Monday, June 17, 2013

FIGHTING THE BEATEN PATH - 'FALLING SKIES' SEASON THREE...


Humanity gains an alien ally in the fight against the evil Skitters. Invasion drama FALLING SKIES returns to UK TV. Images: FOX/TNT.

The enemy of my enemy is my friend - an old saying which the remaining battle scared human heroes of the Second Massachusetts group hope to discover with the arrival of a new group of aliens to their sacred Earth, supposedly a powerful and knowledgeable ally wanting to help them win back their planet once and for all from its original extra-terrestrial enslavers, the “Skitters”, as the new bigger action, bigger stakes third season of FALLING SKIES, once again staring Noah Wyle as the brave historian tuned soldier Tom Mason, with the help of his equally determined young family (including alien-altered youngster Ben (Connor Jessup)), returns to the UK’s FOX channel from 16th July.
 
Abraham Lincoln with a machine-gun? Tom Mason (Noah Wyle) makes an impact in his new leadership role.
Propelled into far-reaching events in the opening two-hour season launcher, seven months on, the alliance between humanity and the alien Volm continues, but trust issues continue to be a thorny problem. Meanwhile, Tom and Anne’s (Moon Bloodgood) baby arrival, a ray of light within such tumultuous change, will surely prove to be something “special”, though the human death toll against the invaders gets ever more serious. Having caused havoc with her full reveal as an alien Overlord, the converted former rebel, Karen (Jessy Schram), is also likely to strike once more (using her puppet on a string Hal Mason (Drew Roy)), and at the worst possible time, as will the now fully converted human child soldiers alongside her, bringing creepy new meaning to the term “little monsters”!
 
Humanity's new saviours? The Volm have arrived.

Intriguing guest stars this time out include Gloria Reuben as Mason's aide Marina Perlata in a multi-episode arc, TALES OF THE GOLD MONKEY’s Stephen Collins, and a memorable appearance from HOUSE’s Robert Sean Leonard, playing an obsessive but gifted scientist who runs the local power grid and lives underground with his pet rats.

Trailers:






Gaining better production values and strong visualists (including continuing HEROES veteran Greg Beeman and STAR TREK’s Jonathan Frakes), with the actors fully settled into their roles-Noah Wyle bringing humanity and heroism to his role of Tom Mason, now the elected President of the New United States- the series may have recently lost its main frontrunner in Remi Aubchon (turning his hand to writing a novel), but FALLING SKIES future, garnering respectable comments from the critics and strong opening ratings, looks hopefully set to continue for at least another year of sci-fi adventure (seen-in by seasoned dark heart producer, BATTLESTAR GALACTICA's David Eick).

Check out some more promotional material from the new series here: 


Saturday, June 8, 2013

KOOL TV REVIEW: 'DOCTOR WHO' - SERIES 7 PART 2 DVD SET

A smashing entrance for the Doctor (Matt Smith) and Clara (Jenna-Louise Coleman) in the latest series of DOCTOR WHO released on BBC DVD. Images: BBC.

Fans of Matt Smith's incarnation of the heroic space wanderer DOCTOR WHO must surely be gutted by the sudden news of his departure from the long running sci-fi show, scheduled this coming Christmas, but they can at least console themselves for the time being with the recently released BBC DVD and Blu-ray set of part two of his third season in the role, containing nine stories that will surely prove a tonic.

Doctor Who: Coming Soon in 2013 trailer - BBC One - YouTube
Up above the London skyline: the Doctor and Clara.

