Posts with tag detective
Posted Feb 20th 2008 11:05AM by Allison Waldman
Filed under: Programming, Monk, Psych, Pickups and Renewals, Ratings
Monk will be back for a seventh season. It isn't an even number, a fact that would irritate the OCD detective to no end, but it is a lucky one.
USA Network has ordered 16 new episodes of the idiosyncratic mystery series which has turned character actor Tony Shalhoub into an Emmy-winning star. USA has plans to run eight of the new episodes in July and August; then the other eight in January and February.
Before then, you can catch up with
Monk, and USA's other whimsical detective series
, Psych, when they air on
NBC in March. Although it has not be announced as yet, USA will likely pick up
Psych, too, and they will continue running in tandem.
Continue reading Monk returning for seventh season
Posted Jun 1st 2007 11:24AM by Anna Johns
Filed under: Law and Order, Celebrities

Jeremy Sisto will replace Milena Govich as a detective on the original version of
Law & Order. Sisto was on NBC last season in the failed series,
Kidnapped, and is perhaps best known for his role as Brenda's crazy brother, Billy, on
Six Feet Under.I'm not sure how they're going to write his character into the show, considering the actor guest-starred on the season finale last month as a defense attorney. I didn't see that episode (apparently my Jeremy Sisto radar was turned off) so I don't know if he had any sort of background as a detective, or if
L&O will just ignore the fact that he guest-starred and recast him as a detective by a different name.
It's a bittersweet announcement, really. Jeremy Sisto is a terrific (and super hot) actor, yet he has taken a role on a show that has dropped in the ratings and
almost wasn't renewed this season.
Posted Apr 5th 2007 10:00AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, OpEd, Early Looks

I'm a big fan of private eye TV shows and novels, and I've been thinking lately that they need to make a big comeback (sorry,
Monk just isn't the same).
Raines comes kinda close, but it's not quite the same thing. Judging from the script for the pilot of
Marlowe, ABC's modern take on the classic Raymond Chandler character, it looks like it could be a return to the great private eye genre that TV fans have been waiting for.
The first thing I noticed is that, yes, the show is going to have voiceovers! Some people hate voiceovers, some people love them. I remember that Robert Parker hated the voiceover on
Spenser: For Hire, when it was actually one of the cool things about the show. There's a lot of voiceover in this pilot script, and while I don't mind it, I wonder if it's too much.
Continue reading Marlowe -- A look at the pilot script
Posted Feb 1st 2007 7:28AM by Martin Conaghan
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, OpEd, BBC

