Direct Beam Comms #146

TV

Rel

The first new network show of the fall season Rel premiered last Sunday on FOX, with regular episodes scheduled to premiere Sunday, September 30. Last season that network did much the same thing with The Orville, premiering the first episode to coincide with the start of the NFL. But, whereas The Orville had an interesting first episode, Rel did not.

I really dug The Carmichael Show on NBC which was co-created by Jerrod Carmichael and co-starred Lil Rel Howery — and Carmichael is co-producing Rel which was created by Howery. But whereas The Carmichael Show was a series with bite, Rel is a relatively toothless.

I giggled a few times during this first episode about Rel, a nurse who’s wife’s left him and taken the kids to Cleveland after she slept with Rel’s barber, but overall the first episode felt like a standard sitcom with lots of jokes that come out of all the obvious places. I’ll give Rel one more try when the series returns in a few weeks since you never can be sure if the first episode is any indication as to where the show’s going to go from here, but otherwise I’ll probably be done with this one by the end of the month.

The Deuce

The Deuce
The Deuce

The second season of the David Simon/George Pelecanos series The Deuce premiered on HBO last Sunday and makes a jump in time five years in time from the first. Mostly gone are the grimy streets of New York City 1972 which have been replaced with nicer ones circa 1977. The grime might not be visible, but it’s still there hidden behind closed doors. Prostitutes and drug dealers still abound, but now they ply their trade more quietly and not in the open.

It’s a good time for people like ex-prostitute turned porn star/producer Eileen (Maggie Gyllenhaal) who’s off the streets and is now making money shooting dirty movies. Even people like Vincent (James Franco) who once made a living day-by-day tending bar now runs a successful establishment, even if behind doors the mob is really pulling the strings.

I thought the first season of The Deuce was interesting, if I lost interest in it towards the end. It might have been too dark and depressing for me, even if that’s how it really was in early 1970s New York. In the second season much of the darkness is gone, replaced with an interesting sort of late 1970s glamour.

The characters are still the same characters from the first season, they’re still prostitutes, pimps and drug dealers. But it’s like as long as they don’t look like prostitutes, pimps and drug dealers everything’s going to be okay, even as mayor elect Ed Koch and his decades long stint of cleaning up the streets looms on the horizon. 


American Horror Story: Apocalypse

American Horror Story: Apocalypse
American Horror Story: Apocalypse

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about horror movies that used to turn up on TV from time to time but really don’t anymore. I remember seeing things like Dawn of the Dead and The Evil Dead on basic cable abet edited for content, but still on cable. But these days those movies almost never turn up on TV. Sure, maybe they’ll run on some premium channel now and then or make some special appearance in October, but for the most part those movies have been absent from public view the last 20 years.

I think I know the reason why, it’s because newer versions of those movies have been made, and when there’s screen time to show a horror movie the channels always go for the remakes.

And that’s what the latest American Horror story series American Horror Story: Apocalypse feels like to me, a remake.

Nuclear war and WWIII was a big subject of movies and TV shows in the 1970s and 1980s. There were things like the made-for-TV movie World War III, The Day After, and Threads that approached the subject matter with a bit of gravitas and there were also movies like Hell Comes to Frogtown, Radioactive Dreams and, while not directly about nuclear war, Night of the Comet that approached it in a more silly and fantastical manner.

But in the 1990s, 2000s and much of the 2010s fiction about nuclear war was passé and was mostly replaced with movies and TV series about zombies. However, as we enter a new age of fear of the “bomb,” comes American Horror Story: Apocalypse about just that.

Here, it’s seemingly a normal day in downtown L.A. when unexpectedly alerts begin going out and sirens wail of approaching nuclear doom. What follows is panic and chaos on the streets, but for a select few there are safe havens that exist, safe havens that come with a price.

Other than the costumes, the first episode of American Horror Story: Apocalypse felt like bits of Miracle Mile, The Day the World Ended mixed with the colors and styling of a 1960s Hammer Films production. Which makes me wonder, while I thought the first episode of American Horror Story: Apocalypse was interesting, if the episode is essentially one long “homage” of movies like these that have come before, why not just watch Miracle Mile, The Day the World Ended and virtually any of the Hammer Films from the 1960s instead?