My own personal enjoyment of this new era for the show, however, continues to be erratic, and I found this season once again something of a mixed bag. As always the series is well made and Steven Moffat's writing/producer-ship reign is inventive and surely pleasing for the Harry Potter generation, but the series just doesn't quite have the heart it used to, and the storytelling often seems all over the place, with style sometimes very clearly overriding substance. Last years Xmas story, The Snowmen, is a case in point- better than the previous years saccharine and abysmal effort The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe, the menace of the titular creatures and the emergence of villain Richard E, Grant as a returned old nemesis from the Second Doctor's past, The Great Intelligence, was a good idea lost in a storyline that actually proved to have very little at its core and once again felt painfully overlong, though the proper introduction of sexily perky Jenna-Louise Coleman, as the first of many incarnations of new companion Clara, was solid. Moffat's next entry, The Bells of St. John, launching Series 7 part 2 in Easter, was thankfully an improvement in some respects- a zippy chase through modern day London to stop a wi-fi invasion of London and the world by the revenge seeking Intelligence, bolstered by a good guest appearance from popular comedian/actress Celia Imrie. However, the subsequent The Rings of Ahkaten, written by Neil Cross, featuring Clara's first trip to an alien society, and seeing her and her Time Lord partner saving the life of a little girl songstress from being a sacrificial lamb to an an angry planet, would sadly prove a complete nosedive in terms of storytelling, and proved a rather twee and dated fantasy that failed to ignite mine, and many others, viewers imaginations- truly a low point of the season and the series in general.

Clara gets personal with an Ice Warrior in Cold War.

Fortunately, the returning presence of a bulky and dangerous enemy- the intimidating hostile form of a martian Ice Warrior in regular series contributor Mark Gatiss's atmospheric, 1983 set cold war drama, aptly enough titled Cold War, was a tonic to all the Ahkaten nonsense,  Bolstered by a lot of visual atmosphere, a hunt the monster plot that evoked the early ALIEN films, and a brilliant redesign for the classic monster-again, another great invention from the Troughton era- plus great guest star performances from Liam Cunningham and David Warner, the story, despite running out of plot in its last ten minutes or so, proved welcome relief and a reminder that the show could recapture its former classic era glories, whilst also setting the scene for a future rematch with the creatures on a hopefully bigger scale. The seventies-set Earth-bound horror/romance Hide would continue the overall quality upscale with its haunted house setting, and Neil Cross improves his WHO reputation with this second script, though the plots transition from edgy ghost story to sci-fi MILLS & BOON ultimately robbed it of its early scares and full impact, as well as easily wasting a strong guest star presence in the form of film actor Dougray Scott.

Lost in infinite danger in Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS.

Lofty ambition and lots of hype almost get the better of the next story, the expeditionary romp Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS, slightly hampered by some poor guest star acting from Ashley Waters, one of three salvage worker brothers capturing the TARDIS for scrap metal value, but ultimately forced to assist the Doctor in saving a trapped Clara and the now critically unstable time vessel from death. This promised and most anticipated look inside the legendary and mysterious TARDIS had a few choice moments of inspired cgi wizardry, but proved nowhere near as spectacular as expected, though the idea of the "creatures" running around the ships fiery core were well handled by director Mat King, as were some nice continuity love-letters from the classic series.

Having broken the Ice Warriors back into the series, Mark Gatiss returns next with a second WHO script that proves a far more experimental and not altogether successful mix of ultimately high camp comedy with occasional chills- the period tale The Crimson Horror, which sadly failed to live up to my expectations and desire for a genuinely serious and disturbing horror story, becoming a poisoned chalice of sorts in the way that legendary actress Diana Rigg and her lovely daughter Rachael Sterling, both of whom were well cast and excellent in the story, stole the show rug out from underneath Smith and co's feet. With some additionally nice visual touches, and occasional, genuinely funny laughs from the returning Sontaran warrior Strax (Dan Starkey), the final reveal of the alien creature influencing the villainous plans of the Gillyflower family ultimately turns out to be a damp squib, looking like a cheap rate version of the Pepperami animal stick creature fom the funny British TV commercials!

The Cybermen lose some of their horror credibility in Nightmare in Silver.

