Friday, 21st November, 2008 RSS Feeds
Add to Google Add to My Yahoo! (requires My Yahoo account). Add to My MSN (requires My MSN account). Add to My AOL (requires My AOL account).

Tue

4

Nov

Newly human: Meet our new Annie and Mitchell

Blogger: Geek Chic

Comment Bubble Comments (3) Printer Print Article
Image related to story, see caption or article text

Right, before we start, the Cliff Notes for anyone coming late to the party. Earlier this year, with very little fanfare Being Human, a one-hour pilot of a show comedy drama about an ghost, a vampire and a werewolf sharing a house, aired on BBC Three as part of a season of one-off shows.

For anyone who didn't get to see (and if you didn't you missed out - it's still one of my favourite hours of telly this year, and yes, that includes the corking season 3 of Heroes and several episodes of Lost that left me weeping and whimpering in equal measure) it was funny, heartwarming but not nauseating, and jam packed with the kind of cultural references Spaced would have been proud of. I loved it and wrote a blog saying so. A couple of people commented in agreement which made it apparent I wasn't the only person who thought so and on a whim I set up an an online petition demanding the Beeb commission a full series. I can honestly say no one was more surprised (or chuffed!) than I when, after almost 4,000 people signed the thing, the Beeb did so - although I don't think the two things are actually linked.

Six new episodes  are well on the way to being completed (it's pencilled in for a late January launch fact fans) and news about the show has been coming out a little at a time over the last few weeks - including a piece on sci-fi mag SFX's website where the show's producer said very nice things about the petition and the response on the 'net to the show - but I deliberately haven't posted anything till there was something tangible to talk about. And now there is. There have been some changes - and finally the full extent of what they are have been revealed.

Now don't look like that. First and foremost, Russell Tovey is back as George. Thank goodness. And while Guy Flanagan and Andrea Riseborough won't be reprising their roles as Mitchell and Annie (which is sad as they were both amazing in the pilot) the announcement today of who is going to be joining the cast has made me feel a little less worried about how they're going to replicate the amazing dynamic between the central trio which was so much at the heart of the first pilot, now, alas, consigned to the annals of history.

But now is the time to meet our new housemates:
Lenora Crichlow Aidan Turner

Annie is now being played by Lenora Crichlow. Best known as Sugar from Channel 4's critically acclaimed (and rather good actually, even if it is overshadowed by the ego of Julie Burchill) Sugar Rush, she's also had recurring roles in The Bill and Casualty, and appeared as Cheen in the Gridlock episode of new Who.

Meanwhile, Mitchell will be getting a bit of Irish charm, courtesy of Aidan Turner, 25. Primarily a theatre actor, his IMDB page is looking a little sparse so far, but he's completed two films this year according to IMDB and had an uncredited role in The Tudors so he's got about a bit. He also, if you're a bit fickle about such things, has smouldering good looks that should hopefully make fangirls bemoaning the loss of Mr Flanagan feel a little happier.

In a press release sent out today, Danny Cohen, Controller, BBC Three says, “Being Human has that rare and brilliant combination of humour and darkness which this talented cast will bring to life perfectly.  There was a palpable buzz about the pilot and a real appetite for more amongst our audience, so I’m incredibly excited to see how our characters and their stories develop over this series.”

Meanwhile Executive Producer Rob Pursey, says, “We were delighted with the audience reaction to the pilot of Being Human, and we’re relishing the opportunity to explore Mitchell the vampire, George the werewolf and Annie the ghost over a series of six episodes.  Our brilliant young cast bring real humanity to these other-worldly lead characters, as they try to 'be human' and fit in with our exciting and sometimes frightening world.” 

The way this news has been disseminated seems to have caused online rumblings of discontent and fears that the tweaked show will be a Hollyoaksified dilution, but I am (for now at least) going to stay the still small voice of positive, geeky, calm - especially now we've heard who the new cast are. Yes, I'm really sad that our original Mitchell and Annie won't be back - although my understanding is that it's as much that schedule-wise it just couldn't happen as these much vaunted comments about the showing being made younger and funkier. Of course the dynamic between these three characters is going to differ from the pilot, but Crichlow and Turner, pretty as they undoubtedly are, aren't talentless totty shoehorned in here. It's undoubtedly going to feel different to the first pilot, but different isn't necessarily bad.

