Frannie 911

July 7th, 2009

The new nice Roger

Frannie 911” is the ninth episode of season three of American Dad!.

Plot summary

After Roger ruins Stan’s study by turning it into a Turkish bath, Francine comes up with an elaborate plan to reunite Stan and Roger after the big fight. She fakes Roger’s kidnapping in the hopes of showing Roger that Stan still cares about him, but Stan never shows up to pay the ransom; he simply delays and makes up excuses. After Stan tells Francine that he knew she was faking it the whole time (she was calling him with her own cell phone and it showed up on his caller ID), she confronts Roger in the hotel he is staying in, telling him that either he needs to be nice or he’s out of the house. For at least a year, Roger had been nice. However, it turns out that being nice is slowly killing him. On his deathbed, Roger reveals that his species has to be jerks, otherwise he’ll die. He insults Steve’s dancing, something Stan says they both needed, restoring himself to health. Though Francine returns to being an enabler, she lets Stan be who he is: “the guy who beats the crap out of Roger when he deserves it.” She locks Roger in the attic with Stan, leaving Roger to be beaten off-screen.

In a sub story, Hayley and Klaus constantly challenge each other to a “dare-or-dare” game. Klaus takes a picture of Francine’s undergarments and later fills his bowl with Jell-O. Hayley has to go naked, say raccoons took her penis and dress herself as Captain Merrill Stubing from The Love Boat for fourteen months.

In another story, Steve tries out background dancing. He eventually stops after Roger tells him how terrible his dancing is.

Escape from Pearl Bailey

July 7th, 2009

Steve and his friends plot their Escape

Escape from Pearl Bailey” is a fourth season episode of the animated series American Dad!.

Plot summary

Steve gets back together with his ex-girlfriend Debbie, making his friends jealous. Meanwhile, Lisa Silver is running for Student Council President, though she is clearly corrupt. Steve tries to persuade Debbie to run against her, which she accepts after learning that Lisa spent the school’s money for fetal pigs on hiring a Hollywood hairdresser and a live buffalo. Steve works extremely hard to get support, neglecting his friends. Though Debbie seems to be winning, someone posts a slam page and she loses. Steve determines that it was Lisa and her friends and executes an elaborate revenge scheme financed by pawning Toshi’s family katana.

Using a mask, Steve exacts his revenge on the cool girls in a parody of Navajo Joe. On Amy, he has a buffalo excrete on her, with laxative; Janet, having her leg filled with fat during a liposuction procedure; and last Lisa, giving her infections by giving her teddy bear to a prostitute and then letting her smother the bear in her sleep.

However, Debbie is horrified at his actions and dumps him. Steve later learns that his friends posted the smear page, as he was spending a lot of time with Debbie and they wanted him back. At this point, Lisa and all the cool kids learn that Steve was the culprit (having traced his purchase of the mask) try to beat up Steve and his friends (Principal Lewis permits this as Janet happens to be his own daughter).

As Steve and his friends try to escape from the school, Principal Lewis abuses his power and makes an announcement to the various cliques in the school to catch them, offering a $500 reward. They get past some of the cliques, but when they stumble into Goth territory, Debbie tells her friends to let Steve go, understanding why he did what he did. But her Goth friends were going to turn Steve’s friends to the popular people, so Steve decide to go with them but Debbie decides to let them all go. Debbie and the Goths distract the other cliques by playing “Love will tear us apart” by Joy Division and dancing in their way.

They make it outside, but the cool kids cut them off from Francine and they get cornered in the school bus. Knowing that their time is near, Steve tells his friends that they will take some of them down with them. They leap out of the bus to go out in a blaze of glory; as the screen freeze-frames, we hear Steve shouting “We’re not taking any of them with us!” alongside the sound of several punches landing at once.

Cultural references

  • Right after the popular girls call Debbie a fat cow, Tim Gunn appears to offer fashonable clothes to help.
  • The scene where the Goth kids allow Steve and his friends to escape (”You shall not pass!”) is a reference to Gandalf’s confrontation with the Balrog in Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring.
  • The Goth kids dance to “Love Will Tear Us Apart” by Joy Division.
  • Snot compares the smell of the stairway taken over by the Goths to a Depeche Mode concert.
  • One of the Goths mentioned buying a dagger on eBay.
  • When Debbie refers to a “thirty year old TV show”, the scene cuts to three nerds in the audience, wearing the costumes of the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth incarnations of the Doctor, as well as K-9. Technically, “thirty years” refers only to the approximate American broadcast history of Doctor Who – the series was first broadcast from 1963-1989, and was revived in 2005.
  • One of the PBHS cliques is the The Red-Headed League, an allusion to a Sherlock Holmes story about a phoney club made up exclusively of red-haired men.
  • Steve’s line “You want to get nuts, come on. Let’s get nuts!” is a reference to the 1989 film Batman.
  • The audience is shown Steve taking revenge on the girls in chapters à la Kill Bill, even going as far as Toshi giving Steve a Samurai sword for his “Holy Revenge”, instead Steve sells it.
  • In the scene where Steve plans to plot revenge against Lisa, he apparently pulls out some dynamite and tells his friends ‘This is my promotional lunchbox from that Cartoon Network show about that bundle of dynamite that lives with that talking burrito.’, he is most likely referencing the bomb scare in Boston caused by a failed promotion for the Aqua Teen Hunger Force movie.
  • The way the boys have to escape the school, by passing all the school gangs, is similar to the way the Warriors escape to their turf by passing all other gangs’ turfs in the film The Warriors, and also features the same song as in that film’s escape scenes. The principal’s announcements over the PA system reference the commentary provided by a radio DJ in the film. The escape sequence can also be seen as an allusion to the film Escape from New York, which is referenced in the episode title. It is also very similar to Cleavon Little’s character ‘Super Soul’ from the 1971 movie Vanishing Point.
  • The pawn shop where Steve pawns the samurai sword to get the cash to fund his revenge plot is the same shop from Pulp Fiction. In an ironic twist, it is the sword that causes the undoing of the nefarious shop keeper and his biker friend in the basement of the shop in the movie.
  • The mask worn by Steve when he takes his revenge is a reference to the film Navajo Joe.
  • Steve makes a reference to James Cameron’s Titanic, to which he admits after the phrase.
  • When Steve and his friends are escaping through the bleachers, it mirrors one of the final scenes in The Faculty.
  • The final scene in which Steve and his friends take on the school in a fight resembles the end of season 5 of the television show Angel. The final freeze-frame is a reference to Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.
  • Just before Steve comes to inform her of the success of his revenge plots, Debbie was standing in front of her locker and whistling Frederic Chopin’s Marche Funèbre (funeral march).

Trivia

  • As implied by Stan in this episode (”Nice of Steve to acknowledge us this week, even if it was just this once.”), the rest of the Smith family (save Steve) have no real part in this episode and only appear in the living room scene. Francine, however, appears twice (in the living room scene and near the end when she is in her SUV reading a romance novel called “Swept Away.”) Also, Roger, Hayley, and Klaus have no lines in this episode making Stan, Francine and Steve the only characters to appear and speak in this episode of American Dad!.
  • When Steve told his friends that they didn’t have girlfriends, Toshi mentions having a wife for a while. This is a reference to the second season episode, “Of Ice and Men”.
  • Debbie’s last name is revealed in this episode as Hyman.
  • Both this and the preceding Family Guy episode contained jokes involving a young woman with her leg deformed in a mishap and simulated intercourse with a teddy bear.


Tearjerker (American Dad!)

July 7th, 2009

Tearjerker” is a third season episode of the animated series American Dad!.

Plot summary

The show starts as a parody of The Spy Who Loved Me. A British agent with a mustache jumps out of a cable car, and the woman next to him tells the henchmen to follow him. The agent kills one of them and when he is about to shoot another, Stan comes to help him. Stan blows up the henchmen and unwittingly creates an avalanche. The two jump out and open their parachutes but unfortunately the unnamed agent dies when he is crushed by Stan’s falling snowmobile.

