What are you watching in (late 2025 and) 2026?

We’ve been enjoying the National Theatre (NT) Live showings in one of our local cinemas in Vancouver (International Village, for anyone who cares). These are recordings of NT productions from London and they’re very well done and very recent, only a few weeks after their runs and it’s a very good (and much cheaper and more convenient) way to see those plays. The ones we’ve seen recently are:

- Inter Alia: Rosamund “Moiraine Sedai” Pike does a frenetic almost one-woman play about a progressive judge whose life is ripped apart when her own teenage son is accused of rape. It’s fantastic and very well judged.

- Mrs Warren’s Profession: Imelda “the Queen” Staunton and her daughter Bessie Carter play the two leads in one of George Bernard Shaw’s best plays about a young graduate who discovers where her mother’s money comes from. The play is unflinching about sex work, capitalism, and the waste of women in society; honestly, nothing has changed in over a century. Both leads are excellent.

- The Fifth Step: Martin “Bilbo” Freeman and Jack “River Cartwright” Lowden do a two-man play about a young incel coming to Alcoholics Anonymous for the first time and his sponsor. It’s energetic, messy, and surprisingly funny, covering addiction, toxic masculinity, religion, and loneliness in equal measure.

We’ve also been watching actual plays and musicals at the Metro Theatre. I didn’t expect to like the last one we saw - Christmas at Pemberley - quite as much as I did. It’s made me look up Lauren Gunderson and her plays. I must see the sequels.

Currently watching Around the World in Eighty Days (2021 version with David Tennant et al) and it’s excellent, if a bit artificial in the way it sets up and resolves character conflicts. It’s almost like the writers are running a Smallville RPG campaign.

The above is on PBS Masterpiece, on which we’ve also watched The Gold (the recent BBC series based on the Brinks Mat robbery - good but imperfect, quite Blue Labour but not at all brave with the writing) and The Mirror and the Light (the sequel to Wolf Hall - compelling viewing but not as historically accurate as it could be).
 

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Hmmm…nothing too special, really.

True crime shows- many of which are reruns- on ID.
Cooking/travel shows on PBS, Food Network or The Cooking Chanel.
Videos on MTV U and MTV Classic
Various murder mystery shows (mostly British). I’m mostly trying to catch u on episodes I’ve missed, but I did add Sister Boniface- a spin-off of Father Brown- to the schedule.

I also have a backlog of some recorded shows that I’m having trouble getting to.


I did enjoy the documentary-series New Orleans: Soul of a City on CNN. Recommended.
 

Recently:

Slow Horses s5 (*****)
The Beast In Me (***)
Peacemaker s2 (****)
Taskmaster s20 (****)
Alien: Earth (****)
Celebrity Traitors (****)
The Morning Show s4 (**)

Currently:

Pluribus (*****)
Robin Hood (**)
Stranger Things s5 (****)
It: Welcome to Derry (***)

Plus the usual Friday night stuff -- Have I Got News For You, etc.

Upcoming:

The War Between the Land and the Sea
The Night Manager
Knight of the Seven Kingdoms
Star Trek Academy

Further Ahead:

Daredevil
The Boys
Lanterns
 
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The BritBox activity this past month...

All caught up and no new ones in the immediate queue (or evermore):
  • The Inspector Lynley Mysteries (Seasons 1-6 - 2001-2008)
  • Lynely (Season 1 - 2025)

You can really tell the change in styles going from the older series to the newer one in terms of production/cinematography and the like (and it does have an entirely new cast and location). Sgt. Havers from the first series is so far my favorite DS of all the British shows I've seen. It took a bit to get used to Sofia Barclay in the role and I think she'd be just fine if I hadn't had six seasons of Sharon Small doing it.

In the midst of:
  • Jonathan Creek - in Season 5 of 5 (show ran 1997-2000, 2003, 2014)
  • Rosemary and Thyme - in season 2 of 2 (show ran 2003-2006)
  • Blue Lights - S3 E4 just dropped
  • Shakespeare & Hathaway - S5 E2 just dropped

Bingeing Jonathan Creek is really odd if you weren't expecting a three year jump and then eleven year jump before seasons 4 and 5. The first three seasons were super. Season 4 wasn't as good, but has a great trap in an episode I will remember for D&D. Season 5 hasn't drawn me in as much, but maybe it is just end of semester too-tiredness.

I love the cast of Shakespeare & Hathaway, but hope the gang has finally worked out the between season in-show drama.