Plus the return of Russell Tovey - arguably the show's heart as George, and now approximately 312 per cent more critically acclaimed since the pilot first aired, following turns in Doctor Who and Little Dorrit - and the fact that the series is still being written by Toby Whithouse (of Torchwood and new Who) whose sparkling script did so much to establish these characters in the first place means no-one should be weeping into their tea just yet.

Although if, as per Russell T Davies' suggestion in his book, Russell Tovey ends up becoming the new Doctor Who you may see me picketing a production office somewhere. Losing all three of the original cast would be a step too far...

Changing faces

Changes between a pilot and full series aren't always calamities. Here's the Geek Chic guide to pilot changes that turned out to be for the best:

* In the original Buffy pilot lovely technogeek Willow was played by Riff Regan. When Fox greenlit Joss Whedon's vision with a full season she was recast by Alyson Hannigan - and the rest is history.

* In arguably the most famous alteration ever, the original Star Trek pilot, The Cage, didn't even have Captain Kirk in it. Captain Pike (played by Jeffrey Hunter) ended up being replaced by some bloke called William Shatner after TV execs branded the show too intellectual and too slow and gave Gene Roddenberry the chance to look at the whole premise all over again and William Shatner the chance to speak slowly and with pauses in in. Compreh. Ensible. Places. Before flogging Crunchy Nut Cornflakes.

* In this year's US remake of Life on Mars (I know - the US' need to remake our successes is worthy of a blog post of its own) Colm Meaney played grizzled Gene Hunt in the initial pilot. However once the show was commissioned Hollywood heavyweight Harvey Keitel was brought in to take over the role. Here's hoping we have a chance to see him in action - although initial reports from across the pond aren't great about the reimagining of the reimagining of police life in Sam Tyler's mind so don't hold your breath...

Gemma

(Unregistered User)

Nov 4 08 16:13

Our Ref: 1149

Use the ref number if you need to report this comment

I suppose it maaay not be a bad thing, but I loved the original three so much! I think they're what made the show. I'll be so unbelievably gutted if they finally bring back being human only to ruin it :(

Report this comment

Scarlet

(Unregistered User)

Nov 5 08 11:44

Our Ref: 1157

Use the ref number if you need to report this comment

This is great news and I'm much less worried about the recasting than I was previously. Hurrah.

I shall now instead go on to worrying about the US remake of Life on Mars. Why? WHY?!

Report this comment

Steve

(Unregistered User)

Nov 19 08 11:08

Our Ref: 1364

Use the ref number if you need to report this comment

This is great news. the pilot was astonishingly good - so good in fact I have not been able to delete it from my V+box!!

Bring on the series! Russel Tovey is excellent in the role and really is the heart of the show.

Report this comment

comments Comments

Post a comment

Your Name: * Note this is a Required Field *

Your Email: * Note this is a Required Field *

Your Comment:


Characters Left:

Word verification:

Captcha Image, filename 0593952.jpg

For your convenience, you can now register with our website (which will save you from having to retype your name each time you post a comment). If you would like to do this (or have already!) then please Log in or Register

Fri

7

Mar

More Humanity

Blogger: Geek Chic

Comment Bubble Comments (0) Printer Print Article
Image related to story, see caption or article text

Blimey. As a geek I'm used to getting excited about the kind of random niche things that, when you try to explain them, involve long explanations, a fair amount of arm waving and usually end with a look of pity and a 'riiiiiiiiiight' from the other conversational participant.

Not so with Being Human.

My original post about this televisual gem ended up accounting for 4 per cent of all the traffic to this site last month after it was linked to and picked up from all over the web - which is pretty fab indeed bearing in mind the traffic this site gets is really not to be quibbled at.

Meanwhile, TV industry bible Broadcast Magazine ran a news in brief piece about the petition, which now is a sneeze away from getting 3,000 signatures.

3,000 signatures!

Wow.

What with that and the fact that the show was so popular on the BBC iPlayer that they extended the amount of time it was available - and at one point it was the most viewed thing on there barring Ashes to Ashes and Torchwood - all the signs are good. Right?

Well I thought I'd chase it up with the BBC Press Office to see if there was any news. It took a while, but a BBC Drama spokesperson was finally able to tell me that no decision had been taken yet, which is - of course - pretty much what we already knew. However she added: "We're delighted by how well the show has been received. A decision about a forthcoming series will be made in due course."