The promos for the second, and final series of
Life on Mars have started sprouting up across the UK.
I spotted a bus stop ad earlier tonight in the west end of Glasgow, designed in a typically 1970s fashion -- replete with the late 1970s BBC logo -- promising the return of this excellent retro-cop time-travelling show on Tuesday 13 February on BBC ONE in the UK.
John Simm will return as detective inspector Sam Tyler, who finds himself still stuck in 1973, following a car accident (the title of the show comes from the last tune he was listening to on his iPod before his accident -- David Bowie's
Life on Mars).
Continue reading Life on Mars returns on February 13th
Posted Jan 25th 2007 5:05PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, TV Royalty, TV on DVD
Must be Columbo week here at TV Squad. Yesterday I talked about some Columbo trivia, and today comes news that they are starting to release the movies made from 1989 and beyond.
The movies from 1989 will be released on April 24. They include Columbo Goes To The Guillotine (with Anthony Andrews), Murder, Smoke, and Mirrors (Fisher Stevens), Grand Deceptions (Robert Foxworth), Sex and the Married Detective (Lindsay Crouse), and Murder: A Self Portrait (Patrick Bauchau). The set will be three discs and probably won't have many (if any) extras on them.
The movies aren't as good as the regular series movies from the late 60s and the 70s (though I like the Andrews episode, where he plays a murderous magician). They just aren't as clever as the older shows were, though a few from the 90s were pretty fun. Those will (hopefully) be released later in the year.
Posted Jan 19th 2007 8:16AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, NBC, Industry, Programming
Raines is the new quirky detective drama starring Jeff Goldblum. It's going to premiere in the Thursday at 10pm slot that ER currently occupies (side note: why was last night's ER a repeat when the rest of NBC's lineup was brand new?). The two episodes will air on March 15th and 30th. The show then goes into its regular time slot, Friday nights at 9pm.
Goldblum plays a detective that "sees" the victims of murder and they help him solve the crime. Now, contrary to earlier reports, these aren't ghosts a la Ghost Whisperer or Medium. These are actually hallucinations that the detective is seeing, but they help him piece together the puzzle of the crime. Yes, it sounds like the guy is legally insane, but he solves crimes.
The show will co-star Matt Craven, Linda Park, Madeleine Stowe, and Remi Boyer.
Posted Dec 4th 2006 10:15AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: OpEd, Animation, Adult Swim, Moral Orel
(S02E04) Sadness is nature's spankings. - Clay Puppington
Those of us who have been watching Moral Orel since the beginning know that the show is more complex than it appears on the surface. The inner tensions within his own family and the other grown ups in Moralton were hinted at in the first season and have come more into focus this season. I'm not a television writer, but I imagine trying to meld the funny and the emotional into an eleven-minute amalgam can't be easy, which is why I think the "slow reveal" approach has worked so well for Moral Orel. In this episode, when Orel finds out his mother might have another family, the scene doesn't feel like it was suddenly sprung on us out of nowhere, because Bloberta's unhappiness and detachment has been part of the show's subtext since it first aired a year ago.
Continue reading Moral Orel: Elemental Orel
Posted Nov 13th 2006 7:01PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Sci-Fi/Supernatural Shows, Celebrities, Sci Fi, Pickups and Renewals
The Dresden Files, which debuts on the Sci Fi Channel in January, sounds somewhat like The X-Files in the way it combines detective work with the supernatural. In this case, however, the detective has supernatural powers himself. The new series, based on the novels by Jim Butcher, focuses on Harry Dresden (Paul Blackthorne), a professional wizard who helps solve cases involving vampires, werewolves and other mystical creatures. Terrence Mann also stars as Dresden's sidekick, a centuries-old spirit who lives inside a human skull.
An interesting concept, at least, though I wonder what this series will have that will set it apart from other supernatural shows, many of which have not been able to find an audience. That being said, I'd rather see a wizard helping police solve crimes than another series about some psychic doing the same. The further we get from vindicating so-called "real" psychics with fictional dramas the happier I'll be. Besides, I have several leprechaun friends who have been trying to sell a script to HBO for years. I think it's about their time to shine.
Posted Nov 13th 2006 1:54PM by Julia Ward
Filed under: OpEd, The Five, Celebrities, Firefly, The X-Files, Strangers With Candy

With Helen Mirren's Detective Tennison bowing out on
Sunday's Prime Suspect finale, television is losing one of its finest tough broads.
Tough broads have feelings and faults, but they're nobody's baby. They also don't give a crap what you think of them. They dress for utility not for style, and they work -- usually in domains stereotypically belonging to men.
We'll miss you, Detective Tennison. You are the inspiration for this list of tough TV broads - the ones little girls and little boys can look up to.
Continue reading The Five: Tough broads
Posted Nov 12th 2006 9:15AM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, PBS, Web

The final episode (episode? movie? miniseries) of PBS' acclaimed series
Prime Suspect will air tonight (and conclude next Sunday - it's a two-parter, four hours). Tim Goodman over at The Bastard Machine
has a review.
It's titled
Prime Suspect: The Final Act and chronicles detective Jane Tennison's last case before retirement (she's almost 60 now), involving the search for a missing 14 year-old girl, a case that's a lot more complex than she first realizes. It also involves Tennison's heavy drinking and blackouts and sadness. OK, so it's not the most uplifting drama.
Actually, Helen Mirren has always given fantastic performances in these shows (she has won an Emmy for Best Actress and the show itself has won three Emmys), and Goodman says that this one is no exception. The state of Florida even figures into this last episode.
Posted Oct 10th 2006 2:16PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, NBC, Celebrities
Former Thief star Malik Yoba will return to TV on the new Jeff Goldblum drama for NBC, Raines. He'll play the former partner of Goldblum's detective character.
Oh, what's this one about? It's about a guy who solves crimes by...speaking to the dead! What an original concept!
Seriously, what's up with that? Medium isn't enough? And Ghost Whisperer? And doesn't the guy on The Dead Zone see people who are dead? Heck, even the blonde on Cold Case sees a "ghost" of the victim at the end of every episode.
I don't remember Columbo or Banacek or Barnaby Jones having to talk to the dead to solve crimes.
Posted Sep 23rd 2006 11:02AM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Celebrities, TNT

