Tampilkan postingan dengan label Mad Dogs. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Mad Dogs. Tampilkan semua postingan

Rabu, 11 Mei 2011

Sky confirm 'Mad Dogs' series 2, maybe 3


Sky have revealed their well-received drama Mad Dogs will return for a second series. The sun-kissed thriller, about a group of childhood friends reunited in Majorca, who become embroiled in a violent murder-mystery when one of them is killed, was a hit for Sky1 earlier this year. Max Beesley, Philip Glenister, John Simm and Marc Warren have also been optioned for a third series, if one gets commissioned. Four new episodes of the BAFTA-nominated show will be filmed soon, for an early-2012 release.

Andy Harries, Executive Producer:

"Mad Dogs had such an impact that it was as obvious as a dead goat that we had to do more and all the our amazing cast felt the same."
Suzanne Mackie, Executive Producer:

"Before we had finished the first series of Mad Dogs we felt that there was so much more to do with these characters. I have been working with Cris Cole on the scripts ever since we finished shooting series one and the ideas for series two and three are every bit as explosive and inventive as they were at the beginning."
SPOILERS BEGIN. Series 2 will pick up "where series one ended -- with Woody, Baxter and Rick driving away from the villa as Quinn has chosen to stay and make a new life in Majorca. In the opening scenes viewers will see Woody, Baxter and Rick have a change of heart and turn back. However, it isn’t long before they realise they’ve made the wrong move setting themselves on an even more misguided course. In the series two opener viewers will see another killing and an escape with the drug money but can they really make a getaway when there are people who want their money back? The complicated situation the friends have found themselves in continues to spin wildly out of control and surely it can only be a matter of time before they face their day of reckoning..." SPOILERS END.

I have mixed feelings about this news. I was under the impression Mad Dogs was a finite story when it was airing, and it certainly ended in a way that didn't seem to require more. For me, the first two episodes were really good, but the final two struggled to finish the story in a satisfying way. I can't see a creative reason for a second series, really. Will we follow the surviving characters on the run, trying to escape the island, with bent cops on their tails? I don't know, this news makes as much sense as a sequel to Shallow Grave right now.

What do you think? Are you glad Mad Dogs is coming back? Is there really more story to tell here, or is this just servicing Sky's need for original UK drama? Do you think a second and third series is justified?

Jumat, 04 Maret 2011

'MAD DOGS' - Part Four


I'm not going to lie: the climax to Mad Dogs was a disappointment. In retrospect, this miniseries can now be divided into halves (the engrossing first two episodes; and the choppy final two). There was a great low-budget British indie movie to be made from this premise, unwisely stretched to four hours of weekly TV. Thank goodness it had a strong cast giving it their best (particularly Marc Warren, unexpectedly), because otherwise it would have been hard to stay engaged with this holiday misadventure's second half.

In "Part Four", Quinn (Philip Glenister), Baxter (John Simm), Woody (Max Beesley) and Rick (Marc Warren) were forced to barricade themselves in the villa -- convinced the Serbian Mafia are lurking outside, launching distress flares and patrolling the grounds with laser-sighted riles. It's a siege. The gang became trapped indoors with limited provisions (a few bottles of water and Cokes) as the villa's electricity and water supplies were turned off and the baking Majorcan heat started to make tempers flare. In particular, Rick confronted Quinn about him allegedly sleeping with his wife, Baxter ranted about the struggles he's faced trying to survive various business upsets, and Woody vented his spleen to detective Maria (Maria Botto), who arrived on the edge of the villa's ground offering the boys leniency if they come clean about what happened to Alvo and the missing drug money from the boat the police have now found.

Two things ultimately spoiled Mad Dogs for me. Firstly, the situation started to unravel after episode 2, but particularly in this finale. The gang theorized that the Mafia don't want them dead because they know where their drug money is. Okay, but if that's true, why don't the Mafia storm the villa and torture them for this information? Didn't they wonder why the Mafia are also drawing attention to themselves by launching distress flares around the villa? And why were they cowering in their villa half the time, but then walking around outside to see Maria at the perimeter fence? Maria happily walked into the villa grounds in episode 2, so why was she suddenly very respectful of their privacy?