In comparison, Rob Pursey, Executive Producer of Touchpaper Television, Being Human's programme makers, sounded veritably cheery (and was eminently more easy to get hold of) when I chased him about what happens now.

Obviously he's waiting for a decision from the Beeb too and thus can't really add any information to that side of things. But he did say: 'It's wonderful that Being Human has taken on a life of its own through the petition and other online activities. And it's great that so many people were able to catch up with the show through the BBC iPlayer.'

So a decision 'in due course' eh? No idea how long that will be, but now is the time to cross your fingers. Alternatively, if you haven't signed it yet keep those digits firmly uncrossed and go and sign the petition.

It's been really nice to see people get behind this show - makes a change for something so ace to get some attention in amongst the dross hitting our screens at the minute (yes Rock Rivals, I'm looking at you). Here's hoping the news of it being picked up comes soon.

Oh, I was wrong about one thing. The vampire/werewolf fan fiction which I thought would herald a new series has in fact already started. So thanks to those of you who sent me links to it. I am awaiting both for the arrival of some mind bleach and quite possibly our IT department to come and frogmarch from the building for getting such things on email. I'll give you brownie points for being quick off the mark though...

comments Comments

Post a comment

Your Name: * Note this is a Required Field *

Your Email: * Note this is a Required Field *

Your Comment:


Characters Left:

Word verification:

Captcha Image, filename 0493956.jpg

For your convenience, you can now register with our website (which will save you from having to retype your name each time you post a comment). If you would like to do this (or have already!) then please Log in or Register

Thu

21

Feb

I'm happy Being Human!

Blogger: Geek Chic

Comment Bubble Comments (1) Printer Print Article
Image related to story, see caption or article text

We live in the digital TV age. But it's not as shiny and wonderous as it sounds.

Think less Jetson's futuristic wonder, more Lily Allen getting a series about her Myspace mates despite having less TV presenting charisma than Gordon the Gopher.

And Lenny Henry spinning entire series out of all those You Tube videos you were sent a year ago and weren't actually that funny even then. And - ok, I'm ranting now. But there is a small glimmer of hope.

It's a sad fact of life that most of the quality genre TV I watch nowadays is American. From Battlestar Galactica to Lost, my new favourite Chuck to Pushing Daisies, most of the stuff that rocks my world in the way of original TV is from the other side of the Pond. The only two UK shows which I'll make an effort to catch are Torchwood and Life on Mars - although I will admit to a slightly guilty love of Hotel Babylon. I *know* it's gilted garbage, but it amuses me and at least it doesn't pretend it's anything else - yes, Primeval I'm looking at you.

But yesterday I saw a TV show that has stuck in my mind (I know, for a whole 18 hours so far - I am testament to the average attention span of the digital age!) and which has got me more excited than anything new I've seen for ages. Of course one of the other joys of the digital TV age is the plethora of new channels (and their +1 brethren) that mean keeping track of what you're watching needs an Excel spreadsheet. So if you don't watch BBC Three, like (alas) a lot of the population then you have missed out this gem of a new show - Being Human.

I too missed out on it (my neck of the woods doesn't get digital yet, no matter how often I forlornly post my postcode into the Freeview website) but was badgered by a friend who thought I would love it repeatedly until I had two options (a) watch it to shut him up or (b) drive to his house and kill him to shut him up. Never before have I been so thrilled to have restrained my murderous urges. Although it does pain me to admit he was right.

Smooth Mitchell is a hospital porter. He is also a vampire. He has a dangerous sexy air and cheekbones sharp enough to slice garlic with and thus spends his time embarking on one night stands which inevitably end badly for the women he's sleeping with. Meanwhile his colleague, geeky werewolf George (Russell Tovey) has moved away from his friends and family rather than have them see him disappear into the woods once a month to come back naked and covered in the blood of animals he's spent the night goring. Both of them yearn for a normal life so when Mitchell decides he wants to go cold turkey from siring lady vamps for a bit to enjoy life as two 20 something blokes with a sofa, a fridge full of beer and pizza it's a match made in heaven. So far so faintly endearing odd couple.

But when they find their dream home is haunted by a depressed ghost (Andrea Riseborough who has the kind of eyes that make your heart ache at the sadness she's not sharing) they end up becoming, initially at least, an unwilling triumvirate of non-mortals trying to find their place in the world.