Holly Hunter will be starring in a new pilot for TNT titled
Grace. Hunter will play an Oklahoma City detective who is visited by an angel (played by
Deadwood's Leon Rippy) who tries to help her redeem her life. Laura San Giacomo of
Just Shoot Me will play Hunter's best friend, and Bokeem Woodbine will play a convict who can also see the angel. I don't know about the rest of you, but I can't recall any television series with an angel as one of the main characters that I actually enjoyed. I know that both
Highway to Heaven and
Touched by an Angel were about as interesting to me as watching an ice cube melt. Nevertheless, we all enjoy different things, so what do the rest of you think? Does this show sound interesting? I will admit that I've always really liked Holly Hunter as an actress, and still harbor a slight school boy crush on Laura San Giacomo, but other than that there's not much pulling me towards this show.
Posted Jul 21st 2006 8:04PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Comedy Shows, NBC, Programming, USA, Psych
USA Network's new series Psych has proven to be quite popular. In fact, it had the highest-rated debut for a scripted series on basic cable this year. NBC will be bringing two episodes of the series to the network on August 7 and August 14, so if you don't have cable and have been wondering what all the noise surrounding the show is about, this'll be your chance. The episode "Spellingg Bee" will air on August 7 and "Speak Now or Forever Hold Your Piece" will air on August 14, both at 9 p.m. The show follows the adventures of Shawn Spencer, an intuitive man with a keen sense of observation who tricks authorities into believing he's psychic so they'll hire him to help solve cases.
Posted Jul 19th 2006 9:05PM by Adam Finley
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, Celebrities, TNT
(S01E03) Writers are the most shameless, self-centered bastards in the world. We lie, we seduce, we'll steal your soul. Anything to look good on the page. -Sam Landry
I thought I had read every story from Nightmares and Dreamscapes, and I might have, but nothing about "Umney's Last Case" was familiar when I read it just recently. Nevertheless, it's not a bad story, and it's also very "meta" as the college kids like to say.
In the story, as in the TV adaptation, we begin in the 1930s where a grizzled private eye named Clyde Umney is leading a storybook life that he'll soon learn is more "storybook" than he realizes. He wields snappy dialogue with the precision of a trapeze artist, and always knows just what to say to get what he wants, at one point managing to turn two women to jelly in his office one after the other.
Continue reading Nightmares and Dreamscapes: Umney's Last Case
Posted Jun 8th 2006 5:49PM by Bob Sassone
Filed under: Other Drama Shows, TV Royalty, Talent, Celebrities

I heard this many years ago, and now
TV Guide's Televisionary
talks about it after getting a question from a reader.
When
Columbo first started in the late 60s (first as the movie
Prescription Murder, and then as part of the
NBC Mystery Movie in the 70s), they never said what Columbo's first name was. He was always just "Lt. Columbo" or "Columbo," and they never even played with the audience in any way, like showing a piece of paper with a thumb blocking his first name or anything like that. They just never addressed it. But when a spinoff show was made in the 80s (yes, there was a spinoff to
Columbo),
Kate Columbo, they finally revealed his name as "Philip." The spinoff did what Columbo did, only in reverse: they showed his wife all the time, solving mysteries, but they never showed her husband. I remember seeing this show, and it wasn't that great. Later they even changed the name of the show to get rid of the
Columbo connection.
Now, this doesn't mean that his first name was "officially" Philip. It might be one of those cases where some other show answered a question, but it was never made official, sort of like how the new
Superman movie pretends that
Superman III and
IV never happened. But it's a cool trivia question to ask your friends.
Update: As reader Bill points out in the comments, check out the
Wikipedia page on
Columbo for more clues about his first name.
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