Stan imitates the gunbarrel sequence but the gun shoots him twice before he can fire, upon which the opening credits start to roll. Stan and other characters play roles in a Bond-style spoof. In it, Stan plays a 007-type agent assigned by his boss, B (Bullock) to infiltrate the set of arms dealer-suddenly-turned-movie producer Tchochkie Schmear (Klaus, in a human form) Schmear has recently been producing over twenty films with A-list celebrites, but all are absolutely atrocious. Stan then travels to Tunisia to investigate the set of one of Tchochkie’s movies, Bark of the Covenant (a remake of Raiders of the Lost Ark featuring all dogs, including a German shepherd as Indiana Jones and Matthew McConaughey as Karen Allen). Eventually, Stan discovers that Schmear has been hired by the diabolical Tearjerker (Roger), an emotionally fragile business tycoon who has been abducting celebrities from his spa and replacing them with celebrity robots that will star in the most horrible movies possible. The robots malfunction when they are exposed to milk. Later, B has Stan fly to Japan. Dressed as Geisha Girls, B informs Stan that Tearjerker is a notorious gambler who only invites people to his lair unless they are celebrites, or if they have beaten him at Baccarat. When he arrives at Monte Carlo, he is introduced to Sexpun T’Come (Francine)(whom he believes is a prostitute) and an apathetic Tearjerker. When Stan reveals that he does not know how to play Baccarat or Craps, an exasperated Tearjerker asks Stan to name his own game. Stan says he wants to play highest number, wherein the players name the highest number that they can think of. After Stan leaves with the invitation, Sexpun gives Tearjerker his wallet. He makes the obligatory quip about the hero’s fate, and then starts maniacally laughing, but cuts himself short when he belches. He states that he had eaten a pickle earlier with a Rueben sandwich, and then moans (self consciously) “I’m so fat.”

On the flight to Tearjerker’s lair, Stan meets Johnny Depp who is drinking a milkshake and reading a script that Steven Spielberg had given him. Stan makes Depp promise to tell him if he is turned into a robot. On their arrival, Tearjerker orders Sexpun to seduce Stan, only to begin randomly sobbing that she had forgotten his birthday. When she approaches Stan, he proposes to her, stating that he was saving himself for marriage, and if she accepted he stated “I’m gonna make love to you until you hate your pussy” Stan gives her a ring and tells her to think about it. After she leaves, Johnny Depp reappears, saying that he has given up the Spielberg script and had been attached to a Schmear project called Skateboarding Grandma. Suspicious, Stan offers Depp a milkshake. When he refuses, Stan physically forces open Depp’s jaws and regurgitates the milkshake down his throat. (”Drink it! Drink it like a bird!”) Depp, now revealed to be a robot, malfunctions. (but not before revealing that he had once seen a robin’s nest in Tim Burton’s hair)

After being helped by Sexpun, who has fallen for him, Stan realizes that Tearjerker (who is out for revenge ever since he was laughed out of the audition for Monster’s Ball) plans to use his masterpiece Oscar Gold, the best and saddest film of all time about a mentally retarded alcoholic Jewish boy and his cancer ridden puppy during the Holocaust, to cause millions of moviegoers to cry themselves to death.

After Gums’ boat tour of the plan leads Stan and Sexpun right into the villain’s office (an example of the poor construction), Tearjerker ties them up and forces them to watch “Oscar Gold” along with millions of people around the world. Everyone is on the verge of crying to death (with the exception of viewers in Tehran, who find it hysterically funny and will apparently laugh themselves to death), Sexpun states she accepts his proposal of marriage, and Stan remembers that the engagement ring was given to him by S (Steve, whose gadgets only make women’s breasts grow). He urges her to put it on, which causes Sexpun’s breasts to swell so large that they break the ropes, allowing her to set herself and Stan free. Discovering the real Adrien Brody and Halle Berry (along with Matt Damon and Lucy Liu) in Tearjerker’s dungeon, where he keeps the captive celebrities, Stan records a video of them with their baby and posts it on the Internet. All the movie goers then get phone calls about the celebrity baby and go home to see them online.

His plan in ruins, Tearjerker unleashes his soldiers to kill Stan. However, as they descend on ropes from his blimp, they plummet through the floor of Tearjerker’s office (another example of the poor construction); Stan then climbs up their ropes (which were supposed to retract, but instead are another example of poor construction) onto the airship. Tearjerker tries to flee in an escape pod, planning on creating a more successful and even sadder movie: six hours of a baby chimp trying to revive its dead mother. However, the shoddy construction causes the pod to fall into a volcano. In the end, Stan and Sexpun get married, though it is unknown how long their relationship will last since Sexpun realizes that Stan was, up until their honeymoon, a virgin. Meanwhile, Tearjerker’s charred arm rises from the volcanic crater…only to fall back in after a few seconds.

Cast

American Dad! character Role Bond spoof
Stan Smith Himself James Bond
Francine Smith Sexpun T’Come Bond girl (specifically, Pussy Galore, Tracy Bond, and Plenty O’Toole)
Roger Tearjerker Auric Goldfinger, Ernst Stavro Blofeld, Le Chiffre
Klaus Tchochkie Schmear Professor Dent, Milton Krest
Avery Bullock B M
Steve Smith S Q
Hayley Smith Miss Peacenickel Miss Moneypenny
Greg Corbin Peddie Mr. Wint
Terry Bates Mannie Mr. Kidd
Chuck White Professor
Capt. Monty Gums Jaws

Partners in Crime (Doctor Who)

July 7th, 2009

The Adipose, CGI aliens depicted using Massive, march through Central London towards Adipose Industries.

Partners in Crime” is the first episode of the fourth series of British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was broadcast on BBC One on 5 April 2008. The episode reintroduced comedienne Catherine Tate as Donna Noble, who previously appeared in “The Runaway Bride”. Donna and the Doctor (David Tennant) meet while separately investigating Adipose Industries, a company that has created a revolutionary diet pill. Together, they attempt to stop the death of thousands of people in London after the head of the company, the alien Miss Foster (Sarah Lancashire), creates the Adipose, short white aliens made from human body fat.

The episode’s alien creatures, the Adipose, were created using the software Massive, commonly used for crowd sequences in fantasy and science fiction films. The episode is stylistically different from other Doctor Who episodes; “Partners in Crime” has no clear antagonist, and the creatures are in a different style to Doctor Whos regular “big [and] scary” monsters.

“Partners in Crime” features the return of three other characters. Jacqueline King reprises her role as Sylvia Noble from “The Runaway Bride”. Bernard Cribbins reprises his role as Wilfred Mott from “Voyage of the Damned”. Cribbins was recalled to replace the character of Geoff Noble after actor Howard Attfield died. Billie Piper briefly reprises her role as Rose Tyler for the first time since the second series’ finale “Doomsday”, in a scene that was not included in preview showings.

The episode received many positive reviews. Most critics liked the special effects used to create the Adipose. Critics also praised Tate’s subdued acting in comparison to “The Runaway Bride”; Donna was changed from a “shouting fishwife” to a more emotional person when she became a full-time companion. Critics’ opinions were split over the episode’s plot: opinion on executive producer Russell T Davies’ writing ranged from “pure pleasure” to “the back of a fag packet”.

Synopsis

The episode primarily focuses on Donna Noble (Catherine Tate), a previous companion who appeared in “The Runaway Bride”. After her encounter with the Doctor (David Tennant), she became disenchanted with normal life and regretted declining his invitation to travel in the TARDIS. She started investigating conspiracy theories in the hope she would find him. She confides her regrets to her grandfather Wilfred Mott (Bernard Cribbins), an amateur astronomer who met the Doctor before in “Voyage of the Damned”.

The episode concerns Adipose Industries, which is marketing a diet pill to London’s population with the slogan “the fat just walks away”. Believing the treatment to be otherworldly, the Doctor and Donna investigate the company separately, and find that the slogan is literal—the pills use latent body fat to parthenogenetically create the Adipose, small white aliens which spawn every night, removing a little of the host’s body fat each time. In an emergency, multiple Adipose can spawn by using all of the body’s organic tissue, killing the host. When the Doctor and Donna meet, they are confronted by Miss Foster (Sarah Lancashire), an alien who is exploiting Britain’s overweight population to create the Adipose for the Adiposian First Family. Miss Foster mentions that the Adipose species “lost” their breeding planet and hired Foster to find a replacement; she chose Earth, knowing that it was illegal.