Comics

Star Wars: The Classic Newspaper Comics, Vol. 3

Star Wars: The Classic Newspaper Comics, Vol. 3

A third and final volume of the collection of the Star Wars newspaper comic strips is released this week. This collection covers 1982 to 1984, with the entire run of strips having been published from 1979 to 1984.

The concluding volume that reprints for the first time the classic Star Wars newspaper strip in its complete format. The only edition to include each Sunday page title header and bonus panels in meticulously restored original color. Featuring nine key stories from Star Wars Legends written by Archie Goodwin and illustrated by Al Williamson.

Movies

Captive State movie trailer

What To Watch This Week

The Dark Crystal
The Dark Crystal

Sunday

The Bedford Incident_ The Bedford Incident from 1965 airs this week on Sony Movie Channel. Most of this flick just is okay, but it has one heck of a brilliant ending!

Monday

Mothra Insomniac theater — the Japanese giant monster classic Mothra airs very early Monday morning on TCM.

The Dark Crystal The Jim Henson and Frank Oz fantasy epic The Dark Crystal also airs on Sony Movie Channel this week. I remember being seriously creeped out by this one as a kid.

Tuesday

Sicario: Day of the Soldado Sicario: Day of the Soldado got hammered by the press last summer, though it did decent enough at the box office. It gets released on digital Tuesday.

The Reading & Watch List

Cool Movie & TV Posters of the Week

2018/2019 TV preview

It’s going to be a long fall. Usually, when the weather starts changing and the nights start getting longer I look forward to staying in and checking out the new series on TV. But this fall isn’t looking too good. Sure, there’s a few things to watch, but not enough for my taste and only a handful of series on network TV. The template the networks have taken for the 2018–2019 season is to debut a lot of lame-looking sitcoms and tired cop/hospital/lawyer procedural dramas that all seem to have been done before.

The good news is it isn’t all bad, there are quite a few new series on cable and streaming services to look forward to. The bad news is that most of these series don’t start airing until much later in the year and even then quite a few not until 2019. Oh well, there’s always horror movies marathons come Halloween to fill the gap.

New series

The Passage

On FOX the vampire thriller The Passage starring Mark-Paul Gosselaar is set to put a lot of stakes into the hearts of the undead ghouls in the one network show I want to check out in January. While the novel the series is based on took place mostly in a future overrun with the blood-suckers, this new TV show looks to moved things back a bit to the pre-apocalypse when these vampires were just being created in the lab.

Manifest on NBC about a plane that takes off one day but lands five years later with everyone on board not realizing the time-jump departs September 24. I think I’d be more looking forward to this show if it didn’t look like a clone of many other series before it, especially Lost.

Matt Weiner’s follow-up series to his uber-successful Mad Man entitled The Romanoffs is set to debut on Amazon Prime October 12. I’m not totally sure how this one’s going to go, but reportedly this anthology series will focus on characters who think they’re related to the Russian royal family the Romanoffs.

After the animated Star Wars: Rebels series on Disney ended earlier this year comes the new series Star Wars Resistance also on Disney October 13. This one is set to take place around the time of the current film series but before the events of Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

Nightflyers

SYFY is once again trying their hand at traditional sci-fi series with Nightflyers, based on the George R.R. Martin book of the same name. Not at all looking to cash in on Martin’s name and the fact that he wrote Game of Thrones and therefore SYFY can promote Nightflyers as such, here, it’s the near-future and as the ship of the same name explores the solar system it uncovers something that threatens everyone abroad the ship. Nightflyers does sound a bit derivative of things like Event Horizon (1997), except that the novel the series is based on was written way back in 1980.

The Netflix series Another Life has an astronaut (Katie Sackhoff) leading a mission to find the origins of an alien artifact, but this artifact might be deadly and the mission one-way. Maybe the cast of Another Life and Nightflyers can team-up since their two shows sure sound a lot alike.

The iconic comic book mini-series then film Watchmen will become an HBO TV series of the same name sometime next year. There’s not a whole lot that is known about this one, other than apparently it doesn’t totally follow the story of the comics but instead takes place in the same comic universe.

