Showing posts with label Austin Powers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Austin Powers. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 February 2012

A Time When Free Love No Longer Reigned And Corruption Ruled

Is how Basil Exposition describes 1997 in Austin Powers: International Man Of Mystery while predicting the return of Dr. Evil.

1997 was the year that Tony Blair was elected Prime Minister, Diana Princess of Wales died in a car crash, the Hale-Bopp comet reached its closest to Earth and an episode of Pokémon caused seizures in hundreds of Japanese children days after the trading card game was blessed by the Vatican for its lack of "harmful moral side effects."

In 1997, I was in My Fair Lady at school.

These are a few of my favorite things from 1997:

Film
The Ice Storm
This look at suburban escapism and sexual politics in two families has a fascinating tone to it, the seventies period detail is impressive and the visuals of the storm itself are amazing. Here's the trailer.

Tomorrow Never Dies
Pierce Brosnan's second outing as Bond is a brilliant tale of mass media manipulation, which in light of the phone-hacking scandal Rupert Murdoch's News Of The World seems all the more apt now than it did on its first release. Michelle Yeoh, Jonathan Pryce, Judi Dench, Geoffrey Palmer, Desmond Llewellyn and Vincent Schiavelli are fantastic. The formula is firing on all cylinders: the car, the gadgets, the stunts, the music and the opening theme are all great (although to put it in perspective, the opening theme was nearly this good). Here's the trailer.

Deconstructing Harry
Woody Allen's film about a writer explores his own emotional shortcoming through a series of vignettes is fantastic. Allen, Hazelle Goodman and Bob Balaban are great and hiring Robin Williams at the height of his popularity and then blurring his face is a very funny notion. Here's the trailer.

Austin Powers: International Man Of Mystery
One part parody to two parts homage, this film evokes sixties-era James Bond with genuine affection and a peculiarly British sense of humour that it apparently takes a Canadian to realise. Mike Myers is fantastic in both his roles and has created two antithetical characters that are equally appealing and infectious. Mimi Rogers, Mindy Sterling, Michael York, Robert Wagner, Charles Napier and Seth Green are great. The set pieces are great and the aftermath of the henchmen's death scenes are fantastic. Here's the trailer.

Jackie Brown
Pam Grier, Samuel L. Jackson and Robert Forster are fantastic in this Blaxploitation-esque film that is better than Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction combined. Here's the trailer.

Grosse Pointe Blank
John Cusack and Dan Ackroyd are great as competing assassins in this very funny comedy film. Any fim that contains the line "I killed the president of Paraguay with a fork. How've you been?" is all right with me, but the dialogue is witty throughot. The soundtrack of eighties hits is great while the muzak during Blank's visit to the convenience store on the site of his childhood home is one of the best uses of music in the history of cinema. Here's the trailer.

