Killjoys – DVDs, Blu-rays for Syfy’s Show About ‘Sex, Thugs and Rockin’ Intergalactic Bounty Hunters!’

17/02/2016

From the producers of Orphan Black and the creator of Lost Girl comes Killjoys. This sci-fi adventure follows a fun-loving, hard living trio of interplanetary bounty hunters (a.k.a. Killjoys) sworn to remain impartial as they chase deadly warrants around the Quad, a system of planets on the brink of revolution. A motley crew that always has each other’s back, until a dark secret threatens to tear apart their trio for good. Follow their adventures and discover their secrets with all 10 episodes back-to-back and uninterrupted.A bulletin from Universal Studios Home Entertainment announces that Killjoys – Season 1 is coming to DVD ($39.98 SRP) and high-def Blu-ray Disc ($44.98 SRP) on May 10th. The Syfy show’s opening season ran for 10 episodes starring Aaron Ashmore (Smallville, Warehouse 13), Hannah John-Kamen (Star Wars: The Force Awakens), and Luke Macfarlane (Brothers & Sisters, Mercy Street, Supergirl).

Each 2-disc set in either format will include English SDH subtitles. The Blu-ray version will also include English 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio, and UltraViolet digital copies of the episodes. The second season begins airing on Syfy this coming summer, so catch up while you can!

Killjoys - Season 1
Killjoys - Season 1

Source: Tv Shows on DVD

 

Cage fighting, arses and frickin’ lasers: Killjoys comes to SyFy UK

25/01/2016

Tonight sees Canadian sci-fi action series Killjoys blasting its way onto British screens, courtesy of SyFy.

Cut from a similar cloth to Firefly, Killjoys follows the exploits of a team of bounty hunters who hop between a series of habitable moons as they chase down marks in a system known as ‘the Quad’, which is something of a political powder keg.

Unlike the densely plotted Battlestar Galactica with its chin-stroking allegories, Killjoys is unashamed sci-fi fun with an emphasis on quirky one-liners, fisticuffs and pew-pew lasers. For British viewers, there’s giggles to be had hearing lead character Dutch (played by Hannah John-Kamen of Misfits and Black Mirror fame) saying words like ‘arse’ and having her American partners in crime John (Aaron Ashmore) and D’avin (Luke Macfarlane) pronounce it ‘ass’.

There’s also some possibly unintentional laughs to be had at the expense of the Killyjoys employers – the Reclamation Apprehension Coalition – which shares its abbreviated name with a certain UK-based car insurer. It’s a shame that for the most part, the characters refer to it as ‘the Rac’ instead of its initialised form, which could have made for a tenuous Norweb Federation in-joke.

Trans-Atlantic lols aside, there’s a healthy dash of intrigue amid the gunfire and roundhouse kicks that should keep the show ticking over for its first ten episodes. A second season’s already in the works – filming got underway in Toronto last December – suggesting that there’s plenty of shocks and suprises in store for the Killjoys.

Killjoys airs on SyFy and SyFy HD on Mondays at 8pm.

  • Sky 114/201
  • Virgin Media 135/165
  • BT TV 319/375
  • TalkTalk TV 319

Source: Recombu

TV REVIEW: KILLJOYS Episode One

24/01/2016

TV REVIEW: KILLJOYS Episode One

Killjoys, the latest show from  SYFY,  arrives in the UK on Monday 25th January and we take a look to see if it is a success for the channel and us wonderful geeks.

Killjoys follows a trio of hard-living but fun-loving bounty hunters – Dutch, John, and D’avin– taking on interplanetary missions, chasing and capturing deadly criminals throughout a distant system named the Quad. They have sworn amongst themselves to remain neutral during a bloody, multi-planetary class war that threatens to destroy the Quad.

For a while the SYFY channel went a little off track with its programming but these days it seems to hitting its stride with shows like Dark Matter, The Expanse and now Killjoys.

Killjoys stars Hannah John-Kamen as Dutch / Yalena, Aaron Ashmore as John Jaqobis, Luke Macfarlane as D’avin Jaqobis. The show is firmly set in scifi territory with its premise of bounty hunters working in the fringe area of space called the Quad. Within the first episode we find out about the universe the characters inhabit and it is a harsh one. Our team start off as a crew of two until something happens and they end up bringing John’s brother into the fold.