And as for new shows this season, that’s about it. I’m sure I’ll checkout some of those lame-looking sitcoms hoping to be surprised with something interesting, but I’m not holding my breath.

Returning series

Fortunately, there are a few returning shows this year to look forward to.

The Good Place

Returning network shows that will premiere this year include The Good Place, the sitcom about a group of people lead by Eleanor Shellstrop (Kristen Bell) stuck between heaven and hell returns to NBC on Thursday, September 27 and The Orville on FOX that is Seth MacFarlane’s love-letter to the classic series Star Trek squeaks into 2018 with its second season debut on Sunday, December 30.

Two Netflix superhero series return this year too. First up is the second season of Iron Fist which drops September 7. Then, sometime later in the year, comes a third season of Daredevil who appear last season on The Defenders. I honestly don’t really remember what happened in the second season of Daredevil since it aired more than a year and a half ago at this point. Weren’t there lots of ninjas?

Doctor Who

Doctor Who returns for its 11th season of the modern incarnation of the character October on BBC America here in the US. The big news with Doctor Who is that after 55 years and more than a dozen versions of the character, this time the lead will be played by a woman, Jodie Whittaker. Personally, I still like Peter Davison’s version of the character the best, no matter how many Matt Smith fans out there I have to go all “Sharks and Jets” with.

The Sundance series Deutschland 86 will return for its second season October 25. The first season was about an East German spy played by Jonas Nay infiltrating West Germany in order to steal military secrets and had tinges of The Americans to it. The third season looks to pick up three years from there and just a few years before the fall of the Berlin Wall.

The British sci-fi series Black Mirror will serve up more creepy goodness sometime this winter on Netflix. Even after four seasons I still really dig this show and I think it’s partially because even though there’s already been those four seasons, Black Mirror is an anthology series so each episode is a story unto itself. And to date there’s been just 20 episodes of it produced in total, which is less than how many episodes of a modern network series are produced in just one year, so the show is still fresh.

Star Trek: Discovery
Star Trek: Discovery

A second season of Star Trek: Discovery returns to CBS All Access this January. The first season of Discovery got good enough reviews from Trek fans, if those were the only people seemingly watching it, and the second season looks to bring in the big guns to the show, namely the USS Enterprise along with its Captain Kir… errr… I mean Captain Pike (Anson Mount).

The Netflix phenomenon Stranger Things will return for its third season summer of 2019. Last time we left the plucky kids of Hawkins, Indiana seemingly having beaten the evil forces that had emerged from the “upside down,” but if other sci-fi shows have taught me anything it’s that every victory against evil is just temporary. Until the final episode of the series, that is.

My favorite superhero series The Punisher also returns to Netflix sometime next year. The first season ended with Frank Castle (Jon Bernthal) having totally accepted the mantel of the skull wearing vigilante by blasting all the baddies to smithereens with the second season looking to pick up from there.

The Terror

A surprise to me this spring was just how much I dug the first season of the AMC series The Terror about an ill-fated expedition to the Arctic the 19th century. The second season will reportedly have a new story and focus on Japanese Americans during the second world war since the first season ended with pretty much the entire cast dead. That’s not a spoiler since the first season was based on a real-life expedition that ended in tragedy and I’m not sure you can consider a historical fact a “spoiler.”

A third season of the critical darling then critically derided True Detective will debut on HBO sometime next year four years after the second. The third season looks to “one-up” the first since that told a story over two time periods by telling a story over three.

Shows that I think will premiere sometime in 2019

Mindhunter

My favorite series of the 2017–2018 season , Mindhunter is set to begin its second season on Netflix next year. This show about the creation of a serial killer hunting unit within the FBI in the 1970s was one of the most well-written and acted shows on TV in recent memory. Plus the series is co-produced and had a few episodes directed by David Fincher which is always a good thing.

The sci-fi drama The Expanse will leave its home of three seasons on SYFY and move over to the Amazon Prime service next year. The third season ended on a high note, so I’m extremely excited to see where the show will go from here.

Another sci-fi drama, this time Westworld, is set to debut its third season on HBO. Now, I won’t even pretend to say that I understood what all happened in the second season finale of Westworld, I don’t think it was quite on the level of the final episode of Lost or anything, but I suppose time will tell.


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