TV
Buffy The Vampire Slayer: Welcome To The Hellmouth & The Harvest; Witch; Teacher's Pet; Never Kill A Boy On The First Date; The Pack; Angel; I, Robot...You, Jane; The Puppet Show; Nightmares; Out Of Mind, Out Of Sight; Prophecy Girl; When She Was Bad; Some Assembly Required; School Hard; Inca Mummy Girl; Reptile Boy; Halloween; Lie To Me; The Dark Age; What's My Line?; Ted
From the very first scene of Welcome To The Hellmouth spectacularly subverting the expectations of the audience, Buffy The Vampire Slayer is awesome and practically perfect: the trademark dialogue gets a showcase, the characters of Buffy, Xander, Willow, Cordelia and Giles are all fully formed. Ken Lerner is hilarious as Principal Flutie in the scene about Buffy's transcripts, The Master's entrance is suitably impressive. Buffy and her friends attempt to prevent The Harvest, the first of their apocalypses: Brian Thompson gives great evil, Kristine Sutherland is wonderful as Buffy's mother Joyce and The Master's "You've got something in your eye" line is the first sign that the Big Bad has got a sense of humour. An investigation into a series of attacks by a Witch marks Buffy's first use of the supernatural as a metaphor with a parent reliving their through their children and the psychological horror quotient is up with Cordelia's blindness, another girl's enforced muteness and Catherine Madison's imprisonment. Elizabeth Anne Allen and Robin Riker are both great and the 'out of character' dialogue they're both given is a really nice touch. It may be monster-of-the-week, but Teacher's Pet is not throwaway, but instead with Xander's dream and guitar solo, his tongue-tiedness at meeting Miss French and his embarrassment a discovering why she chose him this is Nicholas Brendon's first chance to shine. Never Kill A Boy On The First Date has a brilliant twist ending. An episode about possession by hyenas should be awful, but The Pack is much better than it must have looked on paper and once again Brendon is superb. Angel is the episode that defines the first season and raises the bar to a mythic level. Alyson Hannigan is always fantastic, so it's about time Willow gets a featured episode and I, Robot...You, Jane is great, Robia LaMorte makes an impressive debut as Jenny Calendar and the last scene is very funny. The Puppet Show expertly and repeatedly misdirects the audience and Armin Shimerman is wonderfully sinister and deadpan as Principal Snyder. As Sunnydale's Nightmares become reality Buffy proves it can provide a fresh take on even the most overused ideas and Buffy's nightmare scene with her father is very hard to watch. Teenage isolation causes invisibility in Out Of Mind, Out Of Sight is another example of Buffy dealing with a subject better than the competition, Charisma Carpenter is wonderful in her first opportunity to show that there is more to Cordelia than meets the eye and the last scene is very "cool". The first season ends with the fantastic Prophecy Girl: Xander practicing asking Buffy out on Willow, Buffy's reaction to finding out she will die, Porky Pig showing on a blood spattered television set, Cordy's driving, everybody liking Buffy's dress and Sarah Michelle Gellar is phenomenal.
After a lovely pop-culture referencing teaser, Season Two makes a bold start with When She Was Bad in which Buffy is a real bitca to everyone and only Cordelia will say so to her face, but this episode creates a brooding atmosphere and the last scene with The Anointed One is very funny. Some Assembly Required is Buffy does Frankenstein and does it in style, the grief stricken Mrs Epps is truly terrifying and it's another chance for Carpenter to shine. Spike and Drusilla turn up with a bang in School Hard and both James Marsters and Juliet Landau make a great debut, but it's also another great episode for Shimerman and Sutherland. Xander falls for an Inca Mummy Girl and the scenes of the gang laughing off the preposterousness of the mummy coming to life and then realising that's exactly what has happened, Willow's costume and Oz's attraction to her are all great. Reptile Boy is an ensemble piece with everyone getting a pretty equal share and Xander as a fraternity pledge and Willow wrestling with her conscience are he highlights. Buffy's first Halloween episode is an absolute classic: Hannigan is great as ghostly chaperone to the others, the first signs of Giles' past are intriguing and the concept that Halloween is usually the supernatural's night off is very nice touch. Lie To Me looks fantastic and the visit to The Sunset Club is wonderfully over the top and the last scene between Buffy and Giles is beautiful. Anthony Stewart Head is wonderful in The Dark Age which turns the audience's expectations of Giles on their head. The two-parter What's My Line? feels epic: Willow and Oz's eventual meeting is very cute, Mister Pfister is the most disgusting demon on the series, the cliffhanger is great, Juliet Landau really comes into her own, "I mock you with my monkey pants!" and Spike and Dru's role reversal. John Ritter is great as Ted, Joyce's new boyfriend and Sutherland is wonderful when given a little more to do, but Gellar is phenomenal when Buffy thinks she has killed another human being.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: The Darkness And The Light; The Begotten; For The Uniform; In Purgatory's Shadow & By Inferno's Light; Doctor Bashir, I Presume?; Business As Usual; Ties Of Blood And Water; Ferengi Love Songs; Soldiers Of The Empire; Children Of Time; Blaze Of Glory; Empok Nor; In The Cards; Call To Arms; A Time To Stand; Rocks And Shoals; Sons And Daughters; Behind The Lines; Favor The Bold & Sacrifice Of Angels; You Are Cordially Invited; Statistical Probabilities; The Magnificent Ferengi
The fifth season continues with The Darkness And The Light which sees a Cardassian taking revenge on Kira and killing off the members of her resistance cell, their debate has fascinating moral ambiguity. Odo's solidity and Kira's pregnancy come to an end in The Begotten and both of them have interesting emotional reactions to their adoptive 'children'. Sisko's pursuit of Eddington pushes him into a very grey moral area in For The Uniform and the allusions to Les Miserables provide an insight into the latter's martyr complex and Kenneth Marshall gives him an unsettling ambiguity. In Purgatory's Shadow & By Inferno's Light are a phenomenal two-parter that shakes up the status quo of interstellar politics once again and features fantastic performances from Michael Dorn, Alexander Siddig, Andrew J. Robinson and J.G. Hertzler. Robert Picardo, Max Grodénchik and Chase Masterson are hilarious in Doctor Bashir, I Presume?, but the episode is by no means a comedy and Siddig is excellent as it takes a darker turn. Quark takes up arms dealing in Business As Usual until his conscience proves to much for him and he sets one side against the other while Steven Berkoff is terrifying and the scene with Kirayoshi in the pit is very funny. Ties Of Blood And Water concerns deathbed confessions and end-of-life care, Kira's speech about Ghemor's final breaths is very emotive and it's gratifying to see Jeffrey Combs back as Weyoun. Armin Shimerman, Wallace Shawn, Cecily Adams, Combs (in his other role as Brunt), Grodenchik and Masterson are all on form in comedy episode Ferengi Love Songs, with powerful men hiding in bedroom closets, Kira correcting Leeta's every complaint about Rom and Quark's joy at seeing his Marauder Mo action figures. Soldiers Of The Empire is like a pilot for an all Klingon Star Trek show and has very sinister air to it until Worf awakens the warrior within Martok and all the scenes between Dorn and Hertzler are fantastic. Children Of Time is one of the most inventive time travel episodes, the ethical dilemma at its core is exactly the sort of thing Star Trek should be about and Rene Auberjonois is wonderful as the older Odo. Marshall is great as Eddington goes down in a Blaze Of Glory and Nog's attempts to gain Martok's respect manage to be funny without being silly. A salvage mission to Empok Nor leads to a psychological thriller that is probably the creepiest episode of any Star Trek series. War is In The Cards while Jake and Nog barter and trade their way around DS9 in an enjoyable and frivolous tale with Weyoun and Winn's treaty negotiations relegated to a B-story and great performances from Brian Markinson, Louise Fletcher and Combs. The season finale, Call To Arms, packs so much into three quarters of an hour that it should probably feel crowded and yet despite the declaration of war, the laying of mines, the signing of the non-aggression pact between Bajor and the Dominion, the various goodbyes, the station's occupation and a news reporter on the front line and it is absolutely spectacular.
The first six episodes of the sixth season form a serial of the events of the Dominon occupation of Deep Space 9 and life during wartime: A Time To Stand shows a bruised and broken Starfleet, a triumphant Dominion aboard DS9 renamed Terok Nor and Sisko and his crew infiltrating enemy territory in a Jem'Hadar ship. Rocks And Shoals sees that ship destroyed and Sisko forced to make a deal with the enemy while the Vedek's protest is very shocking. Sons And Daughters sees Alexander and Ziyal both attempting to live in two worlds and both being failed by fathers Worf and Dukat and getting more from an adoptive parent in Martok or Kira respectively. It's hard to see Sisko's crew on a mission Behind The Lines without him and Odo's malaise is far scarier than any actual hostility. Favor The Bold & Sacrifice Of Angels form a two-parter within a six-parter which draw all the threads together with the most impressive space battle yet and some character moments: Morn the messenger, Quark the liberator, Rom's being too late, the Female Changeling's blasé attitude to the war, Dukat's descent into madness, the baseball and anyone who says the involvement of the prophets is a deus ex machina may have to fight me. The highlights of all six episodes are the scenes set aboard the occupied station and Visitor, Auberjonois, Shimerman, Combs, Alaimo, Grodenchik, Cirroc Lofton, Melanie Smith, Salome Jens and Casey Biggs are all fantastic throughout. You Are Cordially Invited to Worf and Jadzia's wedding and Jadzia's party, Sisko getting her back on track and Bashir and O'Brien's attack are all great. The genetically engineered savants are all fantastic and their predictions on casualty reports based on Statistical Probabilities are cold and dispassionate. Quark puts together The Magnificent Ferengi to rescue Ishka from the Dominion and the prisoner exchange scenes are very, very funny.

Star Trek: Voyager: Fair Trade; Coda; Blood Fever; Unity; Before And After; Real Life; Distant Origin; Displaced; Worst Case Scenario; Scorpion; The Gift; Day Of Honor; Revulsion; The Raven; Scientific Method; Year Of Hell; Concerning Flight; Mortal Coil
The third season continues with an end of an era for Neelix in Fair Trade, Ethan Phillips is wonderful as the torn Talaxian fearing his usefulness has come to an end he makes some questionable decisions to extend it. The twists and turns of Coda are great as it switches from genre to genre. Blood Fever is more than just a riff on Amok Time, Voyager's Pon Farr episode looks great, feels claustrophobic, features brilliant performances from Roxann Biggs-Dawson and Robert Duncan McNeill and ends on captivating cliffhanger. Unity takes an intriguing view of the Borg and skilfully takes another step toward reintroducing them. Before And After uses time travel in a very innovative way to tell the story of a life lived backwards and Jennifer Lien gives a wonderful performance. Picardo and Wendy Schaal are fantastic as the Doctor experiments with a perfect holofamily in Real Life. As an allegory of Galileo's 'heresy' following Gegen's point of view in his search for Voyager with its pointed dialogue and impressive depiction of Voth culture, Distant Origin is fantastic. Voyager's crew are Displaced one by one in an episode with nice SF ideas and a great twist. Worst Case Scenario is great as an alternative view to life aboard ship and once again Martha Hackett is fantastic. After what is probably the best teaser in all of Star Trek, the season ends with the first part of Scorpion, the Borg pile is a very disturbing image, the realisation of Species 8472 is very impressive and the cliffhanger ending is great.
The fourth season begins with the second part and Jeri Ryan makes a fantastic debut as Seven of Nine, the arguments between Janeway and Chakotay are great, the space battles, the collision of the Borg Cube with the bioship and the Borg drones blown out of Voyager's airlock are stunning uses of CGI. The transitional episode The Gift features great performances from Kate Mulgrew, Ryan and Lien, but watching it is a bittersweet experience as although Jennifer Lien has always given great performances she has had more to do in her last three episode than she has in the last three seasons. Day Of Honor gives the relationship between Torres and Paris a shot in the arm and continues Seven's integration. Leland Orser's portrayal of a hologram's Revulsion is fantastic and Ryan is great in Seven's unexpected comedy scenes. The Raven delves into Seven's past and begins to show her potential. Seven's point-of-view shots in Scientific Method are some of the creepiest images in Star Trek and the competitive maladies conversation of Chakotay and Neelix is very funny. Mulgrew and Kurtwood Smith are wonderful in the phenomenal and epic two-parter Year Of Hell. Concerning Flight is very enjoyable, Mulgrew and John Rhys Davies are great and the realisation of Leonardo Da Vinci's flying machine is very impressive. Neelix is resurrected after shuffling off this Mortal Coil and Ethan Phillips' portrayal of his ensuing crisis of faith is fantastic and asking big questions about the afterlife makes for good Star Trek.