Rosemary and Thyme might be testing my limits of cozy.

Blue Lights is at the other end from R&T in terms of grit (albeit nothing like Luther). And Belfast's (TV at least) police experience is much different than Taggart's Glasgow, Morse's Oxford, or any of the others. The latest episode "The Parting Glass" was very, very good.


Re-watching

Sister Boniface Mysteries - Season 4 ended in September, but the spawn is rewatching and is at Season 2 Episode 3. Taking its comedy for what it is (it is not just a Father Brown-esque cozy), this might be the family's favorite. The town of Great Slaughter and its nearby nuns are spectacular.


Upcoming Soon
  • Shetland - Season 10 drops on Britbox on January 1 (unless I pay the little bit extra to get Premiere first...). It will be strange having a full-season single mystery again (unlike most of the other shows).
  • Midsomer - do I need Acorn to watch Season 25 starting on Monday? Fleur is my favorite pathologist.

-----

In Movies

Sisu 2 - The level of over-the-topness picks up kind of where the first movie left off instead of having a (sort of) gradual build. But I guess if you know where it can go its hard to step back. The cast of villains wasn't as memorable to me. The gore was a bit more omnipresent than I liked with seemingly less of the great panoramic shots of the first. Depending on what folks loved about the first one, I can see them either loving this one more or being disappointed. Count me the latter.

Will be hitting the Christmas movies soon - A Christmas Story, Elf, Babe, and Muppet Christmas Carol are almost certainties. Maybe A Christmas Story Story, Home Alone, and Family Vacation Christmas Movie.

Wake up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery is in the queue

Some in the Spawn's gaming group keep asking me if I've seen Fantastic Four yet. Will probably get to that soon.
 
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After binging through Stranger Things and Hazbin Hotel, I am now watching Heated Rivalry, the gay hockey series on Crave in Canada and HBO Max stateside.

And ... it's very good. Steamy, sexy, but also very poignant and romantic.
 

I just finished watching The Immortal Ascension, a live-action TV adaptation of Wang Yu's xianxia novel, A Record of a Mortal's Journey to Immortality.

Although I'm a big fan of xianxia stories, I stumbled onto this quite by accident. A search via my Amazon Firestick assured me that I could watch Ne Zha 2 for free if I used a streaming app called Rakuten Viki. Apparently Amazon didn't know what it was talking about, because when I downloaded the app and logged in, it had a "rent" tag under Ne Zha 2's listing. While that was disappointing, I couldn't help but be intrigued by all of the (free) live-action shows it had from East Asia, and so I started looking around, eventually finding The Immortal Ascension.

Although there's currently only one season (the show being less than a year old), I should mention upfront that the show is still a fairly hefty commitment, being thirty episodes long, most of which are forty-five minutes (and a few—mostly the first several episodes—are an hour) in length. Also, the Viki app would infrequently need to buffer, and the presence of commercial interruptions was extremely unpredictable; some episodes had none, others had commercials break in frequently. It was often frustrating.

Even so, I don't regret sticking with it, because the show was a lot of fun, telling the story of a young man who is thrust into the world of "cultivation" (i.e. the journey towards immortality via spiritual refinement) and trying to find a way to not only survive, but thrive.

If that part about cultivation sounds odd, be aware that the show makes numerous presumptions that are similar in nature, assuming that its audience knows a lot of the basic tenets that are common to the xianxia genre. The stages of immortal cultivation (i.e. Energy Refinement, Foundation Establishment, Core Formation, Nascent Soul, etc.), the use of spirit stones as currency, flying swords as a mode of transportation, spirit beasts and demons, and more are all here, with very little explanation for what they are or how they work. This is a show for people who are already fans of this kind of story, rather than a gateway for newcomers.

Insofar as the production goes, it's quite good, but there were times when the special effects didn't quite pass muster, at least to me. The CGI often looked a little unpolished, and there seemed to be a bit too much reliance on the same small selection of musical themes, both with lyrics and without. Also, I'm not a fan of having the opening and ending themes both be clip-shows from the series; if you're paying close attention to what's happening, you can pick out minor spoilers from these, as you'll see characters appear in scenes that you'll know you haven't seen yet.

However, the action scenes are quite good! Leaving aside the rare instance where the speed ramping (for fast-motion instances) is obtrusive, the mixture of practical wire-work effects, CGI, and martial arts makes for an impressive combination. Some of the action instances are visually spectacular as a result, and it's nice to see that when the story calls for big battle sequences, the show doesn't shy away from giving them their due.