Foster accelerates her plans, feeling threatened by the Doctor’s invocation of galactic law and fearing he may inform the “Shadow Proclamation”, an interplanetary police force. Throughout London, the Adipose begin to spawn, soon numbering several thousand. The Doctor and Donna prevent total emergency parthenogenesis occurring, while the remainder make their way to Adipose Industries. The Adiposian First Family use their spaceship to collect the Adipose, but kill Foster to hide any evidence they used Earth illegally. The Doctor refrains from killing the Adipose because they are children; Donna notes that his previous companion Martha Jones made him more human, citing his infanticide of the Racnoss in their previous encounter.

At the end of the episode, Donna accepts an offer to travel in the TARDIS. She makes a detour to leave her car keys in a safe location for her mother Sylvia (Jacqueline King), and asks a blonde woman to help Sylvia find the keys. The woman turns towards the camera, revealing her to be Rose Tyler (Billie Piper). She fades from view as she walks away from the area. In the final scene, Donna asks the Doctor to fly by her grandfather, Wilfred, who sees her and celebrates on his allotment.

Production

Casting

“Partners in Crime” features several actors returning to the series. Catherine Tate was offered the opportunity to return as Donna Noble during lunch with executive producer Julie Gardner. Tate, who expected Gardner would ask about appearing in a biopic, later admitted it was “the furthest thing from [her] mind”. Tate’s return was controversial amongst Doctor Who fans; the criticism she received was compared to Daniel Craig after he was cast as James Bond. Howard Attfield, who appeared as Donna’s father Geoff in “The Runaway Bride”, filmed several scenes for this episode, but died before his scenes for the remainder of the season were completed. The producers retired his character out of respect, and dedicated him in the closing credits for the episode. Producer Phil Collinson suggested transferring his traits to the unrelated character Stan Mott from “Voyage of the Damned”, and rewriting his role as Donna’s grandfather. Executive producers Russell T Davies and Gardner liked the idea and recalled Bernard Cribbins to the role to re-film Attfield’s scenes, with the character renamed as Wilfred—a name Davies favoured for Donna’s grandfather—in time for the credits of “Voyage of the Damned” to be changed.

Writing

I see her as a slightly warped Mary Poppins. She’s quite austere. She’s a strong woman. When I first read the script, I thought, oh, well, of course she’s a baddie… but the more I read it, I thought, ‘No, she’s doing what she’s doing for legitimate reasons.’
—Sarah Lancashire

Davies took a different approach while writing the episode. David Tennant and Sarah Lancashire noted the character of Miss Foster had good intentions but was morally ambiguous. The premise of the Adipose pill was equally ambiguous with rare side-effects, but was a “win-win situation” for anyone involved. Davies based the character of Miss Foster on the “Supernanny” Jo Frost and Argentine philanthropist and politician Eva Perón, and Lancashire compared her character to Mary Poppins. The Adipose are a different style to regular Doctor Who villains; antagonists such as Lazarus in “The Lazarus Experiment” or the werewolf in “Tooth and Claw” were singular monsters designed to scare the audience; the Adipose were written as “cute” to provide a “bizarre [and] surreal” experience.

Davies made some changes to Donna’s character. The character was “rounded … out from being a shouting fishwife to someone who’s quite vulnerable and emotional”. Donna was written to provide a “caustic” and “grown-up” attitude towards the Doctor, in opposition to Rose and Martha, who fell in love with him. Tate considered Donna to be more equal to the Doctor because her character did not romanticise him, allowing her to question his morality more easily.

Donna’s mime

In this production, the script requires Catherine Tate, as Donna Noble, to reintroduce herself to The Doctor in mime. The stage directions by writer Russell T Davies are as follows.

Donna does a little mime. I came here, trouble, read about it, internet, I thought, trouble = you! And this place is weird! Pills! So I hid. Back there. Crept along. Looked. You. Cos they…

Tate says Davies had suggested that she might come up with something on the day. She improvised her mime during filming.

Filming

The episode was in the fourth production block in the season, and was filmed in October 2007. The out-of-sequence filming allowed producers to use props to “seed” later episodes; ATMOS, a plot device in the episodes “The Sontaran Stratagem” and “The Poison Sky”, is referred to by a sticker on a taxi’s windscreen. As the episode mostly takes place at night, many scenes were filmed in the early morning.

The scene where Donna and the Doctor investigate Adipose was difficult to film. The scene took thirty shots to complete, and Tennant and Tate experienced problems avoiding each other on-screen. The scene was filmed in a loan company’s call centre in Cardiff’s outskirts on an early Sunday morning, with the company’s telephonists serving as extras.

Exterior shots of Adipose Industries were filmed at the Welsh Gas Board building in Cardiff’s city centre. For health and safety reasons, Tennant was prohibited from performing his own stunts in the window cleaning platform. His only shot that required stunts was when he catches Miss Foster’s sonic pen, a shot that took several takes to perfect.

Adipose

The Adipose were inspired by a stuffed toy Davies owned. The name comes from the scientific name for body fat, adipose tissue. Davies’ brief outlined a “cute” child-friendly creature shaped like a block of lard, similar to the Pillsbury Doughboy. Further consultation with post-production team The Mill resulted in the ears and the singular fang each Adipose has.Stephen Regelous, who won an Academy Award for his software Massive, flew to London to supervise the creation of the crowd special effects. Regelous, a Doctor Who fan, was enthusiastic about helping The Mill with special effects, stating that “When I first found out that the Mill was working on Doctor Who, I was quietly hoping that Massive might be used to create hordes of Daleks or Cybermen and with series 4, I jumped at the opportunity to be involved.” The Mill created two types of Adipose: extras with artificial intelligence and independent movement, and “hero” Adipose, which were hand-animated.

Broadcast and reception

Broadcast and ratings

The episode was broadcast on 5 April 2008 at 18:20, the earliest timeslot since the show’s revival in 2005. Davies criticised the BBC’s scheduling department and claimed the show could lose 1.5 million viewers. The show retained a similar time of broadcast for a further four episodes, before returning to around 19:00. from “The Doctor’s Daughter” onwards.

The preview version of the episode supplied to the press and aired at the press launch omitted the scene that features Rose; before broadcast, only the production team, Tate, and Tennant had seen the scene. The scene contains Rose’s departure theme, “Doomsday”. Tennant commented “on the night of transmission … the Radio Times won’t have told you it’s coming, it’ll come as a genuine [...] prickle up the spine”.

Overnight figures estimated the show was watched by 8.4 million viewers, with a peak of 8.7 million, 39.4% of the television audience. The consolidated rating was 9.1 million viewers. Doctor Who was therefore the most watched show on 5 April, although the Grand National had a higher peak with 10.1 million viewers. The episode’s Appreciation Index was 88 (considered “Excellent”), the highest for any television show aired on 5 April.

Critical reception

The episode received many positive reviews. John Preston, writing for The Daily Telegraph, called the episode an “undiluted triumph”. Opening his review, he said “last night’s episode struck me as being as close to 50 minutes of pure pleasure as you’re likely to get on television”. He noted the episode’s clever tackling of the topical theme of obesity, and its mixture of emotion and special effects. In closing, he said “the dejected critic, denied even the smallest nit to pick, walks glumly away”. Scott Matthewman of The Stage lamented that the Adipose were not threatening enough. He liked the Adipose’s execution of Miss Foster, a “momentary pause in mid-air, gravity only kicking in when the character looks down”, comparing it to Wile E. Coyote and Chuck Jones, which “[was] a nice little touch in an episode … full of them”. He also appreciated Tate, saying that “David Tennant finally has a partner who is approaching an equal”. Sam Wollaston of The Guardian wrote that Tate was “not right for this role” and “too hysterical, too comedy, not cool enough”, and felt her inclusion was an attempt to trade on the popularity of her own series and “broaden the appeal of [Dr Who] still further”. He also found the music “a bit oppressive” but concluded that, despite these criticisms, the show was “still awfully nice television”. Keith Watson of Metro gave the episode 4 stars out of 5. He admitted that despite his dislike of Tate, “she isn’t that bad”. His review of the Adipose was positive, citing them as a reason of the quality of the show. Closing, he said “it split [his] sides”.

Jon Wise of The People said “Doctor Who is a super-galactic way of spending a Saturday night indoors”, and appreciated that Donna was not romantically interested in the Doctor, unlike Martha or Rose. Ben Rawson-Jones gave the episode a wholly positive review, summarising it as containing “pure fantastic family fun, delivering a winning blend of action, comedy, poignancy and one unexpected shock cameo”.