Red Dwarf: Tikka To Ride, Blue
Largely single camera and studio audienceless, Red Dwarf VII is often stylistically closer to a comedy drama than a sitcom. Picking up where Series VI left off, Tikka To Ride sees the time-travelling boys from the Dwarf embroiled in the assassination of JFK, the mock up of the Zapruder footage is phenomenal, Michael J. Shannon is great as Kennedy and plot hole paradoxes aside the episode is very enjoyable. The Rimmer Experience and the accompanying Munchkin song from Blue are great.

I'm Alan Partridge: A Room With An Alan; Alan Attraction; Watership Alan; Basic Alan; To Kill A Mocking Alan; Towering Alan
Steve Coogan, Felicity Montagu, Barbara Durkin, Simon Greenall and Sally Phillips are fantastic throughout as Alan Partridge holes up in a Linton Travel Tavern whilst working for Radio Norwich and awaiting news of a second series of Knowing Me, Knowing You in A Room With An Alan, David Schneider is great as Tony Hayers Alan's bizarre Hayers flashbacks are inspired and the strangest thing is that most of the oddest of Alan's TV show pitch ideas all feel like they've been made in the intervening years. Alan's financial situation worsens in Alan Attraction and highlights include Alan sabotaging Lynn's efforts to economise, a visit to "a cracking owl sanctuary" and a great performance from Julia Deakin. Alan's promotional video for canal barge holidays and his agricultural radio debate in Watership Alan are brilliant, and Chris Morris is wonderful. Alan's zombie costume and cone theft are among the highlights of Basic Alan. Featuring a cringeworthy meeting with Graham Linehan and Arthur Mathews as Irish TV executives, an Afternoon With Alan Partridge and Alan's biggest fan, To Kill A Mocking Alan is brilliant. Towering Alan sees our hero bounce back, albeit briefly, Kevin Eldon is great, Tony Hayer's wake is hilarious and Alan's triumphant cry of "Jurassic Park!" is genius.

Soul Music
On the face of it, Cosgrove Hall's seven-part animated adaptation of Terry Pratchett's sixteenth Discworld novel seems a tad juvenile in its interpretation, but the music-with-rocks-in soundtrack is nothing less than a work of genius as it makes its way expertly through the history of our own planet's rock music emulating era after era perfectly taking in The Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, The Blues Brothers and more. The voices of Christopher Lee, Debra Gillett and Graham Crowden are great.

Brass Eye: Animals; Drugs; Science; Sex; Crime; Decline
This provocative news satire gives us opinions presented as fact, pointless bombastic graphics and celebrities purporting to be experts to sensationalise and create moral panic. The anatomically impossible plight of Karla the Elephant mobilises an army of well-meaning famous fools in Animals. Morris takes on Drugs and brazenly walks the streets of London asking for Triple-sod, Yellow Bentines and Clarky Cat, the drugs even the dealers aren't aware of, meanwhile David Amess MP asks a question in parliament about made-up drug, Cake. Science asks to believe in invisible lead soup, the 0836 whimper and the braintanglia of rudemath, which Jenny Powell, Nick Owen and Steven Berkoff (even more terrifyingly than in DS9, above) duly do. The introduction to Sex is very stark, the good AIDs/bad AIDs debate works very well and the Naval spin on the odd practices aboard HMS Watford. Crime gives us an acting masterclass from Vanessa Feltz as the unnamed victim, Ted Maul's description of Cowsick as "Dante meets Bosch in a crack lounge" with its overly literal visual accompaniment and astonishingly Rhodes Boyson MP's endorsement the deployment of Batman to fight crime. The season finale looks at the state of Britain and asks if it is in Decline, citing 'Me Oh Myra' by Blouse, the murder of Clive Anderson by Noel Edmunds and a jam-making company which encourages the use of illegal drugs to enhance performance as examples. Chris Morris, Mark Heap, Gina McKee, Kevin Eldon, Doon Mackichan and David Cann. Morris was right all along, TV news has become Brass Eye.

Radio
On The Town With The League Of Gentlemen: A Guest At The Dentons; Death By Mau Mau; Go To Joan Glover; Gunpowder, Treason And Plot; A Kind Of Loving; God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen
The radio series features much of the same material as the first television series, but without the local shop or new road storyline and some brilliant audio exclusives in their place. A Guest At The Dentons introduces an unsuspecting listening public to Spent. The nun, Bernice as a DJ, Ingleby, Spent 4726's answer machine. Meanwhile the twin mayors, "You ever done bird, mate?" and the funrun are brilliant elements that are unique to Death By Mau Mau. Mr McHunt and Ms Plummer at Spent's school are fantastic additions in Go To Joan Glover. Gunpowder, Treason And Plot has the wonderful blacksmith scenes, "I look like Hamble" and Mark Gatiss as Miss Radcliffe Denton. Ingleby's date with Barbara and Bernice's disease in focus are great in A Kind Of Loving. The last episode shows us Spent at Christmas and two French Hens, Bernice's childhood radio show, Barbara's altered voice, Chinnery's apocalyptic handwashing and the A Christmsa Carol coda are all fantastic in God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen.

