:
series 1-2
The first season of this Colombian thriller is compulsive viewing, a properly sexy guilty pleasure about a Las Vegas dancer (Carolina Miranda) who falls for a too-perfect businessman (Rodolfo Salas). Then when she pays a surprise visit to see him in Cartagena, all kinds of truths are revealed, leading to a twisty mess of nutty plotting, terrific characters and an outrageous climax. The second season, subtitled Killer Match, is very different as it settles into a serial killer thriller that's utterly preposterous. Characters lose all sense of coherence, and a feeling of both misogyny and homophobia creep in (women are tied up, gays are murdered). It's juicy but not much fun. (Netflix)

I GIVE UP: Severance 2
I am sure this show is a work of genius, but my patience simply ran out with its indulgently knotted plotting, out-of-sequence storytelling and generally mopey pace. The actors are so good that I really tried to keep watching, but the way this is put together makes it impossible to care about anything that happens. We can only admire it. Getting through the first season was a chore, and I only managed three episodes of the second. (Apple)

GUILTY PLEASURES: The Traitors (UK/US), Britain's Got Talent, Fool Us, Drag Race (17/Down Under), Dancing on Ice.

NOW WATCHING: The White Lotus 3, Adolescence, The Studio, Your Friends & Neighbours, Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light

COMING SOON: Mid-Century Modern, MobLand, Andor 2, The Last of Us 2, The Handmaid's Tale 6, The Conners 7.

Previous roundup: DECEMBER 2024 > 

Friday, 7 February 2025

Critical Week: Campfire stories

It's the week after the London Critics' Circle Film Awards, so much of my time has been spent wrapping up details and sifting through the photos (I published my annual album on Instagram - in four parts). There were only a few film screenings, and with the cold, wet weather I was happy to stay indoors. The big movie was Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy, the goofy but enjoyable fourth chapter in the saga of the London singleton so endearingly played by Renee Zellweger, this time alongside romantic foils Chiwetel Ejiofor (above) and Leo Woodall. Plus fabulous scene-stealers like Hugh Grant and Emma Thompson. 

BEST OUT THIS WEEK:
The Seed of the Sacred Fig
September 5
ALL REVIEWS >
Ke Huy Quan is a terrific lead in action comedy Love Hurts, adeptly underplaying the drama while adding wit to the action sequences. The movie is silly, but watchable. Ryan Destiny is fiercely engaging in the boxing biopic The Fire Inside, which is sharper than expected thanks to director Rachel Morrison and writer Barry Jenkins, plus the terrific Brian Tyree Henry in a nuanced variation on the coach role. And Francois Ozon is back with the very French drama When Autumn Comes, which twists and turns through its gently offbeat story, layering personal drama with insinuating intrigue. I also attended the press night for the inventive political play Antigone [on strike] at the Park Theatre.

This coming week, the Avengers are back for Captain America: Brave New World, and I'll also be watching coming-of-age romcom Bonus Track, New York romance Barrio Boy, French drama Holy Cow, Palestinian refugee drama To a Land Unknown and the stage play Miss Brexit at the Omnibus in Clapham.


Thursday, 1 August 2024

Screen: August TV Roundup

This is TV awards season, so I've had more series than usual to keep up with, trying to make a fair assessment on my ballot for the Dorian Awards (Golden Globes TV voting will be in November). But it's a lot, especially as so many shows have unnecessarily long episodes. But there have been some very good shows lately - I'll start with my favourites of the last couple of months...

The Bear: series 3
Bold and riveting, this intense drama continues to be classified as a comedy, perhaps due to its snappy characters. These are often outrageously messy people who struggle to communicate as they work together to run a fine-dining restaurant in Chicago. Jeremy Allen White, Ayo Edebiri and Ebon Moss-Bacharach are as bracing as always, surrounded by an ace ensemble. It's a rare show that continually catches us off guard with surprising details. Episode 6, directed by Edebiri and starring Liza Colon-Zayas, might be one of my favourite half-hours of TV ever. (Hulu)