Secondly, the reveal of the overall "mystery" (via collected video footage Baxter pored over) was disappointingly flat and, frankly, made it feel that there wasn't much of a mystery to begin with. The Serbian Mafia didn't actually exist, the drug deal was between criminals and the Majorcan police, Maria was involved in the "inside job", and Alvo was killed because he didn't agree to help a Mr Dominic make the drop on Jesus' boat. We certainly got answers, which was good, but... they weren't very surprising. There was no deep reason for why Alvo gathered his friends together (I was hoping for some kind of long con), or why he was being so rude to them during their first day together, and no clever twist in "Part Four" to make you re-evaluate the preceding three hours. Maybe it was wrong of audiences to expect a mind-spinning twist, but a satisfying resolution didn't even materialize. Quinn shot Maria dead in the villa's pool before she could kill his friends (a surprise you could see coming given Quinn's absence), then sent his friends off to the airport with 20 grand each, and awaited an ambiguous end when a hitman (another bent cop like Maria, assumedly) walked into the villa's grounds cocking a gun.

It was also a disappointment that the show never really expanded beyond the villa, which gave everything after "Part Two" a cheap feel. Limited locations and characters is no barrier to greatness, but Mad Dogs would have been far more entertaining if the show had become more of a caper set around Majorca. "Part One" suggested we'd be in for a broader story, but every episode since seemed to draw things tighter. Maybe that was intentional -- to show the walls closing in on the friends and force them to really start communicating with each other -- but I can't help wishing Mad Dogs had been more outgoing. There wasn't enough of interest to make me care about the beef Quinn has with Rick, or Baxter has with Woody. It makes sense they cast four recognizable actors like Glenister, Simm, Beesley and Warren, as they imbued those character with more dynamism than what was on the page.

It's a shame Mad Dog didn’t manage a strong finish, as that's soured my overall opinion of this four-part drama. It's also tough to recommend the DVD to Sky-less friends, knowing that so much of the initial promise fades into watching four men in fancy dress try to attack a local Majorcan in a pincer movement. It got off to a great start and I enjoyed "Part Two", but the story hit some bumps in "Part Three" and ultimately fizzled out. Maybe two 90-minute episodes would have been a better format, to keep expectations grounded instead of building to unrealistic heights.

This hasn't been a very popular run of reviews, which I think it a shame, but does anyone have an abiding thought about Mad Dogs and Sky's approach to homegrown drama?

written by Cris Cole / directed by Adrian Shergold / 3 March 2011 / Sky1/HD

Jumat, 25 Februari 2011

'MAD DOGS' - Part Three


If "Part One" was setup and intrigue, and "Part Two" was aftermath and reaction, "Part Three" should have deepened the mystery in preparation for the finale. It didn't quite achieve that, as the story's annoyingly cagey about revealing much about the circumstances behind Alvo's murder, which is beginning to make me suspect the answers will be a disappointment. "Part Three" leaned on the show's farcical side (a corpse was accidentally dropped overboard as a party-boat playing Aqua's "Barbie Girl" sailed past with women flashing their breasts; a short, angry gangster was lowered into a well for safe-keeping), although sometimes the comedy felt forced and witless (like pondering the PC term for a midget), and I was annoyed by the stupidity of detective Maria (Maria Botto) this week, who could have solved the case by staking out the villa and following her four suspect's movements.

The disposal of Alvo's putrefying body was again the driving force of the plot, with the boys convinced that chopping off their dead mate's hands and dumping him on Jesus' stolen yacht will make the cops think he was killed by the Serbian Mafia in "a drug deal gone bad", as Maria believes the Mafia were behind Jesus' own murder. I'm disappointed Mad Dogs didn't widen its scope here, or put the gang on the offensive, as they're still floundering around with no idea what they're caught up in. Why was Alvo shot dead? Are the Serbian Mafia involved? Did the Mafia kill Jesus? If so, why? And why are the four people who witnessed Alvo's hit being kept alive?