Music
Blur: Blur
The eponymous fifth album is an accomplished piece of work carrying the same lyrical prowess away from Britpop and towards a more lo-fi sound with raw guitars. The thought-provoking 'Beetlebum', the gleeful shoutiness of 'Song 2, the beat of 'M.O.R.' willfully plays against its name, 'On Your Own' is singalong pop, 'Death Of A Party' is a languid ballad, 'Look Inside America' is lo-fi at its absolute lo-est and is all the better for it, while 'Essex Dogs' is such a complex composition that has practically everything but the kitchen sink in it. The variety of this album is extraordinary and yet somehow consistent.
Stand Out Tracks: 'Beetlebum', 'Song 2', 'M.O.R.', 'On Your Own', 'Death Of A Party', 'I'm Just A Killer For Your Love', 'Look Inside America', 'Strange News From Another Star', 'Movin' On', 'Essex Dogs', 'Interlude'

Supergrass: In It For The Money
This album is no less energetic than the first, but focuses that energy into an absolute bloody masterpiece. The explosive tracks are still present with the likes of 'Richard III', 'Tonight' and 'Sun His The Sky', but the contemplative 'Late In The Day', 'It's Not Me' and 'Hollow Little Reign' reveal a wisdom that make those explosions all the brighter.
Stand Out Tracks: 'In It For The Money', 'Richard III', 'Tonight', 'Late In The Day', 'G-Song', 'Sun Hits The Sky', 'Going Out', 'It's Not Me', 'Cheapskate', 'You Can See Me', 'Hollow Little Reign', 'Sometimes I Make You Sad'

Cornershop: When I Was Born For The 7th Time
The band's third album takes the Indian sound and tinges it with Indie, Country and all sorts culminating with a Punjabi cover of 'Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)'
Stand Out Tracks: 'Sleep On The Left Side', 'Brimful Of Asha', 'Butter The Soul', 'We're In Yr Corner', 'Funky Days Are Back Again', 'Good To Be On The Road Back Home', 'Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)'

The Seahorses: Do It Yourself
Great guitars and strong absurd lyrics abound on what criminally transpired to be the only album from The Seahorses.
Stand Out Tracks: 'I Want You To Know', 'Blinded By The Sun', 'Suicide Drive', 'The Boy In The Picture', 'Love Is The Law', 'Happiness Is Eggshaped', 'Love Me And Leave Me', 'Round The Universe', '1999', 'Hello'

Books
Jingo by Terry Pratchett
Ankh-Morpork goes to war in the twenty-first Discworld novel. The novel deals with the motivations and is filled with pithy comment on the futility of its subject matter, not least Vimes' great speech about "Them". It's very difficult not to like a novel with this level of common sense, comedy and pieces of prose like "Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life."

Book by Whoopi Goldberg (and Daniel Paisner)
A very funny collection of stories and insights. Whoopi Goldberg is honest about having had this ghost written (although she saves the revelation until the last chapter).




Where's Wally? The Wonder Book by Martin Handford
Wally, Wizard Whitebeard, Wenda, Woof and Odlaw lose themselves among twelve fantasy worlds, including The Game of Games, The Cake Factory, The Odlaw Swamp, Clown Town, The Corridors of Time and the Land of Woofs.


Comics
Ghost World: October
The finale of Daniel Clowes' most famous comic ends with a beautifully poignant whimper.


Doctor Who: Endgame 4; The Keep; A Matter Of Life And Death; Fire And Brimstone; By Hook Or By Crook; Tooth And Claw 1-3
The last part of the Eighth Doctor's first strip, Endgame, is the most barmy and shows signs of things to come as the strip becomes brasher and more playful. The Doctor and Izzy visit The Keep in a strip that ties in nicely with the TV stories The Ark In Space and The Talons Of Weng-Chiang and has a truly shocking epilogue that shows there will be consequences. A Matter Of Life And Death sees the return of scores of the Doctor's enemies and allies as a celebration of the strip for Doctor Who Magazine's 250th issue. Picking up two hundred years after The Keep, Fire And Brimstone takes the strip into a complex story arc with an exciting Daleks versus Threshold strip. By Hook Or By Crook is a very odd one shot that nicely develops the relationship between Izzy and Doctor. The first three parts of Tooth And Claw are very different in tone, but Fey Truscott-Sade is a great addition, the syringe wielding monkeys are terrifying and Part Three ends on a great cliffhanger.

Recommendations welcome.

Wednesday, 30 November 2011

"Tonight I'm Gonna Party Like It's 1999...Again"

So says Philip J. Fry in Hell Is Other Robots (see below) referencing Prince's 1982 song '1999'.

1999 was the year that the first elections of the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly took place, the Earth was circumnavigated in a hot air balloon for the first time, the Columbine High School massacre took place, Slobodan Milošević was indicted for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in Kosovo and the world worried unduly about the wrath of the Y2K bug.

I spent 1998 studying for my A-Levels, appearing in Kiss Me Kate and turning eighteen.

These are a few of my favourite things from 1999:

Film
Magnolia
On a random day, a tangled web of intertwined lives are shaped and reshaped by coincidence. P. T. Anderson's masterpiece features fantastic performances across the board and not one, but two very surprising shifts in tone. Here's the trailer.



Being John Malkovich
Andy Kaufman's continually surprising script is brimming with ideas: the 7½ floor, Malkovich inside Malkovich, the resurgence of puppetry, the chase through Malkovich’s subconscious. The film takes twists and turns and becomes the most extraordinary love story ever told. Puppetry, comedy, metaphysics and existential ennui. John Cusack, Catherine Keener, Cameron Diaz and John Horatio Malkovich himself are wonderful, while everything Orson Bean does is absolutely sublime. Here's the trailer.

Sweet And Lowdown
Sean Penn stars in Woody Allen's biopic of the world's second best jazz guitarist (after some gypsy in Europe), the arrogant, childish and kleptomaniac Emmet Ray. Samantha Morton steals the show in every scene she has and the descent of the crescent moon is fantastic. Here's the trailer.


Star Trek: Insurrection
The ninth Star Trek film concerns "the forced relocation of a small group of people to satisfy the demands of a large one" and that larger group's quest for a fountain of youth. It feels like exactly the sort of Star Trek that Gene Roddenberry would have approved of. As with the other Next Generation films, Patrick Stewart and Brent Spiner get the lion's share of the action with the other characters getting only moments such as Michael Dorn's Worf reluctantly singing Gilbert & Sullivan, LeVar Burton's Geordi seeing a sunrise with his own eyes for the first time, romance between Riker and Troi being rekindled and F. Murray Abraham makes a wonderfully chilling villain as Ru'afo. Here's the trailer.

Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me
Mike Myers is hilarious in his trio of roles in this spy spoof sequel which exploits time travel, "how much England looks in no way like Southern California" and running gags from the first film with very funny results. Mindy Sterling, Seth Green and Rob Lowe are all wonderful and Heather Graham is a Bondgirl par excellence. Here's a fantastic trailer.

The Straight Story
Based on the true story of Alvin Straight's six week journey across rural USA on a lawnmower. This beautiful off road movie explores themes of mortality and family and Richard Farnsworth is fantastic as Straight. Here's the trailer.




Galaxy Quest
SF fandom is a great concept for a comedy and Galaxy Quest doesn't disappoint. The cast are uniformly impressive. Here's the trailer.




Go
Doug Limon's tangled web of a weekend has a great cast, a Tarantino-esque sscript and style and forms a black comedy triptych as its plot threads interweave. Here's the trailer.