The episode received several negative reviews. Andrew Billen, writing for The Times, lamented that Davies had “forgotten that Doctor Who’s main task is to send children scuttling behind sofas while entertaining their fathers with the odd philosophical idea, the occasional classical reference, a joke or two they would probably not wish to explain and a wee bit of space totty”. Billen also criticised the writing and acting, but commended Tate for a “toned down performance”. Alan Stanley Blair of SyFy Portal summarised it as “a runaway Saturday morning cartoon in desperate need to a solid story”. Blair found flaws with the comedy and the music in the episode, but was impressed with Tate’s acting and Piper’s cameo. Kevin O’Sullivan of the Sunday Mirror criticised Tate and Tennant for overacting, and had concerns about the writing: “It didn’t exactly ooze tension. All we got in the way of terrifying space enemies was Sarah Lancashire hamming it up as an intergalactic super nanny, a couple of security guards with guns and lots of cute little fat babies.”Ian Hyland of News of the World criticised the child-friendly storyline, comparing it to “the back of a fag packet”. He also criticised Tennant for appearing “jaded” and Tate for “still shouting”.

More with Less

July 7th, 2009

More with Less” is the first episode of the fifth season of the HBO original series, The Wire. The episode was written by David Simon from a story by David Simon & Ed Burns and was directed by Joe Chappelle. It originally aired on 6 January 2008.

Production

Title reference

The title refers to the cutbacks and buyouts at The Baltimore Sun; managing editor Thomas Klebanow states that they “simply have to do more with less”. It also refers to the unstable fiscal situation in Baltimore, which affects many other institutions, including the police department. In several interviews, creator David Simon has professed that despite being an oft-repeated command to dying institutions, the ability to do more with less is an inherent impossiblilty.

Epigraph

The bigger the lie, the more they believe. – Bunk

After tricking a young suspect into confessing to a crime by an elaborate hoax, Bunk makes this remark. Season 5 of the Wire will revolve around a series of lies, both public and private. This episode also marks the second time the epigraph is spoken during the cold open sequence – the other time was during the first episode of season 3.

Credits

Starring cast

The fifth season starring cast consists of: Dominic West as Jimmy McNulty; Reg E. Cathey as Norman Wilson; John Doman as William Rawls; Aidan Gillen as Tommy Carcetti; Clark Johnson as Augustus Haynes; Deirdre Lovejoy as Rhonda Pearlman; Tom McCarthy as Scott Templeton; Clarke Peters as Lester Freamon; Wendell Pierce as Bunk Moreland; Sonja Sohn as Kima Greggs; Lance Reddick as Cedric Daniels; Andre Royo as Reginald “Bubbles” Cousins; Seth Gilliam as Ellis Carver; Domenick Lombardozzi as Thomas “Herc” Hauk; Michael Kenneth Williams as Omar Little; Gbenga Akinnagbe as Chris Partlow; Jamie Hector as Marlo Stanfield; Neal Huff as Michael Steintorf; Jermaine Crawford as Duquan “Dukie” Weems; Corey Parker Robinson as Leander Sydnor; Tristan Wilds as Michael Lee; Michael Kostroff as Maurice Levy; Michelle Paress as Alma Gutierrez; Isiah Whitlock, Jr. as Clay Davis.

Clark Johnson, Tom McCarthy, and Michelle Paress joins the main cast as journalists at The Baltimore Sun. Neal Huff, Gbenga Akinnagbe, Tristan Wilds, Jermaine Crawford, Isiah Whitlock, Jr., and Michael Kostroff are now billed in the opening credits. Reg E. Cathey’s credit has moved up to the start with the credits in alphabetical order instead of the section where two or more names appear at a time. Fourth season stars no longer appearing in the starring credits include Frankie Faison (Commissioner Ervin Burrell), Jim True-Frost (teacher Roland Pryzbylewski), Robert Wisdom (retired police officer Howard Colvin), Chad L. Coleman (community boxing trainer Dennis “Cutty” Wise), Glynn Turman (ex-Mayor Clarence Royce} and JD Williams (murdered drug dealer Bodie Broadus).

Although credited Michael K. Williams and Isiah Whitlock, Jr. do not appear in this episode.

Guest stars

  1. Frankie Faison as Ervin Burrell
  2. Amy Ryan as Beatrice “Beadie” Russell
  3. Marlyne Afflack as Nerese Campbell
  4. Robert F. Chew as Proposition Joe
  5. Delaney Williams as Jay Landsman
  6. Felicia Pearson as Snoop
  7. Duane Rawlings as Hungry Man
  8. Troj Marquis Strickland as Ricardo “Fatface Rick” Hendrix
  9. Anwan Glover as Slim Charles
  10. David Costabile as Thomas Klebanow
  11. Sam Freed as James Whiting
  12. Dion Graham as Rupert Bond
  13. Bruce Kirkpatrick as Roger Twigg
  14. Jay Landsman as Dennis Mello
  15. Edward Norris as Ed Norris
  16. Method Man as Melvin “Cheese” Wagstaff
  17. Jospeh Urla as Maryland District US Attorney
  18. Gregory L. Williams as Michael Crutchfield
  19. William F. Zorzi as Bill Zorzi
  20. Bobby J.Brown as Bob Brown
  21. Benjamin Busch as Anthony Colicchio
  22. Rick Otto as Kenneth Dozerman
  23. Ryan Sands as Lloyd “Truck” Garrick
  24. Ron Tucker as Unknown
  25. Tom McCarthy as Tim Phelps
  26. Donald Neal as Jay Spry
  27. Robert Poletick as Steven Luxenberg
  28. Kara Quick as Rebecca Corbett
  29. Todd Scofield as Jeff Price
  30. Eisa Davis as Bubbles’ Sister
  31. Gil Deeble as Hucklebuck
  32. Edward Green as Spider
  33. Dante Painter, Jr. as DeShawn
  34. Corbin Smith as Monell
  35. Peter Linari as Pete the Bartender
  36. Laura Lippman as Laura Lippman
  37. Michael Olesker as Michael Olesker
  38. Gene Terinoni as Jimmy Asher
  39. Brandon Young as Mike Fletcher
  40. Lee Everett Cox as Aaron Castor
  41. Dennis Hill as Detective Christeson
  42. Juhahn Jones as Drug Dealer
  43. Brian E. McLarney as Officer Brian McLarney
  44. Jermaine Shorts as Unknown
  45. Jay Spadaro as Officer

Lee Everett Cox and David Costabile’s names are misspelled in the credits as Lee Evertt Cox and David Costible respectively.

Uncredited appearances

  • Mike D. Anderson as Ghost
  • Keenon Brice as Bug
  • Darrell Britt Gibson as O-Dog
  • Chris Clanton as Savino Bratton
  • Thuliso Dingwall as Kenard

Plot

Summary

Homicide

Detective Bunk Moreland extracts a confession from a suspect using manipulation and a mock polygraph test. His reasoning gives the episode its epigraph “the bigger the lie, the more they believe.”

Politics

Mayor Tommy Carcetti’s plan to rejuvenate the police department has been halted by funding cuts necessitated by the massive education deficit. Norman Wilson remains disappointed in Carcetti for refusing the Governor’s assistance for the schools and putting his ambition to unseat the Governor before his responsibilities as Mayor. Police commanders Ervin Burrell and William Rawls are forced to accept further funding cuts from Carcetti but convince him to lift the ban on secondary employment for police officers.

Mayor Carcetti and Council President Campbell meet with the Republican Maryland U.S. attorney as a means of acquiring Federal resources to help the Baltimore Police Department. Carcetti is told that as political corruption and counterterrorism are the bureau’s main investigative priorities that the U.S. attorney’s office will grant them a dozen FBI agents in exchange for corrupt state senator Clay Davis. In the discussion, Carcetti defends Baltimore City State’s Attorney Rupert Bond’s decision to keep the case local as he fears the Republican attorney will be use the case to damage the image of the Democratic Party. Campbell then criticizes Carcetti for upsetting the feds and as they discuss Clay Davis, Carcetti claims that Bond will charge most of the Clarence Royce’s administration including Campbell who sees Bond’s motive to charge Davis as a means of one day running against her for Mayor.

