Skip to main content

BBC Three Ignites "Torchwood"

BBC Three has announced that it will make Doctor Who spinoff Torchwood the "centerpiece" of its fall schedule, launching the "sci fi crime thriller" series in October. No plans are currently in place to import the series Stateside, though our neighbors to the north will be able to catch Torchwood on CBC.

Spinning off of one of Doctor Who's most memorable characters, Jack Harkness (John Barrowman), Torchwood will be set in present day Cardiff (that's Wales to you lot) and will surround a group of covert criminal investigators called the Torchwood Institute, an organization commissioned by Queen Victoria and tasked with investigating alien technology. The team will be headquartered at The Hub, located beneath Cardiff Bay, the site of the TARDIS' landing in "Boom Town" and the location of the rift discussed in "The Unquiet Dead."

Created by current Doctor Who writer/producer Russell T. Davies, Torchwood stars John Barrowman as bisexual time traveller/con man Jack Harkness and Eve Myles as former police officer Gwen Cooper. Astute Doctor Who fans may remember Myles from the Who episode "The Unquiet Dead," where she played the role of the similarly named Gwyneth. (Whether Gwen and Gwyneth are the same character has yet to be confirmed, but the fact that Myles' previous Who episode dealt with the rift adds credence to that theory.)

Joining Barrowman and Myles are Bleak House's Burn Gorman, who will play Torchwood Institute medic Owen Harper, and Absolutely Fabulous' Naoko Mori, who will reprise the role of Toshiko Sato from the Doctor Who episode "Aliens of London."

Doctor Who writer/producer Russell T. Davies has written the first of thirteen episodes. He'll be joined on the series by writers Chris Chibnall, co-creator of Life on Mars, and P.J. Hammond, creator of 1980s cult classic Sapphire & Steel (which starred Mori's Absolutely Fabulous castmate Joanna Lumley), among others.

Torchwood is, of course, a clever anagram of Doctor Who and was originally used as a codename for the current incarnation of Doctor Who, before taking on a life of its own during the series.

I can only hope that we here in the States will eventually be lucky enough to watch Torchwood, though I'm still waiting for an official announcement about when Sci-Fi will air the second (sadly, Eccleston-free) season of Doctor Who.

What's On Tonight

8 pm: Rock Star: Supernova (CBS); America's Got Talent (NBC; 8-10 pm); Blue Collar TV/Blue Collar TV (WB); The One: Making a Music Star (ABC); So You Think You Can Dance (FOX); America's Next Top Model (UPN)

9 pm: Criminal Minds (CBS); One Tree Hill (WB); Lost (ABC); So You Think You Can Dance (FOX); Eve/Half and Half (UPN)

10 pm: CSI: New York (CBS); Law & Order (NBC); Primetime (ABC)

What I'll Be Watching

10 pm: Project Runway on Bravo.

Is it just me or is anyone else still upset that aristocratic vampire Malan was auf wiedersehen'd last week? It just didn't seem fair, though that dress did look like a withered old log. Tune in tonight for another new episode of my new reality fix.

Comments

Anonymous said…
"Torchwood" sounds so cool! I really, really hope that we will get to see it (and the second season of "Dr. Who") here in the states. Fingers crossed!

Oh, and I was also sad that Malan was booted off of "Project Runway." He was odd but at least he had some sort of vision. Even if it was of tree-inspired frocks.
Anonymous said…
It's bizarre - I couldn't STAND Malan. Yet, by the time he left last week I was so sad. His mom THREW HIS DRAWINGS ON THE FLOOR!!!!

He shouldn't have gone. Whats-her-name, who is about as useful as Andrea from Top Chef should have gone. Or, better yet, that older guy, who I really can't stand.
Jace Lacob said…
OMG, Whatshername (i.e. Angela) totally should have gone home. Loved your analogy; she is beyond a doubt the "Andrea" of Project Runway.