TV
Spaced: Beginnings; Gatherings; Art; Battles; Chaos; Epiphanies; Ends
The first episode, Beginnings, sets up the dynamic of this slick and stylish flatsharing sitcom perfectly. Daisy meets Tim and they move into a flat at Marsha's house masquerading as a Professional Couple Only, but it's the rapid editing, pop culture references, great music and surreal elements that make this the most inventive sitcom of the twenty-first century a year early. The introductions of Marsha, Brian and the getting to know you sequence for Tim and Daisy are brilliant. In order to avoid work Daisy throws a party in Gatherings which gives Mike and Twist proper introductions and features fake sex noises, Daisy singing 'Hot dog jumping from almond cookies' and Brian to the rescue. Brian takes Daisy and Tim to see Vulva's Art and highlights include zombies, Cassandra's phone number and "It's not finished. It’s finished." Brian's literal tribute to the self reflexivity of Rembrandt, the colourful tale of Pom Pom, Paul Putner, Mike's 'death' and Peter Serafinowicz is great as Tim Battles Duane Benzie while paintballing. Between Gramsci's politics and Colin's kidnap, Chaos ensues and the rescue attempt is great and Twist running comes into her own with the DK urban warfare range and "Is Jabba the princess?" Michael Smiley is wonderful as Tyres in Epiphanies and his mood swings are inspired as are the Scrabble fight, the clubbing scenes, the glorious remix of The A-Team theme tune and Tyres' exit. The first series Ends beautifully with Mike returning to the TA, Brian and Twist on a successful date and Tim realising life with Daisy is better than it was with his ex. Simon Pegg, Jessica Stephenson, Mark Heap, Nick Frost, Julia Deakin and Aida the Dog are magnificent throughout. It should be required viewing.

Buffy The Vampire Slayer: Gingerbread; Helpless; The Zeppo; Bad Girls & Consequences; Doppelgangland; Enemies; Choices; The Prom; Graduation Day; Earshot; The Freshman; Living Conditions; The Harsh Light Of Day; Fear, Itself; Beer Bad; Wild At Heart; The Initiative; Pangs; Something Blue; Hush
The slayer's third season (and senior year at high school) continues with another great metaphor episode, Gingerbread is about mass hysteria, which proves that paranoia is often far more dangerous than the problem at hand. As usual it's a terrifying concept that is dealt with intelligently and the episode is chock full of funny like Willow's "A doodle, I do doodle. You too, you do doodle too", Cordelia's "wake up in a coma" and Oz's "We're here to save you" lines. Buffy turns eighteen and is made Helpless in an episode about how disempowering reaching adulthood and realising that your parents are flawed can be with great opening and ending scenes. After the briefest (and therefore probably the funniest) Previously On… sequence, Cordelia declares Xander The Zeppo in the first episode of Buffy that redefines what the show can do, the inversion of the A and B stories reduces the apocalypse to the background, raises Xander's quiet night out to epic status and Nicholas Brendon gives a fantastic performance in Buffy's funniest episode. Two-parter Bad Girls & Consequences introduces Wesley, gives Mr Trick a great exit line and is the turning point for Faith. Buffy turns to another SF staple, the 'Evil Twin', with the return of Vamp Willow in Doppelgangland and once again deals with it better than anybody else. Naturally Alyson Hannigan is fantastic in both roles and also as both characters impersonating the other, the hugging scene and Percy's Roosevelt papers are hilarious. Buffy capitalises on its own mythology in Enemies and sets up the showdown between the Slayers in the season finale. Hannigan gives great hostage in Choices and Oz's silent decision making is great. Angel's dream and Jonathan's Class Protector speech are wonderful as Buffy saves The Prom. The Class of '99 goes to war on its Graduation Day in an amazing two-part season finale which has great character moments for everyone, the Mayor is probably TV's most enjoyable villain, the students disrobing is triumphant (though not for the reasons you might expect), Oz's final line shamelessly spelling out the show's metaphor is a great touch. Scheduled to be broadcast the same week as the Columbine High School shootings, Earshot was understandably delayed, but it was worth the wait. Buffy's temporary telepathy gives great insights, especially into the inner thoughts of Cordelia and Oz. Veering from comedy to tragedy and back again with incredible skill. Probably the best standalone episode in the entire run of the series.
After high school comes college and The Freshman shows Buffy not out of her depth, but unsure of it and is a great 'mission statement' episode. An episode about irritation is not an easy thing to pull off, illustrating annoyance without just being annoying is tough and yet some how Living Conditions manages it. The Harsh Light Of Day sees the welcome return of James Marsters, Emma Caulfield and Mercedes McNab, and proves you can learn more in college than you realise. Fear, Itself is a classic, as magic causes the Scooby Gang's fears to manifest it demonstrates the strength of the ensemble, despite spending most of the episode separated. Beer Bad replaces the usual intelligent dialogue with caveman grunting and the result is a bad episode of Buffy, but what it shows is that a bad episode of Buffy is still much, much better than a good episode of a great many other shows. After a great cameo from Spike, Wild At Heart features great performances from Hannigan and Seth Green as Willow and Oz's relationship is tested and the latter leaves Sunnydale. He will be missed. The introduction of The Initiative in The Initiative is really impressive, but it's Spike's promotion to the regular cast and his scene with Willow that make this episode great. Buffy attempts to fend off a vengeful spirit whilst preoccupied with cooking the perfect thanksgiving dinner in Pangs unaware of Angel's return. Protecting her from the wings he interacts with pretty much everyone except Buffy and the subsequent awkward dinner conversation is great. Something Blue is just fun. The almost-silent Hush is a phenomenal piece of television. Watch it.