One Day
Leo Woodall and Ambika Mod are excellent in this complex adaptation of the beloved novel, with each episode set on the same day in the following year. Their characters Dexter and Emma are an oddball couple, but they have a strong connection that creates a vivid friendship. The highs are light and funny, and the lows are powerfully emotional, sometimes downright devastating. Yes, there are quite a few tear-inducing moments, largely because the writing, acting and direction are so astute. It's a properly involving show with strong underlying resonance. (Netflix)


Shōgun
Lavishly produced on an epic scale, this is a beautiful adaptation of James Clavell's novel about an Englishman in 1600 Japan. The storytelling may sometimes feel dense, but it is packed with riveting details about the inner workings of the culture. Cosmo Jarvis is excellent in the focal role, holding his own opposite magnetic stars like Hiroyuki Sanada, Tadanobu Asano and Anna Sawai. The quality of the sets, costumes and historical detail is astounding, and the story is utterly riveting as it builds to a series of astonishingly grotesque battle sequences. This is exceptional television. (Hulu)

The Sympathizer
With director Park Chan-wook's visual flair, this story has both a large scale of geography and history and quirk-filled characters who are massively entertaining to watch. Hoa Xuande is terrific in the lead role as the Captain, a communist spy during the Vietnam War who is hiding as a refugee in California. His reality is incredibly nuanced, from his on-off girlfriend Sofia (a fantastic Sandra Oh) to the various Americans (all played by a scene-stealing Robert Downey Jr) wh keep an eye on him. When he ends up on a film set shooting a Vietnam War movie, the film's expert meta-storytelling really soars. (Max) 

Sugar
With sleek and stylish direction from Fernando Meirelles, this centres around a strikingly cinematic performance from Colin Farrell in the title role as a private eye looking for a missing heiress. The snaky and splintered storytelling weaves in classic movies that flicker through Sugar's mind. So while the case itself is the usual twisty, nasty messiness, there are surprising character layers. And several set-pieces are thrillingly well staged and played, even if it's sometimes over-heightened. First-rate support from Amy Ryan, Nate Corddry, Alex Hernandez and others. Earns extra points for short episodes. (Apple) 

C R O W D  -  P L E A S E R S

The Boys: series 4
Continuing the outrageousness, this show doubles down on its razor-sharp political satire, as the vicious patriots leave a trail of destruction behind them but have never been more beloved by the public, whom they manipulate with the media. Meanwhile, the scrappy "boys" trying to take them down struggle to stay together while facing mind-boggling setbacks. Stakes get steadily higher as the action unfolds, adding strong subtext to lively characters played by Karl Urban, Jack Quaid, Erin Moriarty and especially Anthony Starr, even more unapologetic this season as the absolutely vile Homelander. (Prime)

The Acolyte
Breaking free from the main Star Wars narrative, this prequel is set a century before The Phantom Menace, a fascinating female-based story from the Jedi heyday. It's an intriguing premise, but characters are written so specifically that there's little room for actors to add personal tweaks, so it feels a bit concocted. It's entertaining thanks to lead actors Amandla Stenberg and Lee Jung-jae, while Dafne Keen and especially Manny Jacinto stand out in complex roles. But the structure feels indulgent, especially with extended repetitive flashbacks that overstate plot points and mythology. (Disney)

Fallout
Based on a videogame, this action fantasy is packed with outrageous effects and nutty details. Set in an alternate reality two centuries after nukes destroyed a wacky 1960s-style America, the show follows three figures across a desert that used to be Los Angeles: a plucky but naive young woman (Ella Purnell) who grew up in an underground bunker, a nervous young soldier (Aaron Moten) who works for a warmonger and a vicious 200-year-old mutant cowboy (Walton Goggins) with shadowy motivations. There's enough going on here to keep pretty much everyone entertained. (Prime)

Interview With the Vampire: series 1-2
Gothic and almost painfully theatrical, this show is both overwrought and camp, merrily indulging in ghastly violence while shying away from the sexuality that oozes through the characters. This is the epic tale of three vampires, starting in early 20th century New Orleans as the snaky Lestat (Sam Reid) creates companion Louis (Jacob Anderson) and then teen Claudia (Bailey Bass/Delainey Hayles). And it shifts up a gear in the second season set in 1950s Paris. The push and pull between these three makes this compelling viewing, even with so much absurd melodrama. (AMC)