Killjoys_S1_101_2Throughout the episode we learn about the three crew members especially the team leader Dutch played by the lovely Hannah John-Kamen. Dutch has a hidden past that will have an impact on the show long term with quite a few mysteries to be solved. John seems to have the least developed back story so far but I am guessing that will change over time while his brother D’avin seems to have been involved in a violent past that he does not want to talk about.

The three leads seem to be very comfortable in their roles and looks like the chemistry between will only grow.

We also get to meet some supporting characters that help with the world building of this first episode. The universe has a very similar feel to the Firefly universe which is not a bad thing at all. The special effects are solid and the humour is slightly stiff so far but am sure it will get better as the show grows.

Overall Killjoys is a show that will be great geeky viewing and fingers crossed for at least 5 seasons on this one.

Source: Geek Syndicate

Rob Lowe Stars in New End-Time Comedy

22/01/2016

Here’s your guide to three hot January shows:

You, Me and the Apocalypse

The premise in about 100 words:

The world is coming to an end in 34 days, thanks to an 8-mile comet hurtling toward Earth. Life as we know it is counting down to extinction, save a hodgepodge of unlikely individuals trapped safely in a bunker miles beneath the Earth’s surface. That group includes Jamie (Mathew Baynton), a cute but unassuming banker with a twin brother who runs a cyber terrorist organization; Sister Celine (Gaia Scodellaro), a sweet nun who recently took a post under Father Jude Sutton (Rob Lowe) in the Devil’s Advocate office; and Rhonda McNeil (Jenna Fisher), a librarian who took the rap for her son’s hacking of the National Security Agency. Premieres Jan. 28 on NBC.

Religious themes:

Um … the apocalypse! And with it, all of the philosophical questions The End forces us to confront: What is the meaning of life? Is there life after death? Is God watching? Beyond that, though, the show’s most significant religious explorations come from Sister Celine and Father Jude, who are tasked with investigating the biblical prophecies surrounding the end times, including the identities of false messiahs and perhaps an antichrist. Father Jude is an unlikely priest — he drinks and swears and seems to want to have a lot of sex before the world ends — but he seems to have genuine faith somewhere under all that smarm.

Mercy Street

The premise in about 100 words:

Two nurses care for wounded soldiers in Mansion House, a luxury hotel in Alexandria, Va., that has been turned into a hospital at the start of the Civil War. Mary (Mary Elizabeth Winstead), a New England abolitionist, and Emma (Hannah James), the daughter of the Confederate hotel owner, butt heads as they try to balance their medical duties with their dueling allegiances. Both women are further troubled as they try to make their way through a man’s world, headed by Dr. Byron Hale (Broadway’s Norbert Leo Butz). A moving subplot features Samuel Diggs (McKinley Belcher), a free black man who knows medicine but needs to keep that secret. Premiered Jan. 17 on PBS.

Religious themes:

The key to the show is found in the title: mercy. As one character explains in the first episode, all who arrive at Mansion House receive treatment. No questions asked. The location of Mansion House, in a Union-occupied Southern town, only highlights, if at times strains, the grace the characters offer and experience. Given that this is a Civil War-period drama, biblical allusions and religious sensibilities are often on display. One of the more interesting characters is Chaplain Hopkins (Luke Macfarlane), who, in spite of the mysteries he hides, reminds workers and patients that God does not see uniforms.

Source: Charisma News

PBS wants its own hit drama, but ‘Mercy Street’ lacks more than just a British accent

14/01/2016

Josh Radnor stars in “Mercy Street,” a new Civil War-era drama from PBS. (Antony Platt/PBS)

The slight sense of longing that runs through the six episodes of PBS’s utterly average Civil War drama “Mercy Street” is not about the characters’ wants and desires or the ample metaphors evident in a tale of disunion. All a viewer can feel here is that PBS wants to be dealt into the high-stakes game of Peak TV, but on its own terms.

Continue reading PBS wants its own hit drama, but ‘Mercy Street’ lacks more than just a British accent

Hallmark Review: Christmas Land (2015, dir. Sam Irvin)

24/12/2015

IMG_5321I’m going to go ahead and quote The Cinema Snob review of Ghosts Can’t Do It (1989): Wow! Wow! Wow! Wow! Wibble Wobble Wazzle Woodle What The Fuck?