Bigger, but not necessarily better, monsters came with the return of another classic villainous race- DOCTOR WHO's number two nemesis, the Cyberman, in Nightmare in Silver, written by acclaimed fantasy author Neil Gaiman, though this proved to be a "number two" of a very different kind by the time the end credits rolled. Nightmare for the Viewers would have been a more apt title! Pretty much everything about this other highly anticipated tale would turn out to be a savage disappointment- a tragic shame and waste of time and money, especially considering how good Gaiman's previous story, the nostalgic and often haunting The Doctor's Wife, had been. The plans by the production team to make the redesign-improved Cybermen scarier than ever are ultimately unsuccessful, within a story whose intergalactic fairground setting just doesn't work, alongside poorly written characters you just don't care about- easy cannon fodder for the now running metal monsters, and lots of unwise trick guest casting (Tamsin Outhwaite as a soldier? Please!). Plus two annoying, cringe-worthy school children, currently looked after by Clara, accompanying her and the Doctor in this hopefully one-off visit, who just can't act for toffee! Even Matt Smith gives a laughably poor performance when he's fighting against the controlling influence of the ambitious Cyber Planner, in scenes that should have been scary and terrifying- a rare moment when the Doctor is possessed by an alien force. Ultimately, only LIFE'S TOO SHORT actor Warwick Davis, as a diminutive leader in exile, manages to emerge from this mess with any dignity intact, whilst also proving he has the talent to make a good Doctor himself.

The Great Intelligence (Richard E. Grant) returns for the series finale.

Fortunately, away from the criminally disappointing, very smelly mess, there is a  redemption of sorts for the season with Steven Moffat's ultimately triumphant season wrap-up and lead-in to the all-important 50th Anniversary Special, coming November 23rd. The Name of the Doctor is the evocative, ultimately misleading and misdirecting title to this planetary sized tease of a story, which shows us the Doctors seemingly final demise on the war torn graveyard world of Trenzalore, his beloved TARDIS equally destroyed, its interior dimensions now outwardly spread across its surface, as Richard E. Grant's Great Intelligence returns to threaten the Doctor's entire timeline and absorb it into himself. as if the hero had never lived, whilst the mystery of Clara is finally revealed in a way that proves ultimately obvious from the start (well, at least to me anyway!). Its all enjoyable enough, though, with the return of the Victorian- era alien investigator favourites Lady Vastra (Neve McIntosh), her lesbian servant Jenny (Catrin Stewart) and hot-headed, blaster-toting Sontaran Strax back to aid the weakened Doctor, and helping Clara reach the finishing line in her long time-spanning journey to save her friend (though Alex Kingston's guest contribution as the Doctor's real wife, River Song, is seemingly a waste of time and the actresses talents).

As with previous Moffat efforts, Name was yet another complex puzzle to unravel- so complex I'm surprised many Average Joe viewers could follow it, but there were many slots of classic series nostalgia dotted along the path that could be enjoyed, especially the way the story cleverly mixed classic old Doctor footage with stand-ins (nice to see the colourful Sixth Doctor once again striding down the TARDIS corridors-bit where was Paul McGann's incarnation?). The opening footage, giving us William Hartnell's original and iconic Doctor, alongside Granddaughter Susan, stealing a Type-40 TARDIS on his home planet of Gallifrey, aided by a little hint from Clara, was easily one of the best moments of the new series, whilst John Hurt's mysterious figure of a future, possibly battle-scarred and corrupted version of the Doctor looming on the horizon looks intriguing-oh, how I wish that Hurt wasn't just a guest star and was actually the Doctor for the next couple of years. I wouldn't mind the series having a shorter season run just to accommodate the character actor's busy career...

Special features (DVD): Clara's White Christmas, Vastra Investigates, BBC Children in Need Special: The Great Detective, and The Bells of Saint John - a prequel.


KOOL TV RATING (overall episodes and extras): 3 out of 5


Get the set here: Doctor Who - Series 7 Part 2 [DVD]: Amazon.co.uk: Matt Smith, Jenna-Louise Coleman, Richard E. Grant, Dan Starkey, Catrin Stewart, Neve Mcintosh, Ian McKellan, Dougray Scott, Diana Rigg, Warwick Davis, Tamzin Outhwaite, Nicholas Briggs, Alex Kingston, John Hurt, Saul Metzstein, Colm McCarthy, Farren Blackburn, Steven Moffat, Mark Gatiss, Neil Gaiman: Film & TV





Thursday, June 6, 2013

KOOL TV REVIEW: 'DJANGO UNCHAINED' BLU-RAY

North and South collide in Quentin Tarantino's latest raucously stunning spectacle, DJANGO UNCHAINED, out now on Blu-ray and DVD. Images: SONY.