Of course, this being the first season, things reach a resolution that is decidedly laying the groundwork for future development. I'm hopeful that we'll get to see more of this, because it was a fun journey to be a part of!
 

I just finished watching The Immortal Ascension, a live-action TV adaptation of Wang Yu's xianxia novel, A Record of a Mortal's Journey to Immortality.

Although I'm a big fan of xianxia stories, I stumbled onto this quite by accident. A search via my Amazon Firestick assured me that I could watch Ne Zha 2 for free if I used a streaming app called Rakuten Viki. Apparently Amazon didn't know what it was talking about, because when I downloaded the app and logged in, it had a "rent" tag under Ne Zha 2's listing. While that was disappointing, I couldn't help but be intrigued by all of the (free) live-action shows it had from East Asia, and so I started looking around, eventually finding The Immortal Ascension.

Although there's currently only one season (the show being less than a year old), I should mention upfront that the show is still a fairly hefty commitment, being thirty episodes long, most of which are forty-five minutes (and a few—mostly the first several episodes—are an hour) in length. Also, the Viki app would infrequently need to buffer, and the presence of commercial interruptions was extremely unpredictable; some episodes had none, others had commercials break in frequently. It was often frustrating.

Even so, I don't regret sticking with it, because the show was a lot of fun, telling the story of a young man who is thrust into the world of "cultivation" (i.e. the journey towards immortality via spiritual refinement) and trying to find a way to not only survive, but thrive.

If that part about cultivation sounds odd, be aware that the show makes numerous presumptions that are similar in nature, assuming that its audience knows a lot of the basic tenets that are common to the xianxia genre. The stages of immortal cultivation (i.e. Energy Refinement, Foundation Establishment, Core Formation, Nascent Soul, etc.), the use of spirit stones as currency, flying swords as a mode of transportation, spirit beasts and demons, and more are all here, with very little explanation for what they are or how they work. This is a show for people who are already fans of this kind of story, rather than a gateway for newcomers.

Insofar as the production goes, it's quite good, but there were times when the special effects didn't quite pass muster, at least to me. The CGI often looked a little unpolished, and there seemed to be a bit too much reliance on the same small selection of musical themes, both with lyrics and without. Also, I'm not a fan of having the opening and ending themes both be clip-shows from the series; if you're paying close attention to what's happening, you can pick out minor spoilers from these, as you'll see characters appear in scenes that you'll know you haven't seen yet.

However, the action scenes are quite good! Leaving aside the rare instance where the speed ramping (for fast-motion instances) is obtrusive, the mixture of practical wire-work effects, CGI, and martial arts makes for an impressive combination. Some of the action instances are visually spectacular as a result, and it's nice to see that when the story calls for big battle sequences, the show doesn't shy away from giving them their due.

Of course, this being the first season, things reach a resolution that is decidedly laying the groundwork for future development. I'm hopeful that we'll get to see more of this, because it was a fun journey to be a part of!
Viki is also pretty good for Korean dramas - it has a larger selection and includes those which used to be on other streamers, such as The Greatest Love or City Hunter.

I think it’s also where Thunderbolt Fantasy hangs out these days (maybe Crunchyroll as well?) if you want some great xianxia but in puppet form.

I haven’t watched much xianxia - for some reason I can’t get into it the way I can into manhua - but my favourite to date is probably Alchemy of Souls, a Korean xianxia series on Netflix.
 
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Watched Hundreds of Beavers this week, which is very fun in a “WTF did I just watch*” kind of a way, and also Galaxy Quest. Thinking of watching Robin of Sherwood on Tubi, but also finished Upload, which was hurried but sweet.

*You just watched a black and white almost-silent slapstick comedy about a turn of the century woodsman and his dealings with very many badgers. Isn’t Canadian, but feels it.
 

My wife and I just finished watching Potato Lab, a delightfully unhinged K-Drama Ron-Com about a potato researcher at a potato chip company that has been bought by a large conglomerate, and a mysterious HR "closer" has moved into her familes local resort to look over the lab and the personel. Highly recommended, very funny and heartfelt.

Watched all but the last episode of Mighty Nein on Amazon Prime. Not to get into details, but it is fascinating how they have forged a coherent narrative out of very chaotic and random D&D sessions with a lot of improv and winging it originally.
 
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