Oh, this is bad.

The movie opens up by showing us some Christmas decorations before cutting to the front of a private residence. Inside there are six kids sitting at a table when a woman played by Maureen McCormick of Brady Bunch fame walks in with a picture of herself looking down on everyone from the background.

Continue reading Hallmark Review: Christmas Land (2015, dir. Sam Irvin)

Chaplain Henry Hopkins

Henry_hopkins_mezz.jpg

Henry Hopkins, a hospital chaplain with a dark past, is newly committed to God and his work. His integrity, compassion and worldly wisdom make him an appealing figure to staff and patients alike, and eventually draws the eye of Emma Green, against her own instincts. He, in turn, is drawn to her, though he does his best to hide it, since she is a Confederate who sees him as the enemy. Their attraction is unspoken and slow burning, but will eventually ignite into something neither can deny.

Luke on Henry:

Chaplain Hopkins attends to the souls of the wounded and anybody else who really needs any sort of spiritual guidance, which was an important time or an important thing for these men. This is a time when people were a lot more religious than they are nowadays. So I’ll read Bible verses. I’ll read from the Book of Common Prayer. I’ll do the services. So many of the men in this hospital were at a point in their lives where they badly needed spiritual guidance. Some of them are at the end of their lives and they need to make peace with God, or try to make some kind of peace. So he’s definitely a welcomed figure in the hospital.

Actor bio

Luke Macfarlane currently stars as one of the leads on the SyFy series “Killjoys.” He made his feature film debut in Bill Condon’s Kinsey opposite Liam Neeson and Laura Linney. He also starred in Robert Altman’s “Tanner on Tanner,” a limited series for the Sundance Channel, opposite Cynthia Nixon. On the small screen, Luke was a series regular on the Canadian sitcom “Satisfaction” and has appeared as a guest on hit shows such as “Smash,” “Person of Interest” and “Beauty and the Beast.” On the stage, Luke starred in “Where Do We Live,” written and directed by Chris Shinn, at the Vineyard Theater, as well as the play Juvenilia.

Most recently, Luke has starred in the Playwright’s Horizons production of “The Busy World Is Hushed” opposite Jill Clayburgh. Luke is a graduate of the Juilliard Drama Division, where he starred in the productions of “The School of Night,” “Blue Window,” “The Grapes of Wrath” and “As You Like It.” Luke is best known for his role on ABC’s hit television series “Brothers and Sisters.” He is also known for his work on the critically acclaimed Steven Bochco FX series “Over There” and most recently starred in the CBC mini-series “Iron Road,” leading an all-star cast including Peter O’Toole and Sam Neill.

Luke hails from London, Ontario, and resides in Los Angeles.

Source: PBS

Luke Macfarlane Talks “The Night Shift,” What’s The Deal With The Salvation Army? BRIEFS

24/12/2015

IN OTHER NEWS

Luke Macfarlane talks about his various TV projects, including the Hallmark movie Christmas Land, Season Two of Killjoys, his brief turn on Supergirl (“I got to catch up with Calista Flockhart,”) and his upcoming PBS potential series Mercy Street (which also stars Cameron Monaghan and Jack Falahee)

FeaturedphotoPBS_Mercy-Street_Guide_lores-640x360

 “I’m super proud of this project. It’s produced by Scott-Free, [it has] wonderful writers. I play Chaplain Hopkins, who was a Union Chaplain who worked at this hospital,” he explains. “It’s essentially an Upstairs, Downstairs story of a hospital. Being a Civil War buff, I was very excited to live inside this world. It’s a fantastic cast. I think PBS is looking to find something that whets the appetite of the Downton Abbey audience, which they’ll be losing this year as the show goes off the air. I don’t know how official it is, but I understand they’d like to do one for every year of the war.”

Plus his hopes for a return to NBC’s The Night Shift.

“Also holding a place on Macfarlane’s dance card is the third season of The Night Shift. He hopes he can return to the show after Killjoys wraps in April. “Gabe [Sachs] has been really open with me. I love doing that show. I want to [give him a window] and come do something with Brendan. I’m pitching myself,” he says. “I love being part of the show. I know how frustrating it was for fans [that my availability impacted the story].”

Source: Logo – New Now Next

 

 

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