There used to be gold in them thar hills, but the landscape of the American West soon becomes a bloody battlefield of vendetta and personal justice, when liberated slave Django Freeman goes after the brutal men responsible for the previous savage treatment and procurement of himself, and the continued threat to the existence of his beloved wife Broomhilda to a life of misery and pain, in Quentin Tarantino's latest savagely beautiful, often very funny, intense thrill-ride DJANGO UNCHAINED, smashing free of its chains on Blu-ray and DVD this month courtesy of SONY.

Django Unchained - Official Trailer (HD) - YouTube
Django Unchained - Official Trailer #2 (HD) - YouTube

Licensed to kill. Django (Jamie Foxx) cements his quick-draw skills.

Best described as GONE WITH THE WIND meets THE SEARCHERS meets Tarantino's previous epic INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS, the iconic director's love letter to the western genre is a lively, superb treat to the thrill senses, packed with the kind of classic and stylishly inventive drama and comedy for which he's become so well known, mixing pulp action with surprisingly serious intent this time around-you certainly can't get more serious than the examination of American slavery shown here (a part of American history handled so rarely in previous cowboy movies), against some of the most surreal and authentically beautiful cinematography and set designs composed for a movie. Lead star Jamie Foxx has all the requisite heroism and boiling over defiance that you could want from a lead star in a revenge movie, and you'll be rooting for him every step of the way as he saddles up with his German bounty hunter buddy Dr. King Schultz (another supreme, well-deserved OSCAR winning performance of erudite enthusiasm from Christoph Waltz-one of the best things to happen to cinema in a while, back to inspire Tarantino's universe for a second time after his shocking memorable performance of dark hearted comedy villainy in INGLOURIOUS) in their epic embarkation through the season changing climes of old-style Americana, bonding in friendship and challenging battle to make their "flesh for cash" kills, firstly against the trio of the abhorrent Brittle Brothers who made Django's life such a whipped back hell years earlier, and secondly to free/rescue Broomhilda from the villainous clutches of the ambitious slaver owner, the French ancestored matriarch Calvin Candie (applause to Leonardo DiCaprio for taking on such a challenging role, often going beyond a lot of Hollywood A-listers comfort zones, bringing decadent repugnance to his actions) from within the huge estate he calls Candieland- the rottenest apple in the heart of the Mississippi, where sweetness is anything but lingering. Candie may be one of the richest men in the South when it comes to his control of the savage and murderous arena of Mandingo Fighting, plus the escalating demands of his slavery empire, but his family overlord/head servant Stephen, downright chillingly played with disguised cunning and superiority by Samuel L. Jackson (in another versatile performance), clearly shows the most relish with his grip on both his race and the Candie family, ultimately proving himself as the film's truest and vilest form of corrupt ambition you could ever encounter, as the story builds satisfyingly to the requisite, audience-friendly and explosive ending you know its going to get and deserve. Counter balancing the often intense shards of darkness, the humour within the film also has a satisfying edge to it, and provides one of the funniest after-credits scenes I've enjoyed in a long time.

He deals in lead! Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz) collects another bounty.

SCANDAL actress Kerry Washington, as Django's cherished reason to live, Broomhilda, brings delicate strength to her role in key scenes, alongside a terrific supporting cast of some of the all-time great character actors (including top-tier talent the likes of DEXTER's James Remar (here having two dutifully nasty roles to relish), Dennis Christopher (now playing seedy parts galore), THE SHIELD's Walton Goggins as the memorably big-toothed, big-eviled Billy Crash, and a strong cameo from MIAMI VICE's Don Johnson as a malevolent Colonel Saunders-type slave-owner, Big Daddy. There's also some very cool old-style western acting favourites present like Bruce Dern, Don Stroud, and even the likes of THE DUKES OF HAZARD's Tom Wopat, plus MATT HUSTON's Lee Horsley- all adding greatly to the films seasoned yet fresh-feeling flavour, within some superb set design from J. Michael Riva and a eclectically resplendent music score from a variety of sources- both elements act as unique characters to the film in their own right.