Angel: City Of…; Lonely Hearts; In The Dark; I Fall To Pieces; Rm W/a Vu; Sense & Sensitivity; The Bachelor Party; I Will Remember You; Hero; Parting Gifts
Angel forges out on his own, but only gets as far as Los Angeles. The pilot City Of… sets up our hero as an atoning dark knight with equivalent Batcave and Batmobile, and with Cordelia as his secretary and Doyle as a messenger keeping his destiny on track. The episode sets up Tina as a damsel for Angel to save and Russell Winters as Angel's big bad and then neither of these things comes off quite as we expect. Initially a monster-of-the-week detective show the series seeks to establish its own identity and Lonely Hearts brand of almost sexually transmitted possession is definitely a step in that direction. Conversely it's the link s to the series we know and love that make In The Dark such a success as Spike and Oz crossover from Buffy. I Fall To Pieces is Angel at its creepiest. Rm W/A Vu is a great Cordy episode with a B-story that gives us a glimpse into Doyle's life and introduces Phantom Dennis. Sense & Sensitivity is good example of an idea that is allowed to work better here than it might in a lesser TV show, rather than simply being oversensitive there is far more scope in having the affected characters unable to control their emotions and reveal more about themselves. It's also another opportunity for Wolfram & Hart to emerge from the shadows. We learn a little more about Doyle in The Bachelor Party and Carlos Jacott puts in another great performance. When Buffy arrives in LA the ante is upped and the resulting I Will Remember You is the best love story that never happened. Hero is fantastic, a great send off for Doyle and all the more poignant after Glenn Quinn's death. Setting the pattern for the next couple of years Parting Gifts gives Cordelia the link to The Powers That Be and brings Alexis Denisof's Wesley back into the fold.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Prodigal Daughter; The Emperor's New Cloak; Field Of Fire; Chimera; Badda-Bing Badda-Bang; Inter Arma Enim Silent Leges; Penumbra; ‘Til Death Do Us Part; Strange Bedfellows; The Changing Face Of Evil; When It Rains; Tacking Into The Wind; Extreme Measures; The Dogs Of War; What You Leave Behind
The final season continues with an interesting twist on the semi-annual 'O'Brien must suffer' episode with the return of the Prodigal Daughter as Ezri investigates the Chief's disappearance on her homeworld. Another semi-annual tradition are the episodes set in the Mirror Universe, and The Emperor's New Cloak is a lot of fun with Quark and Rom’s theft of the cloaked cloaking device, Rom’s attempts to understand the differences between the alternate realities and realisations of the Mirror versions of Ezri, Brunt and Leeta are great. Field Of Fire is a forensics-style whodunnit in the vein of CSI and another great use of Ezri. Chimera presents Odo with Laas, another Changeling who isn't part of the Dominion and J.G. Hertzler plays his feeling of superiority over the 'monoforms' wonderfully, Quark gets a great speech about genetics and Nana Visitor deserves a special mention for the palpable sense of guilt that she gives Kira about the possibility that their relationship is holding Odo back. Badda-Bing Badda-Bang isn't just DS9's version of a heist movie, it's DS9's version of the original Ocean's Eleven, it's mostly frivolous, but great fun. William Sadler makes a welcome return as Sloan in Inter Arma Enim Silent Leges, a well told espionage story which makes Section 31 seem even more complex. Setting up the next eight episodes of the epic end of the series, Penumbra is the calm before the storm and shows that the show is going to go all out as Ezri rescues Worf and they are captured by the Breen, Sisko proposes to Kasidy, but is subsequently told by the Prophets not to marry her and the sight of a Dukat surgically altered to appear Bajoran is very shocking. In spite of the Prophet's warning Sisko and Kasidy are joined in marriage 'Til Death Do Us Part, the political wrangling continues as the Breen and the Dominion form an alliance and Ezri and Worf are handed over as gifts, but topping Dukat as a Bajoran, is Kai Winn unwittingly becoming romantically involved with him. Winn and Dukat make Strange Bedfellows as the Pah Wraiths send her a vision and she struggles with her faith and as the Cardassians begin to be victims of the Dominion's plans for the war, Damar is increasingly uncomfortable as puppet leader. Louise Fletcher and Casey Biggs are phenomenal as their characters each undergo an about face. The Changing Face Of Evil sees both these characters finally switch allegiances as Winn turns to the dark side, in scenes which another great performance from James Otis as Solbor, and Damar's resistance turns the Cardassians against the Dominion, shown as a broadcast witnessed by all the major players at the same time. The space battle at Chintoka is great and the destruction of the USS Defiant is a hell of a blow. When It Rains… it pours., this episode is packed with developments: Odo, Garak and a now Starfleet Kira aid Damar's resistance, Gowron takes over the Klingon deployment seeking glory, Bashir and O'Brien discover Starfleet deliberately infected Odo with the morphogenic virus and Dukat is blinded and shunned by Winn. Tacking Into The Wind keeps all the balls in the air and the "something has to be done" scene between Sisko and Worf, Garak lurking in the shadows, the scene between Kira, Garak and Damar after the latter's family has been killed, Ezri's appraisal of the state of the Klingon Empire, O'Brien and Bashir's 'devious' scheming, Gowron's death, the Mexican standoff aboard the stolen Jem'Hadar ship are all excellent. Bashir and O'Brien take Extreme Measures to find Odo's cure and Sloan is determined not to make it easy for them in the most SF episode of the last nine, A Tale Of Two Cities being the key to realising they've been duped is a lovely device and it's great to see these two friends get one last adventure together before all hell breaks loose. The new USS Defiant arrives at DS9, Odo is cured of the virus killing his people, Damar becomes the champion of the people of Cardassia, the Emissary's wife discovers she is pregnant, The Dominion retreats and the Alpha Quadrant alliance decides to go on the offensive and press home the attack in The Dogs Of War, but the big picture of the Dominion War has largely left Quark on the sidelines and so the penultimate episode redresses the balance somewhat and is a wonderful last hurrah for the Ferengi: Armin Shimerman, Max Grodénchik, Wallace Shawn, Chase Masterson, Cecily Adams and Jeffrey Combs (in both his roles) are all as great as ever. The finale, What You Leave Behind, is astoundingly good: Ezri's reveal in the first scene, O'Brien resisting telling Bashir about his post-war plans, Broca's uselessness, the Female Changeling's dismissive reaction to Weyoun's offer to give his life for her own, Bashir and Garak's final scene together, Worf's weird repetition of "Minsk", Vic's farewell song, Sisko's toast, Dukat getting everything he wanted, Winn's reaction to the disappearance of the Kosst Amojan, Sisko's ascendance, Odo and Quark's lack of goodbyes, the last line (and the fact that it's Quark that gets to say it), the beautiful last shot are all amazing. It's an achievement that the end of the Dominion war doesn't completely dominate this episode and the tying up of loose ends and the separation of O'Brien from Bashir, Kira from Odo and Sisko from Jake and Kasidy leaves the viewer with a satisfactory sense of closure without being sentimental. Avery Brooks, Rene Auberjonois, de Boer, Michael Dorn, Cirroc Lofton, Colm Meaney, Shimerman, Alexander Siddig, Visitor, Marc Alaimo, Biggs, James Darren, Fletcher, Hertzler, Salome Jens, Penny Johnson, Juliana McCarthy and Andrew Robinson are all excellent throughout. So ends the best of the Star Trek series and one of the best television series ever made.

Star Trek: Voyager: Latent Image; Bride Of Chaotica!; Gravity; Dark Frontier; Think Tank; Someone To Watch Over Me; 11:59; Relativity; Equinox; Survival Instinct; Tinker, Tenor, Doctor, Spy; Riddles; Dragon's Teeth; The Voyager Conspiracy; Pathfinder
From memory loss to conspiracy via a Sophie's Choice dilemma, Latent Image is great and Robert Picardo is fantastic as the Doctor attempts to discover what happened to him and then to resolve it with his ethics. Bride Of Chaotica! is incredibly camp, but also great fun. Gravity is excellent and Tim Russ and Lori Petty are fantastic together. TV movie Dark Frontier is epic, brings out the best in Kate Mulgrew, Jeri Ryan and Susannah Thompson and the flashbacks to Annika’s childhood are great. Jason Alexander is suitably eerie as part of the Think Tank, an episode that is incredibly simple and all the better for it. Someone To Watch Over Me is a delightful romantic comedy with an very sad ending. The millennial flashback scenes of 11:59 are great and the Y2K bug prediction is bold (and as it turned out largely accurate). Voyager's encounters with the USS Relativity revisits earlier episodes and complicates them with a fascinating temporal paradox. Voyager discovers the USS Equinox, another Starfleet ship in the Delta Quadrant which has travelled the same path, but abandoned its ethics along the way. It vindicates Janeway in a season that saw her questioning the decision that marooned her crew.
The second part sees the two Captains switch positions as Janeway tries to get revenge by any means possible and Ransom has a change of heart and repents, but once again it's Picardo and Ryan that rescue the story. The sixth season continues with Survival Instinct, which forces Seven of Nine to choose quality or quantity of life for three of her peers. Tinker, Tenor, Doctor, Spy is great fun and the Doctor's daydreams are all wonderful, especially his operatic diagnosis of Tuvok's medical condition and Seven as his muse. Ethan Phillips and Tim Russ are wonderful in Riddles, a great Neelix and Tuvok episode. Dragon's Teeth features wonderful CGI effects and some great scenes for Neelix. A little learning is dangerous thing and an overabundance of information causes Seven to theorise The Voyager Conspiracy and sets Janeway and Chakotay at loggerheads, it's a little late in the day to convince but compelling nonetheless. Dwight Schultz is as wonderful as ever in Pathfinder and his scenes aboard the holographic USS Voyager are particularly poignant and this episode manages to bring the real one a step closer to home with being cloyingly sentimental.