Major Crimes Unit

The Major Crimes Unit’s year long investigation into the Stanfield Organization and their involvement with the murders in the vacant houses has still not produced enough evidence to make arrests, but their continued observation has curtailed some of the criminals’ activity. Marlo Stanfield continues to scheme despite noticing the continued surveillance. He is intimidating independent drug dealers into buying his narcotics, causing unrest in the New Day Co-Op about splitting up new territory and has Chris Partlow working to find Sergei Malatov as a connection to the Co-Ops’ suppliers.

The Unit is closed down as part of the cutbacks, effectively ending investigation of the vacant murders. Colonel Cedric Daniels convinces Carcetti to retain detectives Lester Freamon and Leander Sydnor to staff the Davis investigation.

McNulty

Detective Jimmy McNulty is outraged and despondent upon his return to the homicide unit. McNulty has begun drinking heavily again and fails to return home to his domestic partner Beadie Russell.

Western District

Morale is similarly low in the Western District because of pay cuts. Sergeant Ellis Carver struggles to keep his men in line and drinks after work with his old partner Thomas “Herc” Hauk. Herc has been discharged from the department and is now using his contacts in the department as a defense investigator for Maurice Levy.

Michael

Michael Lee is acting as an enforcer under Partlow while his friend and co-habitant Duquan “Dukie” Weems runs their drug dealing crew. Dukie has not gained the respect of the crew and Michael suggests paying him for looking after his younger brother Bug instead.

The Baltimore Sun

In The Baltimore Sun newsroom similar funding cutbacks are affecting the reporters’ morale and work. Editor Gus Haynes remains principled and efficient. His institutional memory allows his team to identify and break a story about city council president Naresse Campbell relocating known drug dealer Ricardo “Fat-face Rick” Hendrix’s strip club out of town at a considerable loss of public money and link it to campaign contributions from Hendrix. Ambitious reporter Scott Templeton remains dissatisfied while his colleague Alma Gutierrez is happy with her work.

Bubbles

Bubbles is living in his sister’s basement and no longer using drugs. However, he must leave each morning as his sister does not trust him enough to leave him alone in her house. He walks through the city while she’s at work, trying to avoid the temptations of the street. Bubbles works as a rush hour distributor of The Baltimore Sun to commuters – he sells a copy to Campbell, who is outraged by the Fat-face Rick story.

First appearances

  • Gus Haynes – a veteran of The Baltimore Sun and city desk editor,
  • Scott Templeton – an ambitious and dissatisfied reporter, and
  • Alma Gutierrez – an enthusiastic young crime reporter.
  • James Whiting, the paper’s Executive Editor
  • Thomas Klebanow, – The paper’s Managing Editor
  • Steven Luxenberg, – The paper’s Metro Desk Editor
  • Tim Phelps, – The paper’s State Desk Editor
  • Jay Spry, – veteran re-write man
  • Roger Twigg – long serving reporter
  • Mike Fletcher. – young general assignments reporter

Baby Shower

July 6th, 2009

Jim explains how Michael is related to Jan's baby.

“Baby Shower” is the third episode of the fifth season of the television series The Office, and the show’s sixty-eighth episode overall. The episode aired in the United States on October 16, 2008 on NBC.

Plot

Dwight acts out the process of birth with a watermelon, as Michael wants to be prepared for Jan’s baby.

The Party Planning Committee is planning Jan’s baby shower, and collects money for a present, which many employees are reluctant to donate to. Angela makes a “guess whose baby picture” game for the shower, and she is angered when Andy unintentionally makes fun of her picture.

Jim and Pam feel awkward trying to communicate with each other throughout the day, with Pam telling the documentary crew that the two of them were having an off day.

Jan arrives with her baby girl, Astrid, already born, much to everyone’s surprise. The shower ends up taking place anyway, and Michael tries to pacify Jan by being cold to Holly, which makes her uncomfortable despite being foretold by Michael.

The present the office got for Jan ended up being a stroller, which was unnecessary as she already had a more expensive $1200 Orbit stroller. Dwight found this a ridiculous price to pay, stating that his bomb shelter cost that much, so he goes out to test the durability of the stroller as the shower continues. He straps the watermelon front the beginning of the show into the stroller and goes out to a dump-like area to throw the stroller into fences and off of small cliffs. He also ends up tying the stroller to the back of his car for his “bumper test.”

Michael holds Astrid, only to find no connection, so he seeks advice from another “baby-daddy,” Darryl. Darryl mocks him, as the baby is not even Michael’s. Jan acts coldly to Holly when they have a conversation, being direct when Holly attempts humour. Jan then retrieves her daughter from Angela and Andy, who were setting up a photo of the baby amongst vegetables. She leaves soon afterward, telling Michael in the car park not to date Holly. Michael hugs Holly when he goes back into the building and feels a connection he did not feel with Astrid. He then asks her out on a date, which she accepts, visibly moved.

Jim and Pam call each other at the exact same time and leave each other messages that are extremely similar, hinting that perhaps they are not as disjointed as this day has made them feel but highlighting the difficulty they are both having with being apart.

Reception

In the 18-49 demographic, Baby Shower earned a 4.1/10 ratings share. The episode was watched by 8.07 million viewers.

“Baby Shower” was voted the nineteenth highest-rated episode out of 26 from the fifth season, according to an episode poll at the fansite OfficeTally; the episode was rated 7.74 out of 10.

The Poisoned Chalice

July 6th, 2009

b>Arthur fights a Guardian of the Forest to save Nimueh, disguised as a young maiden.

The Poisoned Chalice” is the fourth episode in the British fantasy drama television series Merlin, which was broadcast on BBC One on 11 October 2008.

Synopsis

King Bayard of Mercia arrives for the celebration of the union of the two kingdoms. To gain revenge on Merlin, Nimueh poses as a serving maid and fools Merlin into believing that Bayard was conspiring to poison Arthur. However, this results in Merlin being poisoned in Arthur’s place. In spite of his father’s wishes, Arthur sets out to search for the antidote to save Merlin’s life.

Plot

Bayard, the king of Mercia, comes to Camelot to form a union. However, before he passes the two ceremonial goblets for Uther and Arthur to drink, Nimueh, posing as a servant, takes Merlin to one side and tricks him into believing that the goblets’ drink is poisoned. Merlin promptly disrupts the ceremony and is forced to drink from the goblet himself – if he lives, he will be turned over to Bayard to use as he wishes.

However, after Merlin drinks the goblet he collapses. He is taken under the care of Gaius, who finds a poisonous flower petal in the chalice which has been put there by Nimueh. He explains to Arthur that an antidote can only be made from the leaves of this same mortaeus flower, a flower which may only be found in the caves beyond the Forest of Balor. Despite Uther forbidding it, Arthur takes it upon himself to find the flower.

In the forest where the cave is found, Arthur finds Nimueh disguised as a maiden, claiming to have been abused and abandoned by her master. Believing her story, he fights and defeats a cockatrice that guards the caverns. Afterwards, Nimueh tells him she knows where the flowers are found and leads him to them, only to cast another spell inside, causing the ledge he’s standing on to collapse. Although Arthur survives by clinging to the cave wall and fighting off a giant spider, she leaves him there to die, telling Arthur that it wasn’t his destiny to be killed by her.

While semi-conscious and under the effects of the poison, Merlin constantly mutters about Arthur’s situation, suggesting he is either subconsciously using magic or has some kind of link with Arthur. Upon realising that it’s too dark inside the cave, Merlin creates a sphere of ethereal light in his palm, which suddenly appears in a larger form near Arthur, hovering beside him to light his path. Arthur is soon attacked by many more spiders, but manages to reach across to pick the flowers needed to cure Merlin, and then clambers up the wall to the exit of the cave, guided by Merlin’s light.

However, once Arthur returns to Camelot with the flowers, he is immediately arrested and taken to the dungeons. He begs Uther to take the flower to Gaius, but Uther, teaching Arthur a lesson in obedience, crumples the flower and drops it outside the cell. Arthur reaches through the bars to get it back.

Understanding that Arthur has returned, but also realising that no one is allowed to see him, Gwen poses as someone bringing Arthur’s food in order to see if he had the flower. Arthur manages to secretly give her the flower, and Gwen returns to Gaius. In order to make the antidote work, Gaius secretly uses magic for the first time in the series, despite it being forbidden. Merlin then makes a fast recovery, and upon realising Merlin is awake, Gwen kisses him in happiness. He claims not to remember anything since he drank from the goblet.