It was also a real shame that Maria's role was reduced to a few brief scenes here, as she was a wonderfully peculiar screen presence in "Part Two". The fact it was revealed she has the gang's video of their trip on Jesus yacht made for a good cliffhanger last week, but that didn't impact this episode's events in the slightest. Why doesn't she arrest them? And, as I said, she'd have cracked the case by simply following them around, as they rarely leave the villa without carrying a dead body or drug money.

Tiny Blair (sans mask) also returned to antagonize the gang and demand they tell him where Jesus' yacht is, in broken English, but why didn't he interrogate them after shooting Alvo? And as this week's cliffhanger involved Tiny Blair being found dead in the villa's deep freezer, with a note saying "we told you not to go to the police", the whole thing is a real puzzle.

Overall, "Part Three" was the weakest installment of Mad Dogs yet, which I wouldn't have expected from a penultimate episode. Still, there was a stronger emphasis on the characters than "Part Two", with nerves beginning to shred. In particular, Rick (Marc Warren) started to annoy everyone by openly discussed Quinn's (Philip Glenister) failures and the £5,000 he's still owed by Baxter (John Simm). Quinn was also in a reflective mood, admitting he wishes he never had children because of what it did to his marriage ("... as soon as you have that kid, the love that you had for each other is consigned to history") and pontificating about how people don't control their destinies these days. Some great moments from a great cast, and I'm eager to see how writer Cris Cole draws everything together for next week's finale. I just hope the mystery isn't revealed to be something rather basic, hence why there's been so much weirdness to throw us off the scent.

written by Cris Cole / directed by Adrian Shergold / 24 February 2011 / Sky1/HD

Jumat, 18 Februari 2011

'MAD DOGS' - Part Two


Last week's opener was a slow-burn setup to the shocking climax, where well-heeled Alvo (Ben Chaplin) was shot in the head by an undersized gangster wearing a grinning Tony Blair mask, in full view of the four friends he'd invited to his luxury Majorcan villa. Part Two dealt with the immediate aftermath of the bloody murder; resulting in a less languorous pace, if ultimately giving things a less innovative, insidious feel.

The key thing this episode had to do was make it seem plausible the gang wouldn't just call the police to report Alvo's murder, as they've done nothing (knowingly) illegal and have each other as support. This was handled very well: the shooter "Tony Blair" (Tomas Pozzi) incriminated Baxter (John Simm) by smearing his saliva on the murder weapon; "Tony" was seen driving away in a police car (placing doubt in everyone's mind that the police are even trustworthy); Baxter reasoned that implicating the cops would make theirs a federal case, meaning they'd be stuck in Majorca for months awaiting trial; and Woody (Max Beesley) realized it looks very suspicious that they arrived on the island and Alvo's villa was signed over to them, shortly before he was killed.

Matters were also nicely complicated the next morning (after the boys had scrubbed the murder scene clean and buried Alvo in the garden) when Spanish detective Maria (MarĂ­a Botto) arrived at the villa, looking for Alvo in relation to Jesus' stolen yacht. The guys spun a story about Alvo having gone to the mainland on business until Tuesday, to satisfy Maria's nosiness, before Rick (Marc Warren) remembered he'd left the DV camera of their holiday footage on the abandoned yacht, prompting a trip to the vessel for another cleanup. And while there, they found themselves caught in the middle of an exchange with drug-dealers, who handed them €3 million. Involving money is the point Mad Dogs really started to resemble a sun-drenched version of Danny Boyle's Shallow Grave for me -- with the friends deciding to cover their tracks, stash the €3 million somewhere safe, continue their holiday, and return home.

If you didn't enjoy the easygoing pace of last week, Part Two was much livelier and nicely broadened the story. I particularly enjoyed Botto's performance as the peculiarly friendly detective, who nevertheless sensed something's amiss about the four men. At times Maria felt like a headmistress arriving to see what four naughty schoolboys have been up to behind their teacher's back (notice how she held Baxter's hand when she took him in for questioning?) This episode built to scenes where Maria interviewed each of them individually at the villa (after they'd hidden Alvo's body in a freezer, having sliced his feet off with an electric knife to fit), and various discrepancies in their story came to light.

