An astonishing amount of premieres over the Bank Holiday weekend, with no less than five on Saturday 23rd alone. jlnight has noted BBC4's premiere of Iranian film
My Favourite Cake at 9 p.m., which is in a three way clash with the first showings of
Black Adam at 10:30 p.m. on ITV1 and
The Equalizer 3 at 9 p.m. on Channel 4. Earlier in the evening Channel 4 is showing
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem at 4:40 p.m., and as jlnight has noted, the most intriguing film of the week is Film4 showing South Korean horror film
Sleep at 11:40 p.m.
Another clash occurs on Monday 25th with
Arthur The King on BBC1 at 11 p.m., whilst BBC2 Blumes Into You with
Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret at 10 p.m. As jlnight has noted earlier on Bank Holiday Monday Film4 is showing the premiere of
Robot Dreams at 4:30 p.m.
And at 9 p.m. on Thursday 28th Film4 embraces the "Yookay" aesthetic with
Sumotherhood, teaming Ed Sheeran and Jeremy Corbyn together in a film for the first time.
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Repeat-wise, BBC4's dance season continues to deliver with a showing of the 1953 broadcast of the ballet
Les Sylphides at 11 p.m. on Sunday 24th followed at 11:35 p.m. by a 1974 Omnibus episode in which Lindsay Anderson talks to Rudolf Nureyev.
Earlier that evening BBC4 is doing a tribute to the late Stanley Baxter with his 1962 film Crooks Anonymous at 7:30 p.m. followed by a showing of the Being Stanley Baxter documentary at 9 p.m.
"Legend Xtra"-wise in their Sunday night classic slot they are continuing the Orson Welles theme with 1972's
Treasure Island at 9 p.m. with Welles as Long John Silver and is a strange UK/French/Italian/German/Spanish co-production that according to imdb is apparently co-directed by John Hough (who would go on to The Legend of Hell House the next year), Antonio Marghereti and Andrea Bianchi (who directed Strip Nude For Your Killer in 1975!)
That is followed at 11 p.m. by
Edge of the World, which is a take on the character in Joseph Conrad's Lord Jim. So that's the most interesting double bill of the week.
Though the one screening on Legend Xtra next week that I particularly want to highlight is a showing of the sci-fi film
Pandorum at 11 p.m. on Wednesday 27th, which I think is very underrated (particularly by the RadioTimes, which gives it a one star "Poor" rating!), because it starts out as a really claustrophobic film full of pitch black darkness and tight crawlspaces and (spoiler) moves from a more intense sci-fi horror vein to something much, much bigger by the end. It has been a while since I last watched it, but I do have it on Blu-ray and most remember the way that the film steadily expands its scope and re-frames the relationships between its small cast of characters on the ship felt very impressively done. It is from one of the German producers behind the Paul WS Anderson Resident Evil films, and it kind of takes the same amnesia formula of the first of those films as a jumping off point for something a little bit darker than those films, and weirdly despite being made years before Ridley Scott did his Alien prequel films sort of anticipates the direction of how I would have imagined any sequel to Alien: Covenant to have gone in! Its really a film about the terror of the unknown, facing up to that fear and somehow overcoming it.
That was directed by Christian Alvart and came after 2005's
Antibodies, which has Norman Reedus in a small role despite it being in German(!), and the Renee Zellwegger horror
Case 39. It looks as if since Pandorum that Alvart has stayed mainly in German film, although there is apparently a London set series coming called Embassy which features JK Simmons and Anna Kendrick in it!