‘Warehouse 13’: Season 2 DVD review
Warehouse 13 is a fun show with a big heart, ideal for the layman who dabbles in geekery, or the geek who doesn’t mind a bit of a dumbing down.
Warehouse 13 is a fun show with a big heart, ideal for the layman who dabbles in geekery, or the geek who doesn’t mind a bit of a dumbing down.
Eureka is a title you will already associate with all manner of science related shows, hence it is known on British television by its extended moniker, A Town Called Eureka.
So this is it: the last season of anything Stargate-related for the foreseeable future. It’s such a shame, and not just because the series ends on yet another cliffhanger.
For the first time since taking over as the Doctor, Jon Pertwee gets to step outside the cosseted confines of UNIT Headquarters and leave his enforced exile on Earth behind.
After the surprise success that was Season 1 of the US sitcom Modern Family, the natural question arose – would the makers of this show be able to continue the high quality of the award-winning and ratings smash?
Few comedies can successfully turn physics into punchlines, but The Big Bang Theory hits its fourth year on DVD with a confident and unashamedly nerdy stride.
As Dexter villains go, the Trinity Killer (John Lithgow) – with his love of deer, family, opening femoral arteries and his Yoda-like fascination for the show’s hero – was always going to be a hard act to follow.
Forty-five years after its original transmission as part of The Wednesday Play series, the BBC have re-released one of director Ken Loach’s most feted early works on DVD.
European police procedurals are very much in vogue at the moment following the surprise success of Denmark’s The Killing, but where this Paris-set series suffers somewhat from a surfeit of characters and plot lines.
This is so immersive a world for the viewer that, after only one episode, we longed to put on a v-neck sweater, grease our hair, and smoke an awful lot of cigarettes.