I'm not going to spoil what comes next but suffice to say it's 60 minutes of TV gold. A cracking, witty script, great acting - including Adrian Lester as head of the vampire cult angling to start a war elevating them back to their rightful status above mere mortals - and a soundtrack which sparkles. It's simply ace. And if you watched Spaced and felt like the pop culture references were describing your life then you'll love this, although quite possibly be frightened at the fact you're identifying with a werewolf.

It's still available on the BBC iPlayer for another six days, so go check it out. There are few things worth sitting at your monitor for an hour to watch but this is one of them.

But there's a problem. It's like being introduced to your dream date, heading out for a wonderful meal with lots of laughter and flirting, finding you have loads in common, and then at the end of the night when you're full of the possibilities of what to come they tell you they're moving tomorrow to Papua New Guinea. Forever. For Being Human remains - for now at least - a one off. The BBC are holding off on commissioning a new series. Never mind the row over TV phone voting or alleged news bias - the fact they haven't watched this first episode of this, seen how amazing it is and gone back to the programme makers to beg they immediately give them another six episodes makes me want to demand a refund on my TV licence.

So once you have watched, go sign the online petition lobbying BBC commissioning editors to give it a full series. If Lily gets air time and the (ok but not great) Phoo Action gets time to flourish then *surely* something of this calibre should get its chance? I should probably declare an interest - I actually set the petition up (yes, I like it *that* much, and that's with me being a cynical hack and all) but in the time I've taken writing this blog 15 people who aren't me have signed it so I'm obviously not alone. 15 people! Let's face it that's probably equivalent to the average audience of The Murder Mysteries and Quiz Shows of the 80s Channel + 1 or whatever right there.

So go. Watch. Sign. And in 18 months' time when TV critics across the land are saying they saw the brilliance of this before everyone else, when a full series is being shown on BBC Two and when fans (who will probably have labelled themselves Humanists) are writing erotic fiction to make your eyes bleed about vampire/werewolf fraternisation you will have that warm - and yes, faintly smug - glow that you were here at the beginning when something wonderful was formed.

I promise you it's the best thing you'll see on TV this week.

albion

Feb 22 08 18:01

Our Ref: 45

Use the ref number if you need to report this comment

You're absolutely right, it was a marvellous show and deserves to be made into a series. What bugs me is that the ludicrous, not-all-that-good guilty pleasure that was Phoo Action has already been picked up as a series. Why, when Being Human hasn't been? Why? WHY? (Apologies for the small rhetorical rant...)

Report this comment

comments Comments

Post a comment

Your Name: * Note this is a Required Field *

Your Email: * Note this is a Required Field *

Your Comment:


Characters Left:

Word verification:

Captcha Image, filename 0596832.jpg

For your convenience, you can now register with our website (which will save you from having to retype your name each time you post a comment). If you would like to do this (or have already!) then please Log in or Register

Thu

14

Feb

Ways to say I love you...

Blogger: Geek Chic

Comment Bubble Comments (0) Printer Print Article
Image related to story, see caption or article text

Valentine's Day is rubbish. Fact. While I love the idea of romantic gestures - even with my cynical exterior I'm a big sap underneath it all - the idea that there is one day of the year when you have to pay over the odds to go out and eat overpriced food sat elbow to elbow with dozens of other grumpy looking people doing the same leaves me cold. Cold.

I am pathologically against a day of the year that somehow to 99 per cent of the population seems to mean that you *don't* have to be thoughtful and occasionally romantic at any other point in the remaining 364 (or 365 this year!) days.

Valentine's Day? Pah.

Except someone has just drawn my attention to this.

What says 'I love you' better than a jar of Champagney Marmite?

I have tried to hunt down a jar or two (my supplies of Guinness Marmite, bought out for last St Patrick's Day are running dangerously low) but to no avail... yet.

Anyone know where you can get some?

comments Comments

Post a comment

Your Name: * Note this is a Required Field *

Your Email: * Note this is a Required Field *

Your Comment:


Characters Left:

Word verification:

Captcha Image, filename 0005063.jpg

For your convenience, you can now register with our website (which will save you from having to retype your name each time you post a comment). If you would like to do this (or have already!) then please Log in or Register

Observer Advertisement

Travel Deals

Most Read