Red Dwarf: Back In The Red; Cassandra
Series VIII begins with epic three-parter Back In The Red which sees the Starbuggers return to the small rouge one to find it bigger than ever before and amazingly with its long dead crew resurrected. After seven series of being the last man alive, Lister is suddenly back at the bottom of the pile. It's great to see him reunited with Rimmer, how Cat and Kryten react to their new situation and Mac MacDonald makes a welcome return as Captain Hollister. Cassandra is an intricate locked box of an episode reminiscent of Dwarf circa Series V, with some nice jokes in it and it's nice to see each of the characters reactions to learning their future.

The League Of Gentlemen: Welcome To Royston Vasey; The Road To Royston Vasey; Nightmare In Royston Vasey; The Beast Of Royston Vasey; Love Comes To Royston Vasey; Escape From Royston Vasey
Mark Gatiss, Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith prove themselves to be three of the country’s best actors as their sketch show meets sitcom comes to television. The dark comedy world of Royston Vasey is brilliantly brought to life in Welcome To Royston Vasey: from its fantastic opening joke with the wonderful Frances Cox, Benjamin visiting the Dentons, Tubbs and Edward at the Local Shop, Barbara, Chinnery, Pauline and her jobseekers, Geoff, Mike and Brian telling "Mau Mau", the characters are more than mere grotesques but have a real depth to them, the visual gags are brilliant and the horror movie references are very rewarding. The first series is made up of groups of sketches which for the most part only have the town in common, but with the construction of The Road To Royston Vasey as an overarching storyline, the introduction of the "special stuff", Henry and Ally's video selection and Pop's son(s). Aqua vita, "there is a Swansea", the roundabout zoo, Bernice's sermon and egregious are among the many highlights of Nightmare In Royston Vasey. The series takes on an epic quality with the discovery of The Beast Of Royston Vasey and turns darker still with Farmer Tinsel's scarecrow, Charlie and Stella's date and Legz Akimbo Theatre Company gives Theatre-In-Education a bad name with its unfortunately accurate portrayal. Gatiss is excellent during his monologue as the Stump Hole Caverns tour guide while Geoff uses his speech as Mike's best man to settle old scores and Barbara misunderstands Benjmin’s advances as Love Comes To Royston Vasey. Things culminate in Pauline's dismissal, Geoff finally firing his gun, the return of Tubbs and Edward's son David, the reveal of the contents of the towns postboxes, Barbara's operation and Benjamin makes another attempt to Escape From Royston Vasey.

Futurama: Space Pilot 3000; The Series Has Landed; I, Roommate; Love's Labors Lost In Space; Fear Of A Bot Planet; A Fishful Of Dollars; My Three Suns; A Big Piece Of Garbage; Hell Is Other Robots; A Flight To Remember; Mars University; When Aliens Attack; Fry And The Slurm Factory; I Second That Emotion; Brannigan, Begin Again; A Head In The Polls; Xmas Story
Matt Groening and David X. Cohen's vision of the future gets a solid start with Space Pilot 3000. The characters of Fry, Leela, Bender and Farnsworth arrive fully formed and the trademark cruel humour is already in place. Amy joins the Planet Express crew as they make a delivery to the moon in the both touching and funny The Series Has Landed. I, Roommate is I, Robot meets The Odd Couple and the flathunting montage is great. Introducing Zapp Brannigan, Kif and Nibbler, Love's Labors Lost In Space, is a step into a more adult arena and the Vergon VI fauna are great. The demonisation of humans in Fear Of A Bot Planet is great and best summed up in the It Came From Planet Earth B-Movie line featured within: "Relax Wendy, humans will never come to our defence less little town. It's perfectly safe to let our guard down, even for a second." As extinction tales go, A Fishful Of Dollars is funnier than it has any right to be. The episode introduces Mom and her assumption of Fry's plan for the last tin of anchovies is as terrifying, as the last scene is funny. My Three Suns is a more sedate, but no less brilliant episode featuring a unisex robe. The Planet Express crew go up against A Big Piece Of Garbage that threatens Earth in an episode which highlights the show's interesting take on environmental issues. Hell Is Other Robots compares religion with addiction and hilarity ensues. The Robot Devil is a great character and the episode features the first of many wonderful original songs.
A Flight To Remember sees Leela and Amy both pretending to be dating Fry aboard the starship Titanic, what could possibly go wrong? The episode's highlight has to be Hermes facing up to his past as a limboer. Mars University is Animal House with an actual animal as Guenter the monkey with the Electronium Hat bests Fry who enrols in college to become a college dropout. When Aliens Attack is wonderful, the Monument Beach scene, the Single Female Lawyer scenes and the reassuring-everything-back-to-normal ending. Fry And The Slurm Factory is reassuringly disgusting. Bender is forced to feel Leela's emotions in I Second That Emotion which the episode exploits brilliantly, whilst introducing the sewer mutants very successfully. Brannigan, Begin Again is wonderful: the Neutral planet, "I'm going to allow this", Fry's "Woooooh", the Midnight Cowboy parody, Bender looking back and laughing. All of it. As a treatise on political apathy A Head In The Polls is very funny, Billy West's Nixon is a triumph and its The Scary Door opening is excellent. Introducing Robot Santa and Tinny Tim, Xmas Story gives us a terrifying vision of the Christmases of the future and features some great yuletide gags.

Farscape: Premiere, Thank God It's Friday, Again; I, ET; DNA Mad Scientist; Jeremiah Crichton; A Human Reaction
If Firefly's Mal Reynolds is Han Solo done right, then Farscape's universe is the Mos Eisley cantina writ large. For obvious reasons most of the first season concerns Ben Browder's fish out of water Crichton, but Virginia Hey's performance as Zhaan deserves a special mention.

Doctor Who And The Curse Of Fatal Death
Featuring no less than five Doctors and a fantastic performance from Jonathan Pryce as the Master, Steven Moffat's Comic Relief spoof is a loving tribute that pokes fun in all the right places.

Louis Theroux's Weird Weekends: Swingers; Wrestling
Wife swapping is your future, and Louis investigates the world of Swingers, finds it difficult to fit in and exposes cracks in a relationship. Louis tries his hand at professional Wrestling and discovers that while it isn't fake, it is predetermined and the WCW's Sarge trains him hard enough to prove the distinction. Rowdy Roddy Piper, Pistol Pez Whatley and the AIWF come out of it very well.

