Been watching some new stuff this week. Well, new to me anyway;
Alcatraz - about prisoners coming back from the past. not a terrible premise but ultimately a bit boring
Touch - about a kid who seems quite damaged but writes numbers everywhere. then stuff happens around those numbers. his dad (Keifer Sutherland) spends his time being the sympathetic single dad and running round trying to unravel the mystery. It's quite a good premise but I found myself unwowed by it. This (like alcatraz) seems to be trying to ride the wave of stuff like lost. Thing is that was Lost was good where this I'm afraid isn't very.
bringing me to something that I have been wowed by
Sons of Anarchy - absolutely mental depiction of life inside a biker Gang in the wonderfully named town of Charming. Quintessentially American, bawdy, really quite violent most of the time, verging well into proper nasty at times, but humorous and caring as well. Clay (Ron Perlman) is the gang's leader, his step son (Jacks, played by some dude I've never seen before) is the biological son of the gang's original leader, who seems to have been a bit of a philosopher but died on the road, leaving behind a biker's manifesto that forms the backbone of the plot arc. Clay is now married to Jacks' mum, played by Katie Sagal (her out of the old Married With Children) only you're not someone's wife in the club, you're their "old Lady". sounds misogynistic and maybe it is but Jemma is no wilting violet, a true matriarch, as we find out in the second series. Club is family and family comes first. Clay is aging and at some point won't be able to ride anymore (if you can't ride, you can't lead), Jacks is up and coming, VP of the club and with the ear of the younger members plus more than a few of the old guard who remain loyal to his dad. Both are outlaw crims but Jacks is more of the philosophical anarchist looking for life and freedom whereas clay is a balls out arms dealer and hoer shagger. Jacks' idea of the straight and narrow is fronting up a porn business. the main plot arc is their clash of heads in a contest to push their club in the direction they see fit. It's clear from the outset that there's more to Jack's father's death than it appears and I'm fairly sure we're going to find out at some point that Perlman had him killed, probably with the involvement of Jack's mum, although that is less clear (but she's definitely keeping a big secret for him). I've finished the 2nd series and it's bloody brilliant up to there.
plus, they just started screening
True Justice Segal's TV cop series over here. the tag line is "Some lines should never be crossed" ... a better summary of Segal's career I have never heard. I've warmed up the PVP. I'm expecting it to be beyond terrible. should be fun