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http://www.tvguide.co.uk/gadget.asp.

IMPORTANT NOTICE: SITE MOVE

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Anyone who types mindaudacity2 to will be re-directed to the new site home,I hope you will still visit us at our new home. All posts have moved to the new address.

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BBC Three, Being Human: Series 4, Episode one: Eve of the War Preview Clip

George and Tom launch a surprise attack.

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Source: BBC

Brand New: Gallery Of StreetDance 2 3D Posters

‘Being Human’ Video Interview: Q&A With Damien Molony

Being Human returns for a fourth series tonight at 9pm on BBC Three, with Aiden Turner‘s  “Mitchell” staked at the end of series three, a new vampire is in town in the shape of Damien Molony as “Hal” who’s set to move into Honolulu Heights with Ghost Annie (Lenora Crichlow) and werewolf Tom (Michael Socha).

Being Human new boy Damien Molony chats to Digital Spy

Vodpod videos no longer available.

Source: Digital Spy

Alex Kingston Hints At Doctor Who Return

In an interview with Graham Norton set to air on Friday at 10:35pm on BBC1, Doctor Whos River Song, actress Alex Kingston has hinted that she may be set to reprise her role as Amy Pond’s daughter in the sci-fi series, as well as admitting how long she knew the true identity of her character.


Alex, who made her first appearance in the Doctor Who episode “Silence in the Library,” has appeared with both David Tennant and Matt Smith in the title role. Alex, who can next be seen in the second series of Upstairs Downstairs, said: “You may see her again. Who knows?” adding: “Let’s just say, Upstairs Downstairs and Doctor Who don’t film at the same time.”

Talking about how long she knew the secret that her character River Song was the daughter of the Doctor’s assistants Amy and Rory Pond she said: “I knew…for the whole of the last series,” she admitted. “[The other actors] didn’t know and were constantly trying to get it out of me. They discovered it in that episode [A Good Man Goes to War] when they read the script.”

Source

Ken Follett’s World Without End Mini-Series – Behind the Scenes – Videos

Video Diary 1 – Building the Sets

Vodpod videos no longer available.

Video Diary 2 – Workshop

Vodpod videos no longer available.

Video Diary 3 – Location Scouting

Vodpod videos no longer available.

Inside Men Episode 1 Review

The opening of Inside Men is a stunning piece of television that has you gripped from the start as the Counting House that John (played by Steven MacKintosh) manages is infiltrated by a gang of robbers in a brutal manner, all the while the voice-over of John explaining the protocol of an attack in a calm manner as the music score keeps you gripped to the fate of this man from the start.


I really enjoyed the story, the characters and the brave outlook shown in allowing the violent scenes and a drama of this manner to be commissioned. Some might say a bit too violent, but in reality, I doubt many robbers are going to be concerned with the welfare of the staff. However…a new element is added when we discover that it’s the staff who are in fact the ones doing the heist and we go back and forwards in time to show the planning and how the heist came about.

John is mild-mannered and a bit of a walk over afraid of confrontation, he never takes risks and even makes up missing money for an easy life. He has become stuck in a routine, where his work, and his marriage to Kirsty (Nicola Walker) although nothing wrong with them have become tedious. However that changes when he realises two of his employees Marcus (Warren Brown) and Chris (Ashley Walters) have stolen fifty thousand pounds. Instead of reporting them he decides to join them in stealing, but only for all the cash of the counting house, and so the planning for the heist begins.

All the characters are likable. Marcus is a forklift driver at the counting house; he’s a happy-go-lucky guy, who doesn’t think through his actions first, he lives with his girlfriend Gina (Kierston Wareing) and has a failed hairdressing business. It’s Marcus who comes up with the idea first, he wants to give his girlfriend the luxury lifestyle, he just doesn’t have the brains to know how to do it without getting caught, unlike John and Chris. Chris is a security guard at the depot who starts a relationship with 17 year-old Dita (Leila Mimmack) after she gets fired from her job for stealing, he’s also dealing with an alcoholic mother, but things are set to change for him as he gets shot in the leg in the heist.


Most of the cast have appeared in Luther or TopBoy, both great dramas. The cast is first-rate, as is the script, and production, so far it’s certainly shaping up to be the best drama of 2012. I’d even go as far as to say It even tips Sherlock. There’s a moral dilemma for the viewer as much as we know the heist is wrong, you can’t help but want them to get away with it. If they do remains to be seen; the BBC has commissioned a gem in Inside Men and I can’t wait to see the rest.

Vampire Diaries Season 3 Poster

Source: EW

Prisoner’s Wives Series 1 Episode 1 Review

Be honest, when you heard the title you thought of Footballers Wives, didn’t you? Does it compare? Or do it any favours for that matter? No! If you want deep thought-provoking drama, you’ll want to look elsewhere (not that I’m saying FW was that at all). But if you want an hour of TV that you can just sit and enjoy then yeah its a bit like Footballers Wives in that respect, although I cringed at the line “I’m your dream ticket.”
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