Upon discovering that the poison was made with magic, Gaius reveals to Uther that Nimueh must have been behind it, and the potential war between Camelot and Bayard’s country is averted. Uther then reveals to Arthur that the woman he met was Nimueh, and emphasises how he believes all magic to be corrupt.

Cast

  • Colin Morgan as Merlin
  • Bradley James as Prince Arthur
  • Richard Wilson as Gaius
  • Anthony Head as Uther Pendragon
  • Angel Coulby as Guinevere (Gwen)
  • Katie McGrath as Morgana
  • John Hurt as The Great Dragon
  • Michelle Ryan as Nimueh
  • Clive Russell as Bayard
  • Jamie Kenna as Dungeon Guard
  • Paul Kynman as Sir Cador
  • Gary Oliver as Gregory

Cast Notes

  • The Great Dragon does not appear in this episode, and is only heard during the introduction.

Reception

Airing at 19:05, episode four pulled in average overnight ratings of 5.92m (25.6%), a rise of 160,000 viewers from the previous episode. The final ratings were 6.48 million viewers.

Release

This episode, along with episodes 1 to 3, 5, and 6 was released on the first volume of the first series, released 24 November 2008.

The Poison Sky

July 6th, 2009

The poisonous Sontaran gases (creating the titular "poison sky") above Sylvia and Wilfred's street ignite as the flames from the Doctor's atmospheric converter spread globally.

The Poison Sky” is the fifth episode of the fourth series (since revival) of British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was broadcast on BBC One on 3 May 2008. The episode features both old companion Martha Jones and the alien Sontarans. It is the second of a two part story, following “The Sontaran Stratagem”.

Plot

Synopsis

Following from the previous episode, Sylvia Noble (Jacqueline King) manages to free Wilfred Mott (Bernard Cribbins) from the car by smashing the window with an axe. The Doctor (David Tennant) sends Donna Noble (Catherine Tate) back to the TARDIS while he sets off to figure out what the Sontarans are up to. After studying the gas, UNIT determines that it will need to reach 80% density to become lethal. Elsewhere, Martha Jones’s clone (Freema Agyeman) informs the Sontarans of UNIT’s defence systems and helps them to teleport the TARDIS to their orbiting ship. Realising that he is trapped, the Doctor attempts to goad General Staal (Christopher Ryan) into revealing their plan: Staal is smart enough not to fall prey to this ploy, but the Doctor soon works out by himself that the Sontarans plan to use the Earth for their own benefit, since they are beginning to lose their long war with the Rutans. He also tricks Staal into moving the TARDIS out of the main war room, placing Donna in a position to help.

Against the Doctor’s advice, UNIT decides to use nuclear weapons against the Sontarans; however, Martha’s clone has covertly copied the launch codes, and stops every attempt they make to fire the weapons. This in itself shows a hidden agenda, since the Doctor knows a nuclear strike would not have harmed the Sontarans in the first place. This, combined with the unidentifiable elements in the gas, suggest that the Sontarans have an interest in keeping anything from disrupting the atmospheric conversion. At the same time, the Sontarans, under Commander Skorr “the Bloodbringer” (Dan Starkey), mobilize a contingent of troops to protect the factory. With the Sontarans’ ability to jam most conventional firearms by expanding the copper-lined bullets, the UNIT troops are quickly slaughtered and the factory is secured.

Luke Rattigan (Ryan Sampson) leaves the Sontaran mothership to gather his students, explaining that he plans to have the Sontarans take them to another planet and begin the human race anew. The students merely laugh him off, even when he brandishes a gun. When he returns to report his failure, the Sontarans likewise ridicule his efforts, admitting that they had planned to kill his students and never intended to take him anywhere. Rattigan teleports back to his mansion before they can kill him, and the Sontarans lock the teleport pods behind him. Back in his own quarters, he lies sobbing on the ground.

Meanwhile, the Doctor instructs Donna on how to reopen the teleport pods. As she makes her way through the ship, UNIT begins a counterattack, loading their weapons with non-copper bullets and using the aircraft carrier Valiant to clear the gas. The counterattack is a success, and the UNIT troops are able to put the Sontarans on the defensive. The distraction allows the Doctor to make his way to the cloning room where Martha is being held. Having figured out long before that the clone wasn’t the genuine article, he severs its connection to Martha, leaving it to die. Martha convinces the clone to betray the Sontarans in its last moments, and the clone reveals that the poison gas is actually food for Sontaran clones: they are converting the planet into a giant breeding world. With Donna’s help, the Doctor is able to reactivate the teleport pods, allowing him to rescue Donna, steal back the TARDIS, and teleport into Rattigan’s mansion.

With the terraforming equipment Rattigan’s students built, the Doctor builds his own atmospheric converter, igniting the atmosphere to clear out the poison gas as shown in the picture. However, he knows the Sontarans won’t accept defeat so easily, and teleports to their ship with the converter, planning to give them the choice between retreat or death. Staal chooses the latter, content with the knowledge that the Doctor will die with them. At the last moment, Rattigan teleports himself to the Sontaran ship and sends the Doctor back to Earth, sacrificing himself to destroy the Sontarans.

With the day saved, Martha says goodbye to Donna and the Doctor in the TARDIS and prepares to head home. However, before she can leave, the TARDIS suddenly springs to life, locking the doors and piloting itself to an unknown destination as the jar containing the Doctor’s severed hand bubbles.

Continuity

  • Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart is mentioned as being “stranded in Peru”, the first explicit mention of the character in the new series. Colonel Mace refers to him as “Sir Alistair”, implying he has received a knighthood since the events of Battlefield.
  • Just as Donna moves towards the TARDIS screen while the Doctor contacts the Sontarans, Rose Tyler briefly appears on the screen, silently calling out. This follows a similar silent cameo appearance in “Partners in Crime”. The same happens in “Midnight.”
  • The Valiant, the primary setting for the climax of “The Sound of Drums” and much of “Last of the Time Lords”, is seen again in this episode when it is used by UNIT to clear the poisonous gas from the atmosphere over the ATMOS factory. It is also equipped with a scaled down version of the Torchwood weapon that destroyed the Sycorax ship in “The Christmas Invasion”.
  • As the TARDIS traps Donna, Martha, and the Doctor at the end of the episode, the Doctor’s severed hand, last seen at the beginning of “Voyage of the Damned”, can be seen in a similar state of agitation it felt when the TARDIS materialised near it in the Torchwood episode “End of Days”.
  • In addition to the Sontarans, the Rutans are mentioned for the first time in the revived series.
  • Lachele Carl reprises her recurring role as Trinity Wells, a US newsreader, seen previously in the episodes “Aliens of London”, “World War Three”, “The Christmas Invasion” and “The Sound of Drums” and in Doctor Who spin-off The Sarah Jane Adventures story Revenge of the Slitheen.
  • The Doctor asks Colonel Mace, “Are you my mummy?”, while wearing a gas mask – a line spoken by gas mask-wearing characters in “The Empty Child” / “The Doctor Dances”.
  • The episode is revisited in the series four episode “Turn Left”, where Jack Harkness and the remaining Torchwood team of Gwen Cooper and Ianto Jones stop the Sontarans in a parallel timeline. Harkness is transported to Sontar while Cooper and Jones are killed destroying the Sontaran ship.
  • The finale episode “Journey’s End” features a brief flashback of Luke’s sacrifice, among others, as the Doctor remembers all of those who have died for him.
  • The Doctor doubles back from calling Martha, Donna, and himself the “old team”, and calls them the “new team”. In Series 2’s “Doomsday”, Rose proclaims that the Doctor and herself are the “old team”.
  • A single remaining Sontaran from this story is the focus of The Sarah Jane Adventures story “The Last Sontaran”.

Production

This episode and the previous episode were filmed over five weeks, beginning in September 2007. Post-production was completed a week before the first part aired.

During production, director Douglas Mackinnon intended to have the episode’s climatic scene in the TARDIS show the moveable column in the center console move up and down much more rapidly than normal. However, when attempting to accomplish this, Mackinnon ended up breaking the prop, which took thirty minutes to repair.