Journeys Into The Outside With Jarvis Cocker
An excellent three part series following the Pulp frontman around fascinating artwork created by people with no formal training. The documentaries take in Les Rochers Sculptés, La Maison de la vaiselle cassée, Jardin du Coquillage and Ferdinand Cheval's Palais Idéal in France, the Coral Castle, Miracle Cross Garden, Beer Can House, Bottle Village and Watts Towers in the USA, Las Pozas in Mexico, the Tower of the Apocalypse in Belgium and the Chandigarh Rock Garden in India. Cocker's insights are great and his French is very impressive.

Now And Again
The first ten episodes of this excellent and criminally unavailable TV show were broadcast this year. Eric Close, Dennis Haysbert, Margaret Colin and Gerrit Graham are fantastic in the story of Michael Wiseman, a man whose brain is transplanted after his death into the perfect genetically engineered body and resurrected as a tool for espionage. Wiseman is given a new life and trained to be a spy, but is unable to leave his old life, wife and daughter behind. The show was a great mix of action and comedy

The Flint Street Nativity
A class of schoolchildren attempt to tell the story of the birth of Jesus as they understand it. Tim Firth's Christmas tale sees the children played by a great cast of adults on an oversize set. The misunderstandings and logical leaps of the children, both about the nativity story and life itself, are very, very funny and sometimes heartbreaking.

Music
Supergrass: Supergrass
The band's third (and eponymous) album, also dubbed the X-Ray album, is fantastic from start to finish and consistent throughout. Musically it is mature and assured, but the trio have lost none of their sense of fun.
Stand Out Tracks: 'Moving'; 'Your Love'; 'What Went Wrong (In Your Head)'; 'Beautiful People'; 'Shotover Hill'; 'Eon'; 'Jesus Came From Outta Space'; 'Mary'; 'Born Again'; 'Mama & Papa'

The All Seeing I: Pickled Eggs & Sherbert
This electronic album which feels like it came from an astral conjunction of a Sheffield supergroup. Jarvis Cocker's lyrics are fantastic and the vocals by Tony Christie, Phil Oakey and Stephen Jones from Babybird are all great.
Stand Out Tracks: 'Walk Like A Panther', '1st Man In Space', 'Stars On Sunday', 'I Walk', 'Happy Birthday Nicola', 'Plastic Diamond'

Blur: 13
The band's sixth album moves further away from their Britpop roots with a baker's dozen of tracks largely about love and loss that stretch them musically.
Stand Out Tracks: 'Tender', 'Coffee & TV', '1992', 'B.L.U.R.E.M.I.', 'Trailerpark', 'No Distance Left To Run', 'Optigan 1'

Ultrasound: Everything Picture
The sole double album release from Ultrasound is an epic and sprawling beast of an album with layers and layers of sound. Every song feels like a big hitter, the anthemic 'Stay Young' builds into what I'm sure would have a crowd pleaser given half a chance, while songs like 'Cross My Heart', 'Floodlit World' and 'My Impossible Dream' show the enormous musical ability of band. The unassuming 'Sentimental Song' is one of the most beautiful songs I've ever heard and the title track is a 21 minute symphony that revisits the first ten songs expertly and is at turns triumphant and discordant and then a hidden track like a delightful lullaby. This is a bittersweet beauty of a record as sadly their inability to remain in the 'Same Band' denied us a follow up.
Stand Out Tracks: 'Cross My Heart'; 'Same Band'; 'Stay Young'; 'Suckle'; 'Fame Thing'; 'Aire & Calder'; 'Sentimental Song'; 'Floodlit World'; 'My Impossible Dream'; 'Everything Picture'

Gomez: Liquid Skin
The second album is another slice of hazy pseudo-Americana in the same vein as the first, but with a more refined production this time around.
Stand Out Tracks: 'Revolutionary Kind'; 'Bring It On'; 'Blue Moon Rising'; 'We Haven't Turned Around', 'Rhythm And Blues Alibi'

Kula Shaker: Peasants, Pigs & Astronauts
The band’s second album is a grand soundscape heavy on the psychedelia and eastern mysticism, but it's the rockier tracks that impress the most.
Stand Out Tracks: 'Mystical Machine Gun'; 'Shower Your Love'; '108 Battles (Of The Mind)'; 'Sound Of Drums'

Mr Scruff: Keep It Unreal
Breakbeat programmer Mr Scruff has excelled himself with this diverse collection of tracks.
Stand Out Tracks: 'Spandex Man'; 'Get A Move On'; 'Midnight Feast'; 'Shanty Town'; 'Blackfoot Roll'; 'Fish'


Books
The Fifth Elephant by Terry Pratchett
One of the themes of the Discworld series is the conflict between tradition and progress and the twenty-fourth novel pulls in both directions as the Ankh Morpork City Watch expands and modernises. Vimes briefly becomes the city's ambassador to Überwald, the disc's allegory for Transylvania, where he investigates the theft of the Dwarf's Scone of Stone and becomes embroiled in Vampiric intrigue. A crime thriller set against a fantasy backdrop that is as funny as it is scary. References veer from Dracula to the plays of Chekhov and back via the Diet of Worms and The Italian Job.

The Science Of Discworld by Terry Pratchett, Ian Cohen & Jack Stewart
Alternating between a Discworld story featuring the creation of a universe of 'Roundworlds' by the wizards of the Unseen University and scientific explanations of the creation our universe, the Earth and the beginnings of life. This book is a great literary contribution to popular science and the two halves compliment each other and made up for shortcomings in my own knowledge of science.

The Boy Who Kicked Pigs by Tom Baker
This story of a misnthropic boy who takes a perverse pleasure from the kicking of pigs is an escalating morality tale with inevitable (and horrific) comeuppance. The novel is wonderfully macabre and the accompanying illustrations by David Roberts are just as unsettling.


Santa Land Diaries by David Sedaris
These six short Christmas stories are hilarious, from the titular tale of the trials and tribulations of being one of Santa's helper elves in a department store to 'Season's Greetings To Our Friends And Family!!!' is a great parody of the traditional American holiday newsletter with a touch too much honesty in it.


Comics
Doctor Who: The Fallen; Unnatural Born Killers; The Road To Hell; TV Action!
The Eighth Doctor is reunited with Grace Holloway in The Fallen a story that riffs extensively on Paul McGann's TV movie and the fantastic final panel makes it obvious to the reader that this is the beginning of another epic story. Adrian Salmon's simple storyline and stark artwork for the Doctorless strip Unnatural Born Killers reintroduces Kroton the Cyberman with a soul, as he takes on a pack of Sontarans and loses his home. The Road To Hell is paved with good intentions as the Doctor and Izzy arrive in 17th Century Japan during an isolationist period, Lady Asami being driven mad by images of Japan's future from Izzy's mind is great and the concept of forcing immortality on a Samurai who try as he might cannot give his life and therefore his continued existence dishonours him is fantastic. The TARDIS lands at BBC Television Centre in TV Action! which is a nice little comedy strip that shows a snapshot of the BBC's output in 1979 and features a guest appearance from Tom Baker of all people.

Recommendations welcome.