My Lady Jane
Playfully revising history, this fizzy comedy tells the story of Jane Grey, Britain's queen for only nine days before Bloody Mary deposed (and beheaded) her. In this fantasy version, conflicts emerge due do opposing opinions about people who can transform into animals. King Edward (Jordan Peters) seemingly dies, Jane (Emily Bader) is crowned, and Mary (Kate O'Flynn) plots against her with her advisor/sex slave Seymour (Dominic Cooper). Anna Chancellor steals the show as Jane's manipulative mother, and the romantic plotlines are engaging. But it's very silly, and is set up for more. (Prime)

That 90s Show: series 2a
As goofy and genuinely hilarious as ever, this next-generation show continues to maintain its high energy levels even as it observes a group of teens just sitting around and coming up with ways they can get into trouble. And grandparents Kitty and Red (Debra Jo Rupp and Kurtwood Smith) are still moaning about their own issues. But all of this is very funny indeed, refreshingly willing to take on some edgier ideas about sex and drugs without needing to get deliberately rude. It's a thoroughly enjoyable mix of witty dialog and rousing nostalgia. (Netflix) 

Single, Out: series 2
From Australia, this snappy show continues the escapades of Adam (Will Hutchins) as he navigates his new life as an out gay man in Melbourne, including his relationships with boyfriend Gabe (Jake Hyde) and various friends and family members. Adam is a likeable guy whose highs and lows are easy to identify with. And everyone around him is hilariously ridiculous, with their own antics at work and a variety of inter-connections. The show's still loose and breezy, but it's also a lot sexier this season, playing energetically with the lustiness these young people are learning to express. (Cinephobia)

S T A R   P O W E R

The Curse
This story about a couple (Emma Stone and Nathan Fielder) trying to change their community for the better is squirm-inducing, because it challenges viewers about what's correct. Transgressions come in all sizes, from throwaway comments to deliberate deception, as this duo creates eco-homes and jobs for the unemployed while making a reality show with a producer (Benny Safdie) whose morals are rather slippery. The many observations are fascinating, although the episodes are too long, which makes them feel indulgent. Still, the sheer originality and daring make this worth a look. (Showtime)

The Regime
This is a camp, bonkers satire about political manoeuvring in a fictional middle-European nation. Kate Winslet is fabulous as the self-centred leader, with ace support from Mathias Schoenaerts and Andrea Riseborough (plus a fabulous Hugh Grant). At its core, this is a pointed depiction of how people who think they're smart can be so easily manipulated. It's rather absurd that Winslet's Elena maintains power when literally everyone is against her. But the coup episodes are genuinely heart-stopping. And the show says clever things about political wrangling and the reach of history. (Max)

Expats
Thoughtful and intriguing, this swirling series spins between three intertwined foreigners in Hong Kong after a young child goes missing. Nicole Kidman leads a fine cast, bringing understated steeliness to the frazzled mother, although like all of the characters she becomes difficult to sympathise with. Only a few people on-screen are remotely kind. It's impressive that the writers properly go for it, revealing dark insecurities and entitlement of wealthy migrants as well as the vulnerabilities of less well-off people caught in their orbits. But the show feels drawn-out and somewhat indulgent. (Prime)

Fantasmas
Julio Torres' boundless imagination is on full display in this fanciful show in which he plays a goofy variation on himself in fantastical settings that are packed with wildly inventive supporting characters. A steady stream of great cameos includes producer Emma Stone, Tilda Swinton, Bowen Yang, Paul Dano, Steve Buscemi and Dylan O'Brien. The way Torres tells stories is endearing, funny and constantly surprising. So while the central plot about a missing earring is a bit absurd, the hand-made approach to sumptuous visual effects makes this well worth watching. (Max)

GUILTY PLEASURES: Drag Race All Stars (9), The Boyfriend, Don't Hate the Player.

NOW WATCHING: Time Bandits, Lady in the Lake, Decameron, Snowpiercer (4), Sausage Party: Foodtopia.

COMING SOON: Only Murders in the Building (4), Heartstopper (3), The Umbrella Academy (4), Kaos, Agatha All Along.

Previous roundup: JUNE 2024 >