Django confronts the villainy of eccentric egotist slaver Calvin Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio)...
...and opportunist overlord Stephen (Samuel L. Jackson).

If you never originally saw it in the cinemas, Blu-ray is the only way to see this film, alongside 40 minutes worth of special features that give us a solid but not fully comprehensive look at the making of the film-from the inventive and dedicated work that Tarantino, the cast, stunt team and horse wranglers achieved to bring new heights of bold fantasy action to the screen (alongside some loving tributes to the past), to the beautiful and lavish costume designs of Sharen Davis, and the dedicated pursuits of the late production designer J. Michael Riva (who sadly passed away as the film was nearing completion), working symbiotically with Tarantino to make this one of the most visually arresting and atmospheric western projects in a long time. There's also a brief trailer for the varied artists soundtrack, and the ultimate collection of Tarantino's 20-year career, also out now on Blu-ray. The lack of any major single featurette contribution or an audio commentary from the writer/director on the extras front is disappointing, but SONY are surely holding these out for a loaded two-disc special edition release somewhere down the line.

KOOL TV RATING: Film- 4 out of 5. Extras- 3 out of 5

A perfect gift for the upcoming UK FATHER'S DAY weekend, get DJANGO UNCHAINED here: Django Unchained (Blu-ray + UV Copy) [2013]: Amazon.co.uk: Jamie Foxx, Leonardo DiCaprio, Christoph Waltz, Quentin Tarantino: Film & TV

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

ALPINE HORROR! 'THE RETURNED' ARE HUNGRY FOR LIFE...

Reflections in terror for two of the living and dead stars of THE RETURNED. Images: CHANNEL 4.
They may have been pretty darned slow in the off-take - years, in fact - in acquiring the kind of continental and European dramas that have becomes so classy and addictive to UK TV viewers, like The Killing, Spiral, Borgen and Braquo have been for the BBC and FX channels, but CHANNEL FOUR have at least gone into different genre territory with their exclusive screening rights to the new French Alps set horror/drama THE RETURNED, based on a 2004 movie They Came Back, starting from next Sunday 9th June.

Some genuinely eerie and disturbing edge of your seat (and perhaps behind it!) moments linked to zombies and cannibalism are apparently promised here, as well as a lurking serial killer who makes his dread presence tragically felt, part of an intriguing plot about a group of people from past and present thought dead who return to their homes, and families- the mystery and ultimate point of their resurrection not yet revealed, and the consequences of their arrival to the general populace nothing less than emotionally and psychologically shattering...

Out of the mist, past lives reawakened...

The Returned | Coming Soon | Channel 4 - YouTube

Starring Céline Sallette (from the Marion Cotillard’s film RUST AND BONE) and Anne Consigny (THE DIVING BELL AND THE BUTTERFLY), written and directed by Fabrice Gobert, and a huge hit in its home territory, THE RETURNED (aka Les Revenants), looking like a mix of early TRUE BLOOD with the spooky beginnings of THE 4400 (but without the aliens!), and perhaps even a bit of the grim black humour of our very own BBC THREE series wonder THE FADES, THE RETURNED, with its distinctly edgy environment of isolation and unease, certainly looks set to win over genre fans and audiences who something new and hopefully innovative added to FOUR's schedules beyond programmes about human sexual body parts, teen angst and the housing property market!

Monday, June 3, 2013

SOARING TO SEVENTY- FIVE! 'SUPERMAN' RETURNS...