When interviewed on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross, Catherine Tate stated that she had been filming alongside ten actors playing Sontarans for two weeks before she realised that there were actors inside the Sontaran costumes. She had assumed the Sontarans “ran on electricity”. It was not until an actor removed his helmet to reveal his real face that she realised her mistake. She stated she was “freaked out” by this and said she “nearly died”.

When the Doctor interrupts the Sontarans’ transmission, animated footage from CBeebies’s part live action, part animationeco adventure show Tommy Zoom is brought up on screen featuring the villanous Polluto disguised as a magician and the heroic Tommy and his dog Daniel as his audience. Originally, the plan was to use Shaun the Sheep, but this fell through.

As in many previous episodes of the revived series, supposed BBC News 24 footage is used featuring reports of unfolding events. However, as with the more recent appearances of such footage in Doctor Who, the channel is simply captioned on screen as ‘News 24′ devoid of the BBC logo. Since this episode was produced, the BBC News 24 channel was rebranded in real life as BBC News.

Broadcast

Unofficial overnight figures indicated that “The Poison Sky” was watched by 5.9 million viewers, giving it a 32.5% share of the total television audience. The final consolidated figure was 6.53 million viewers. It was the second most watched programme of the day, being beaten by ITV1’s Britain’s Got Talent, which got 9.12 million viewers. It was the highest rated programme on BBC1 for the day and the 18th most watched of the week. The episode received an Appreciation Index score of 88 (considered “Excellent”).

Zoey 101: Chasing Zoey

July 6th, 2009

Zoey 101: Chasing Zoey is a TV movie based on the Nickelodeon TV series, Zoey 101. It originally aired on May 2, 2008 and stars Jamie Lynn Spears as Zoey Brooks. Zoey101: Chasing Zoey is the fourth and final movie of the series. It was also the shows last two episodes. The movie more than double of the series’ average viewers when it drew about 7.3 million viewers.

Plot Summary

The movie is centered around PCA’s approaching prom and the characters issues leading up to it. It starts with Zoey’s boyfirend, James, giving her a locket with the inscription I love you – James. Zoey, however, is still unsure about how she feels about Chase. This leads to Zoey’s eventual break up with James. When she offers to return the necklace, James insists that she keep it. They each agree to remain friends. After this, James is not seen and it is unknown what became of him. Dateless for the prom, Zoey stubbornly refuses to attend. The night of prom Chase returns to PCA, and after making a clumsy entrance, Zoey and Chase share their first kiss. At the prom Zoey and Chase announce their relationship to their ecstatic friends. Zoey invites Chase to stay with her in Hawaii for the summer, which Chase of course gladly accepts..

Quinn and Logan decide to choose each other’s dates and pair each other up with Dustin and Stacey respectively so to not arouse any suspicion of them dating. At the prom their relationship is revealed when Stacey tries to kiss Logan. He unthinkingly declares he doesn’t want to kiss Stacey. Which leads to Logan and Quinn confessing their love for each other for the first time as well as their first kiss in public.

Wanting to drive Lisa to the prom, Michael gets a classic car from his father. Trouble comes when the car turns out to be a stick shift which Michael cannot drive. A mysterious Asian man (James Hong) claiming to be the lower school math teacher comes seemingly out of nowhere to help Michael learn. He has Michael learn by stomping grapes and stirring tuna, which both help Michael with the gas pedals and shifting the stick (A reference to “Karate Kid”). No one but Michael knows who this man is and at the end of the movie, Michael sees him on a bull and asks him to tell his girlfriend he helped him, but the man says he cannot because he does not exist. He disappears into the dark of the night, leaving Michael scared and confused.

Mark is crushed when his girlfriend, Brooke, dumps him saying he is not exciting enough. Michael tries to teach Mark how to drive stick using the same methods the Asian man taught him with, trying to take his mind off everything. Mark takes the wheel and hits an upset Stacey running out of the building. Her lisp is fixed as a result.

Lola is named head of the prom committee, but passes the work onto Stacey, while she relaxes. She agrees with her boyfriend, Vince to arrive to the prom “fashionably late,” they end up becoming lost in the woods due to unforeseen events with their taxi driver. With the aid of the nerds, Lola and Vince make it to the prom before it finishes.

The final scene of the series closes with the main cast dancing together in the resulting: Zoey and Chase, Logan and Quinn, Lola and Vince, Michael and Lisa, and Mark and Stacey.

Zoey One-o-Win Week

Heavy Marketing was announced to promote the new TV movie with a week long sweepstakes titled, “Zoey One-o-Win Week”, where viewers can win actual stuff from the set like Chase’s Bicycle or The Lounge’s Foosball table and Pool table , PCA T-shirts and Backpacks, bean bags, and Scripts with Bonus Scenes signed by the cast. A “James and Zoey” mystery prize was revealed on May 2, 2008 around the end of the premiere. The prize was about Zoey and James. The prize was the locket given to Zoey by James which read “I Love You -James”.

Chase and Zoey episodes
Each day from April 28 – May 2, 2008, Nick airs 2 back-to-back episodes of Zoey 101 that have Zoey and Chase moments.

Day Date Episodes Season
Monday 28 April Welcome to PCA; The Play 1
Tuesday 29 April Back to PCA, Time Capsule 2
Wednesday 30 April Surprise, Zoey’s Balloon 3
Thursday 1 May Zoey 101: Goodbye Zoey? 3
Friday 2 May Trading Places, Chasing Zoey 4

Cast

Main Characters

  • Jamie Lynn Spears as Zoey Brooks
  • Erin Sanders as Quinn Pensky
  • Victoria Justice as Lola Martinez
  • Christopher Massey as Michael Barret
  • Matthew Underwood as Logan Reese
  • Paul Butcher as Dustin Brooks

Brief and Special Appearances

  • Sean Flynn as Chase Matthews (Part 2)
  • Austin Butler as James Garrett (Part 1)

Supporting

  • Abby Wilde as Stacey Dillsen
  • Lisa Tucker as Lisa Perkins
  • Brando Eaton as Vince Blake
  • Jack Salvatore Jr. as Mark Del Figgalo
  • Dan Schneider as the angry cab driver
  • James Hong as Mr. Takato

The Hub (Battlestar Galactica)

July 6th, 2009

The Hub is the eleventh episode in the fourth season of the re-imagined Battlestar Galactica. It first aired on television in the United States on June 6, 2008.

Plot

Survivor Count: 39,673

A cold open reviews some of the events of the previous episode, Sine Qua Non. Text reading “Two Days Ago” picks up the story of President Laura Roslin and the other human beings aboard the damaged Cylon basestar. As the Cylon hybrid is reconnected, it cries out “Jump!” The ship jumps to an empty part of space. During the jump, Roslin finds herself aboard a dark, empty Galactica. Priestess Elosha, who died in the Season 2 two-part episode, Home, appears. She and Roslin embrace. Roslin admits she feels at home aboard the Galactica. The jump ends, and Roslin’s vision ends. During subsequent jumps the vision reoccurs. Roslin and Elosha walk through the ship, eventually reaching the sick bay where they see a version of Roslin dying alone of her cancer. Again, the vision ends when the jump ends. The Hybrid continues to jump the basestar, and the Leader of the Number Eights theorizes that the Hybrid is completing its mission and bringing the basestar to the Hub, so that the resurrection technology of the Cylons can be destroyed.

Gaius Baltar, one of the Sixes, and an Eight believe that the Hybrid is panicking. Baltar’s attempts to talk to the Hybrid seem to calm it somewhat, but Roslin’s attempts to do the same do not. Baltar criticizes Roslin for speaking “at” the Hybrid rather than to it. Roslin attempts to calm the Hybrid again, speaking to it more humanely, and the Hybrid seems to calm down even further.

The jumps continue, as do Roslin’s visions during the jumps. Roslin and Elosha discuss death and dying. The periods between jumps become somewhat lengthy. During one such period, Capt. Karl “Helo” Agathon discusses the misson with the Leader of the Eights. He and the Eight conclude that only by using the Galactica’s Viper ships—several of which were trapped aboard the basestar when it jumped away from the Colonial Fleet—can they hope to destroy the Hub. They conceive a plan. When Helo shows signs of stress, the Eight massages his shoulders just as his wife, Sharon “Athena” Agathon has done. Helo is surprised at her actions, but the Eight reveals that she downloaded many of Athena’s memories after Athena used the resurrection ship technology (an event which occurred during the Season 3 episode, Rapture). Helo finds himself emotionally drawn to the Eight.