Will the foursome split into pairs soon? There were signs here that Baxter and Quinn (Philip Glenister) are closer friends; likewise Rick and Woody. Right now the boys are united as a foursome, but I'm wondering how long it'll be before desperation has them turning on each other.

Overall, Part Two was a strong continuation of this four-part story and definitely better paced. It's certainly an advantage with UK dramas that exist to tell a single story, over a finite period of time. We had the setup and exposition in Part One, Part Two was all about reaction to the aftermath, and I'm sure the remaining two hours will explain exactly what's going on. What was Alvo caught up in? Did he lure his friends to the villa to pin the blame for something on them? Was he killed over the yacht theft, or for something else? I also keep wondering if the whole thing's an elaborate hoax or "game", until I remember that Alvo's definitely dead and surely nobody's that committed to a practical joke!

The only problem with Part Two, in comparison to last week, is that we didn't really learn anything about the characters, and most of the plot was instead driven by hide-the-corpse/money black comedy. There's such a brilliant cast involved in Mad Dogs that you can't help wanting to get under the skin of their characters, but beyond Rick poking fun at Woody's chiseled physique (shades of Alvo's mickey-taking last week), there wasn't much fleshing out of the four leads. It was all about seeing how they reacted to a horrendous situation.

Mad Dogs is proving itself one of the more entertaining British dramas in awhile; beautifully filmed, nicely acted, with a storyline you can't help feeling gripped by. I can't wait to see how it pans out, how about you?

Asides

  • I wasn't convinced by the gang's plan to dig up Alvo's body and plant it on the yacht, so the cops will eventually find him and think a drug deal went south. Forensics would surely detect Alvo's body was recently covered in earth, right?
  • I wondered how long it would take Max Beesley to deliver full frontal nudity.
  • I didn't like Part One's flashforward opening, but the same device worked a lot better here; with the four lad's sitting by the pool and the surprise arrival of detective Maria.
  • The mannequin being used as Alvo's dead body was, unfortunately, quite apparent.
written by Cris Cole / directed by Adrian Shergold / 17 February 2011 / Sky1/HD

Sabtu, 12 Februari 2011

TV Ratings: 'Mad Dogs', Sky1


Sky1's new drama Mad Dogs got off to a great start on Thursday night at 9pm, with 960,000 viewers tuning in for Part One. My guess is that the star-power of the four leads (Philip Glenister, John Simm, Max Beesley, Ben Chaplin) was too much to resist, particularly on an evening that's hardly flowing with TV gems. There was also another effective marketing campaign.

I can't imagine many of that 960k not watching Part Two next week, given this opener's stunning climax that almost demands you watch more. I'm just glad Sky are channelling some of their cash into an original homegrown series, given all the emphasis that's been placed on Sky's US acquisitions this year. Incidentally, while Mad Dogs was clearly a hit with audiences, I was surprised by the lack of comments on my review. Did nobody here care?

Jumat, 11 Februari 2011

'MAD DOGS' - Part One


Take a trip to Obsessed With Film, where I've reviewed the first episode of Sky1's four-part drama MAD DOGS, starring Philip Glenister, John Simm, Marc Warren and Ben Chaplin. There's sun, sea, sand, and a gunman wearing a Tony Blair mask. Are you up for the holiday from hell?

Sky's newfound commitment to original drama continues with the sun-kissed thriller Mad Dogs, where four middle-aged friends -— Woody (Max Beesley), Quinn (Philip Glenister), Baxter (John Simm) and Rick (Marc Warren) -— fly out to Majorca to spend a week at their mutual pal Alvo's (Ben Chaplin) luxurious villa, at his invitation, to get reacquainted and relive their youth. A simple setup for a ribald comedy-drama about midlife crisis, but Mad Dogs has more sinister and surreal things playing on its mind. Continue reading...