American Legend! SUPERMAN, as personified by Christopher Reeve, protects Humanity. All images: copyright DC COMICS/WARNER BROTHERS
Thrilling fans for seventy-five years, the alien born hero with the superhuman powers but the often fragile human heart and conscience, the Kryptonian red-caped, blue tights wonder with the kiss-curl, Kal-El, aka SUPERMAN, as originally created by then Ohio-born youngsters Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster back in pre-World War II, endures as one of pop culture's most incredible and entertaining creations within the realms of comic art, film and TV medium storytelling.

The iconic 1938 comic book covers that launched the hero to the world.

In and out of his secret identity as mild-mannered, bumbling spectacled Clark Kent in his day job as reporter on the all-important Daily Planet newspaper, Superman's life journey has seen him take on all manner of foes from Earth and space (including the varied schemes of the power mad businessman Lex Luthor), whilst his relationships with his human friends have blossomed, especially with friend/lover/spouse Lois Lane, the reporter with the ballsy streak who wins the Man of Steel's heart with the detonating speed of a green Kryptonite arrow, created during an arena where strong and sexy on-screen women like Bette Davis, LanaTurner and katherine Hepburn were coming to the fore, and who has evolved and became a woman of her time in subsequent incarnations and re-imaginings.

Kirk Alyn as the first on-screen SUPERMAN. Image: COLUMBIA.
Followed into colour by George Reeves.

Superman (1948) Columbia Movie Serial Episode One (Part 1 of 3) - YouTube
Adventures of Superman Season One Opening Credits - YouTube
The Adventures of Superman - YouTube

Superman ➟ The Comic Strip Hero (1 of 5) - YouTube
Look Up Into The Sky, The Story of Superman Part 1 - YouTube

A truly tough act to follow. The one and only Christopher Reeve in 1978's SUPERMAN: THE MOVIE.

In the realm of comics Superman has continued to ride the tide of evolution, too- he helped push the allied cause in World War II, fought the racism of the Ku Klux Klan and saluted the brave men and women that survived and endured the world-changing events of 9/11 (heck, he's even boxed against Muhammed Ali!), and has been written and illustrated, killed off, brought back to life and endlessly re-imagined by some of the finest talents out there (including the likes of Curt Swan, Neal Adams, THE X-MEN's John Byrne and Frank Miller). On the film and TV screens he's caught the attention and beloved respect of generations of audiences. From his early days in the radio imaginations of the 40s and 50s, then as an animated triumph, he became the star of breathless cliffhanger COLUMBIA serials starring Kirk Alyn in the role, to the B/W and colour antics of the underrated George Reeves, who caught the early technology of the video age at just the right time, though tragically suffered the curse of typecasting, in the late fifties. A star of futher numerous colourful animated series into the seventies, he then returned as a living breathing star played by a later real-life superman and human inspiration, Christopher Reeve, in the first two (of four) phenomenally successful movies starting from the late seventies to the late eighties, making us believe all over again, and wonderfully, that a man could fly, from the creative talents of the Alexander Salkind film-making family, director Richard Donner (who caught the true zeitgeist of the character and brilliantly cast Reeve), alongside the romantic, majestic, legendary soaring into your heart and soul theme by John Williams.

Superman: The Movie - Opening credits HDV - YouTube
Superman (1978) New Trailer HQ - YouTube
The Making Of Superman The Movie 1978 (Part 1) - YouTube
Original Superman Trailer 1978 - YouTube
Superman II - Movie Trailer - YouTube
Superman III ( Trailer ) 1983 - YouTube
Superman IV ( Trailer ) 1987 - YouTube

Back on TV,  Dean Cain's Superman gets a little heroic help from a masked Lois Lane (Teri Hatcher).
SMALLVILLE brought a younger take to the franchise, with Tom Welling as Clark Kent.

