[Dormant, move to !television@lemm.ee] Shows and TV

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It’s no Fallout... but it ain’t Uncharted, either.

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cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/18997841

Beloved children’s TV series Pingu is set to be revived in a new adaptation from Barbie company Mattel and Wallace & Gromit creators Aardman.

The original Pingu launched on BBC One in 1990. A Swiss-German production, the TV series was designed by Otmar Gutmann, and followed the adventures of an impish penguin in the South Pole. The character was known for his catchphrase, “Noot noot”.

Pingu originally ran until 2000, and was briefly revived on British TV between 2003 and 2006.

The new series will be stop-motion animation, in the same vein as the original.

Mattel Television Studios, the TV arm of toy conglomerate Mattel, acquired the rights to Pingu in 2011 when it purchased HIT Entertainment.

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cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/18994156

Egotistical actors, meddling executives, extras suffering panic attacks from beneath their prosthetic make-up – the new Sam Mendes-Armando Iannucci-produced comedy The Franchise is a fictional series inspired by real-life drama behind the scenes of superhero movies.

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Overall, the vibe is one of barely-contained chaos – a reflection, says showrunner Jon Brown, of the off-camera reality of the superhero industry.

“People think these movies are laid out in neat phases for the next 10 years. Then you hear about a set where, in the morning, a limo literally pulls up, the window comes down, and they hand out new script pages,” Brown explained. “Or producers on set have eight versions of the same script open, and they go through each script, cherry picking lines, and then they Frankenstein a scene out of nothing.”

The Franchise is watchable, though tremendously sneery of nerd culture – you can tell everyone involved is delighted superhero movies are on their uppers and that the day of geek in popular culture is at an end. But setting to one side such unfortunate snobbery, its portrayal of Hollywood anarchy is right on the money – as the following countdown of real-life superhero movie disasters confirms.

  1. Marlon Brando v Superman, 1978
  2. Batman & Robin – Mr Freeze’s Gun Vanishes, 1997
  3. Wesley Snipes v Ryan Reynolds, Blade: Trinity, 2004
  4. Superman Can’t Fly, 1996
  5. Superman Returns takes to the skies without a script, 2006
  6. Edward Norton, aka The Incredible Sulk, 2008
  7. Elon Musk in Iron Man 2, 2010
  8. Josh Trank v Fantastic Four, 2015
  9. Jared Leto jokes around on Suicide Squad, 2016
  10. Justice League v Henry Cavill’s Moustache, 2017

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'Shogun', 'Rivals' and 'Slow Horses' prove book to TV adaptations continue to work globally.

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!dcstudios@lemmy.world

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