Aboard the Hub, the Cylon known as Brother Cavil “unboxes” or reactivates the Number Three known as D’Anna Biers. All Number Threes were deactivated and their memories isolated and stored in the third season episode Rapture. But now Cavil uses the resurrection technology to reactive Biers. Cavil reveals that civil war has broke out among the Cylons, with the Eights, Sixes and Twos opposing the Fours, Fives and Ones. Biers is surprised to see Sharon “Boomer” Valerii having defected to join the Ones. Biers expresses surprise that Cavil does not want to know the identity of the Final Five Cylons. Cavil says his mind has not changed on that subject, and that the identity of the Final Five must remain hidden. He merely wants to know if Biers and the Threes will help end the civil war.

Meanwhile, Roslin continues to communicate with the Hybrid during periods between jumps. Baltar asserts that only he can communicate with it, but Roslin seems able to glean information from it as well. Roslin tries to learn about her dream in which she and Athena through an opera house in pursuit of the half-human/half-Cylon hybrid child, Hera Agathon, only to have a Six and Baltar pick up the girl and leave through a closed door. Although the Hybrid appears to give Roslin more clues, it quickly senses the re-activation of the Threes. This creates alarm among the humans and Cylons aboard the damaged basestar, infusing them with a sense of urgency.

During another jump, Roslin and Elosha witness Admiral William Adama, Lee “Apollo” Adama who is comforting Capt. Kara “Starbuck” Thrace, and Dr. Cottle standing a deathwatch over Roslin. Adm. Adama seems very distressed over Roslin’s impending death, and Roslin and Elosha discuss what it means to die, and to die alone.

When the jump is over, Helo and the Leader of the Eights tell Roslin and the Leader of the Sixes about their plan. The Cylon Raiders and Cylon Heavy Raiders will attack any basestars around the Hub, and disable the Hub’s jump drive. Meanwhile, the Vipers—all electronics and engines turned off in order to avoid detection — will be towed into battle by several Heavy Raiders. Once they close with the Hub, the Cylons will free the Vipers. The Leader of the Eights and Helo will board the Hub and kidnap the Three. Once they are clear, the Vipers will use nuclear weapons to destroy the Hub. After the meeting, President Roslin tells Helo that he must bring the Three to her first so that she can learn the names of the Final Five Cylons hiding among the humans in the Colonial Fleet. She tells him that she must know the names of the Final Five first, and that only the human race can know the way to Earth. Helo disagrees, arguing this is a betrayal of the trust they have built with the Cylons. Roslin tells him that he must put aside his feelings for the Eights and follow orders, or she will remove him from the mission. Helo agrees to do as she asks.

Roslin continues to try to talk to the Hybrid. The Hybrid’s vocalizations soon lead the Cylons and humans to realize that the Number Six model known as Natalie is either wounded or dying back aboard the Galactica. This leads to murmurs of distrust among the Cylons.

Helo and the Leader of the Eights discuss the Viper towing plan with the Cylon and human pilots. Many of the human pilots express dismay, arguing that their ships will be defenseless before the Cylons. Lt. Eammon “Gonzo” Pike in particular is vocal about his anger and distrust of the plan. His complaints lead to several rejoinders by the Cylon pilots, especially the Sixes. But the Eight and Helo point out that the Cylon pilots will be fighting and dying as well. The Eight points out that there is no alternative plan, and that if the plan succeeds then the human pilots will have destroyed Cylon resurrection technology forever. This appeases the disgruntled pilots, human and Cylon.

The damaged basestar jumps to the Hub’s location. Once more, Roslin has a vision during the jump. Still at her own deathbed, she and Elosha talk more about death. Elosha says that everyone values their life, even bad people like Baltar. Life is too precious for any one person to decide whether to take another’s life, she counsels Roslin. Roslin has difficulty believing her. Elosha says that is because Roslin has not allowed herself to feel in a long time, nor to love. Roslin watches Adama weep over her dead body, and her face softens.

After the jump, battle ensues. Onboard the hub, Biers takes the opportunity to kill Brother Cavil, and Boomer flees. Helo and the Leader of the Eights board the Hub and leave with Biers. The Viper pilots are freed on cue, and destroy the Hub with nuclear missiles once Helo, the Leader of the Eights and D’Anna are safely away. Also, one of the two enemy Basestars is destroyed in the Hub’s explosion accounting for the destroyed Basestar detected in the previous episode. During the battle, Baltar encounters a Centurion. He begins to speak to the Centurion, telling it about his beliefs in a Cylon God, the seeming enslavement of the Centurions by the humanoid models, and the need for the Centurions to take control. As the Centurion seems to become angry, a weapon strikes the Cylon basestar. The Centurion is destroyed in the explosion, and Baltar is wounded in the stomach (bleeding heavily).

Roslin discovers Baltar in the damaged corridor, and drags him to safety in another room. She puts a field dressing on his belly wound, and injects him with morphine for the pain. As Baltar becomes less lucid due to the drug, he tells Roslin that he carried an incredible guilt which the Cylon monotheistic god has taken away from him. An incredulous and shaken Roslin listens as Baltar tells her that he gave the Cylons the defense codes which led to the genocide against the human race. Baltar justifies his actions by saying that the book of Pythia tells of a Noahic-like flood which reinvigorated the human race. No one blamed the flood, Baltar says; likewise, he is just a flood, and no one should blame him. As Baltar slips toward unconsciousness, Roslin removes his field dressing. Baltar begins to bleed to death. Out in space in the battle, Lt. Pike declares that he is not going to put his faith in the Cylons any more, and that he has programmed his Raptor to jump repeatedly until it reaches the Fleet again. The other human pilots tell him not to flee. An enemy Cylon Raider attacks his ship, and a bullet pierces the front window of his ship, mortally wounding him. Pike manages to jump his ship (the results of his jump are seen in the previous episode, Sine Qua Non). The rebel Cylons and humans land about the damaged basestar, and it jumps to safety shortly thereafter.

During the jump away from the Hub, Roslin is deeply moved to see herself die. Admiral Adama weeps as Roslin’s life ends. He says he will no longer be selfish and fight to keep her alive. As he prays that she finds true rest, he removes his wedding ring and puts it on Roslin’s finger.

The jump ends. Helo takes Biers to see Roslin. The Eight tries to stop him, telling him that this is a violation of their trust and the pact the Cylons had with the human beings. But Helo tells her that he’s “just following orders,” and leaves with the Three.

Roslin finds herself across the room from Baltar. Realizing she may have ended his life, she rushes to put a new field dressing on his wound, and attaches an I.V. bag of fluids to his arm to help him overcome shock. Helo and Biers arrive. Biers rushes to Baltar’s side, and finds that he is still alive. She announces he will live, and Roslin is relieved.

Roslin orders Helo to leave them alone, and she asks Biers for the identity of the Final Five. Biers declares that Roslin is herself a Cylon. Roslin is shocked, but then the Three bursts out laughing. She says that was a lie, and that she has no intention of revealing the identity of the Final Five until the basestar reaches the Fleet and safety.

The basestar jumps back to the position the Colonial Fleet had occupied before its jump at the end of the previous episode, Sine Qua Non. William Adama, reading in his Colonial Raptor and waiting for the basestar’s return, quickly powers up his ship and flies toward the basestar. He and Roslin greet one another on the basestar’s flight deck. They embrace, and Roslin tells him that she loves him. Adama responds that it’s “about time”.

Reception

Alan Sepinwall of The Star-Ledger praised Mary McDonnell’s performance and was intrigued by Helo’s uneasy interactions with the Eight who had downloaded Athena’s memories. Lucy Lawless’ return “proved worth the wait, between her casually snapping Brother Cavil’s neck while still in her resurrection bath, or her snarking on all sides of the Cylon/human alliance once she was free of the Hub.” Eric Goldman of IGN.com also praised McDonnell’s acting in this episode, and found the episode’s final scene satisfying, despite not finding it believable that Adama would have waited for Roslin. “But in and of itself, Roslin being reunited with him and proclaiming that she loved him was incredibly sweet and gratifying, considering all that has occurred between the two throughout the entire series.”

Cultural References

  • Once again, as in the The Ties That Bind episode, the Orion constellation is visible as the damaged Basestar jumps back from completing its mission to destroy the Hub