Eventually relinquishing the role, Reeve would enlarge his film and TV career beyond the cape, with the small screen seeing Superman making a less than blockbuster action style comeback after the movie series (and its SUPERGIRL spin-off) had diminished their then box-office potential, though his romance with Lois Lane was explored to popular acclaim and some hearty fun with the likes of the Dean Cain/ Teri Hatcher starring LOIS AND CLARK: THE NEW ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN. Befofe that, there would also be an earlier reasonably popular SUPERBOY series (starring Gerard Christopher). Then came the re-imagined exploits of Kal-El as Clark Kent before he donned the iconic costume, growing up in SMALLVILLE for ten very successful 90210'ish seasons (starring Tom Welling).

LOIS & CLARK: THE NEW ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN Intro / Opening Credits - YouTube
Smallville Season 9 Opening Titles **HD** - YouTube
Superboy TV series - (1988-1992) - YouTube

SUPERMAN RETURNS, with Brandon Routh as Kal-El.

Numerous unsuccessful attempts to get the movie franchise back on its feet (including aborted efforts from Tim Burton (with Nicholas Cage as a very different Superman) and BAD ROBOT wunderkid JJ Abrams) would come and go, but noted rising star director Bryan Singer, a critical and box office trustee what with his work in taking MARVEL COMICS THE X-MEN to the screen) finally brought the caped wonder back to celluloid and digital life in 2006, with his love letter to the Donner films that captured his and the fans imaginations in their formative years. Beautifully made, and with the Reeve lookalike Brandon Routh confidently, and much under-ratedly, handling the important tole with charm and strength, its a shame that SUPERMAN RETURN didn't quite catch the audiences interest as much as Reeve's version- Singer's aborted second film, planned to solidify the filmmakers lofty trilogy ambitions, not taking place..

Superman Returns Teaser HD - YouTube
Superman returns trailer - YouTube
Superman Returns Trailer - YouTube
Deleted Scene: Return to Krypton SCENE - Superman Returns MOVIE (2006) - HD - YouTube
Superman Blu-ray Anthology Trailer (Revised) [HD] - YouTube

Re-imagined once again, Henry Cavill is the 2013 take on the MAN OF STEEL.

Now, in 2013, with DC COMICS/WARNER BROTHERS determined to make a more box-office friendly, audience relevant entry in the franchise, to prove that their comic book characters can be successfully translated to the big screen anew, like BATMAN recently had, filmmaker Zack Snyder (best known for his biceped action fest 300) brings an all-new take to Krypton's last son with the epic MAN OF STEEL, starring Henry Cavill, arriving in cinemas this month, and looks set to put action and adventure, alongside a very real story of family and love, back into our heroes steel blue, Earth-patritoic soul. From the scope of the trailers so far, with a supporting cast that easily matches that of the first 1978 SUPERMAN movie, its superb action scenes, special effects, and overall new attitude in portraying our hero, his family heritage and the effects of his discovered presence to the people of Earth, it looks a winner.

The new-look Superman with Lois Lane (Amy Adams).

man of steel official trailer 1 - YouTube
Man of Steel - Official Trailer #2 [HD] - YouTube
Man of Steel - Official Trailer 3 [HD] - YouTube
Man of Steel - "Fate of Your Planet" Official Trailer [HD] - YouTube
Superman: Zack Snyder Short, New Logo for 75th Anniversary of Character

Entertainment Weekly's recent soaring cover celebrating Superman at 75.

KOOL TV raises its glass to salute the man, the SUPERMAN (and the many people over the years bringing him to reality), whose beliefs in "truth, justice and the American way" are now so ingrained...


Celebrating SUPERMAN's epic life, ages of adventure (key issues and storylines), and heroism as a DC comics institution, alongside years of memorable friends and enemies, DORLING KINDERSLEY BOOKS have released a wonderfully nostalgic book, compiled and written by Daniel Wallace, full of classic art from the thirties to now, that's well worth getting hold of.


Some lovely spreads from the new DORLING KINDERSLEY  release on the DC Comics icon: SUPERMAN: THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO THE MAN OF STEEL. With thanks to DK for the images. 