And poor Malan. I couldn't believe his mother would stomp on his dreams like that. I felt awful that after all of that he was booted off Runway in the second episode...
Tidmore said…
I can't wait for Torchwood. But as I'm sure you know there are ways to see the show (and the 2nd Season of Doctor Who) before it airs here (if it ever does) In fact Davies in an American interview told American fans to d/l the episodes and if the producer says it's okay, then I think it must be okay!
Also don't worry about the second series being Eccelston free, because David Tennant quickly comes into his own and (In my humble opinion) is far superior than Eccelston (And I loved Eccelston.
Jace Lacob said…
Hey Tidmore,

When it comes to television, I am definitely a purist and can't quite succumb to watching series on my computer. It's just not the same to me. Though given the lag between seasons of Doctor Who, it is making it all the more tempting.

While I love Eccleston, I'm also a huge David Tennant fan (see "Viva Blackpool") and am really looking forward to his take on the Doctor... and you're not the first to tell me that he's actually *better* than his predecessor.
Tidmore said…
I totally understand the purist, but when a show is as good as "The Doctor" I don't like to wait, mainly because somehow, someone will, inadvertently ruin it for me. Of course when you have a DVD player that plays DIVX files you can burn the show onto a DVD and watch it on your tv.
It's amazing how many great British shows are out there, that watching Doctor Who has introduced me to, Life on Mars, Hustle, Jonathan Creek, The Office (British verions, I've loved the American one for awhile), Ed v. Spencer, Hex. I love them all.
BTW just found your site a few days ago and love it!

Popular posts from this blog

Katie Lee Packs Her Knives: Breaking News from Bravo's "Top Chef"

The android has left the building. Or the test kitchen, anyway. Top Chef 's robotic host Katie Lee Joel, the veritable "Uptown Girl" herself (pictured at left), will NOT be sticking around for a second course of Bravo's hit culinary competition. According to a well-placed insider, Joel will "not be returning" to the show. No reason for her departure was cited. Unfortunately, the perfect replacement for Joel, Top Chef judge and professional chef Tom Colicchio, will not be taking over as the reality series' host (damn!). Instead, the show's producers are currently scouring to find a replacement for Joel. Top Chef 's second season was announced by Bravo last month, but no return date has been set for the series' ten-episode sophomore season. Stay tuned as this story develops. UPDATE (6/27): Bravo has now confirmed the above story .

BuzzFeed: Meet The TV Successor To "Serial"

HBO's stranger-than-fiction true crime documentary The Jinx   — about real estate heir Robert Durst — brings the chills and thrills missing since Serial   wrapped up its first season. Serial   obsessives: HBO's latest documentary series is exactly what you've been waiting for.   The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst , like Sarah Koenig's beloved podcast, sifts through old documents, finds new leads from fresh interviews, and seeks to determine just what happened on a fateful day in which the most foul murder was committed. And, also like  Serial  before it,  The Jinx may also hold no ultimate answer to innocence or guilt. But that seems almost beside the point; such investigations often remain murky and unclear, and guilt is not so easy a thing to be judged. Instead, this upcoming six-part tantalizing murder mystery, from director Andrew Jarecki ( Capturing the Friedmans ), is a gripping true crime story that unfolds with all of the speed of a page-turner; it

BuzzFeed: "The Good Wife Is The Best Show On Television Right Now"

The CBS legal drama, now in its sixth season, continually shakes up its narrative foundations and proves itself fearless in the process. Spoilers ahead, if you’re not up to date on the show. At BuzzFeed, you can read my latest feature, " The Good Wife Is The Best Show On Television Right Now," in which I praise CBS' The Good Wife and, well, hail it as the best show currently on television. (Yes, you read that right.) There is no need to be delicate here: If you’re not watching The Good Wife, you are missing out on the best show on television. I won’t qualify that statement in the least — I’m not talking about the best show currently airing on broadcast television or outside of cable or on premium or however you want to sandbox this remarkable show. No, the legal drama is the best thing currently airing on any channel on television. That The Good Wife is this perfect in its sixth season is reason to truly celebrate. Few shows embrace complexity and risk-taking in t