Available from AMAZON: Superman: The Ultimate Guide to the Man of Steel Dk Superman: Amazon.co.uk: Daniel Wallace: Books

Saturday, June 1, 2013

KOOL TV REVIEW: 'DOCTOR WHO - HARVEST OF TIME' NOVEL



DOCTOR WHO: HARVEST OF TIME

Featuring the Third Doctor, Jo Grant, UNIT and the Master

A novel by Alastair Reynolds

Available 6th June 2013, from BBC BOOKS


“Nastiness comes in all sizes”

The Doctor

Current TV Time Lord Matt Smith may not be back on our screens until later this year, but DOCTOR WHO fans have lots to celebrate in this anniversary year with the Doctors of the past-splendid fellows, all of them!- within BBC BOOKS continuing evolving range of original fiction. Acclaimed British sci-fi author Alastair Reynolds follows Stephen Baxter’s prominent footsteps in helming his first, and hopefully not last, original DOCTOR WHO novel set within his favourite Doctor/era from childhood. Pacily written, Harvest of Time joyously captures the spirit of that five-year earthbound period starring the beaky nosed, cape-swirling hero Jon Pertwee.

Set at some point between the Classic WHO stories The Daemons and The Sea Devils, the incarcerated mind of evil that is the Doctor’s deadliest nemesis from Gallifrey, the
Master, is up to his old tricks again-desperate to escape his confinement and using the past, present and future as his weapon. But strange things are afoot linked to his unique presence. Time seems to be changing around him. And why are his UNIT captors suddenly and inexplicably starting to lose their memory of their Public Enemy Number One? What’s causing this “time fade? And can it be stopped?

Even with this looming threat of forgetfulness, however, a bigger catastrophe is quickly beckoning our heroes attentions, as the Doctor’s favourite planet is in danger once again. There’s metal killer crabs, pockets of Earth’s oceans being diminished or disappearing, collapsing North Sea oil rigs and an ancient alien ship which should be destroyed but isn’t, its lethal cargo intact and ready for revenge…

One of the most belligerent and vicious life forms who exist to conquer by sheer numbers, the Sild, have made their arrival on Earth, emerging from its once blue seas…and they want it!

The warm, comfy hint of the shows halcyon seventies days remain intact and finely recreated by Reynolds. The affectionate relationship between the mature Doctor and young Jo Grant recreates the charisma of stars Jon Pertwee and Katy Manning (even if they are separated for the vast majority of the book), whilst Pertwee’s mannerisms and dialogue in the overall scheme of things all feel right. So too do the UNIT regulars (the indomitable Brigadier, likable Etonian Mike Yates, reliable Benton), all given sturdy moments in the sun.

The story’s new supporting players are solid whilst keeping to the era: there’s corrupted ministers and lackeys, an oil rig boss with an important past and future history, and the disposable soldiers always getting killed by the threat of the week, set against some nice WHO location backdrops- an abandoned nuclear plant, oil rigs, dying planets and an epic-size spaceship, the former two appearing when the story kicks in to big sci-fi concept mode during its second half: Chapter Twenty-one, in particular, has a brilliant ending that’ll make you want to keep reading on into the night…

But it’s the Master that reigns supreme in this adventure- his hypnotic visage, diabolical evil, supreme intellect and all-round charm as personified by the late, magnificent Roger Delgado. His eventual and inevitable team-up with the Doctor, which was such a big and vital element of that era’s success, continues with aplomb.

With some nice links to old and new series, and one fun little plot element/tribute that fans of Douglas Adams time on WHO will greatly enjoy, Harvest of Time is easily one of the best original DOCTOR WHO novels in a very long time, and a true pleasure to read. A well-thought out, classic mix of nostalgia and sci-fi trappings within a lovely tribute to the TARGET books of old, but with added sophistication.

All we need now is some imaginary RADIO TIMES episode clippings made real, to give us some teasing plot elements and a cast list, and our nostalgia senses for Classic WHO are fully primed!

KOOL TV REVIEW: A lovely tribute to seventies tea-time horror and imagination-the spirit of Jon Pertwee, and the shows then dedicated and highly creative seventies production team, lives on! 5 out of 5

Get hold of HARVEST OF TIME here: