The Flash: Sky1, 8pm
Struck by lightning in a freak accident, meek police scientist Barry Allen is transformed into the fastest man alive... The Flash!
Glee actor Grant Gustin dons the garb of DC's Scarlet Speedster for this fun and frothy series, a spinoff from Sky1's Arrow - and watch out for a cameo from that show's star, Stephen Amell.
The Missing: BBC One, 9pm
James Nesbitt and Frances O'Connor star in this new high-emotion thriller, which explores the fallout from the kidnapping of a young boy - five-year-old Oliver, son of Tony (Nesbitt) and Emily Hughes (O'Connor).
Jason Flemyng and Arsher Ali also star in The Missing - a glossy co-production between the BBC and Us cable network Starz.
CSI: Channel 5, 9pm
This Us TV procedural brings its 14th season to a close with a very personal episode for Jim Brass (Paul Guilfoyle), who must make...
Struck by lightning in a freak accident, meek police scientist Barry Allen is transformed into the fastest man alive... The Flash!
Glee actor Grant Gustin dons the garb of DC's Scarlet Speedster for this fun and frothy series, a spinoff from Sky1's Arrow - and watch out for a cameo from that show's star, Stephen Amell.
The Missing: BBC One, 9pm
James Nesbitt and Frances O'Connor star in this new high-emotion thriller, which explores the fallout from the kidnapping of a young boy - five-year-old Oliver, son of Tony (Nesbitt) and Emily Hughes (O'Connor).
Jason Flemyng and Arsher Ali also star in The Missing - a glossy co-production between the BBC and Us cable network Starz.
CSI: Channel 5, 9pm
This Us TV procedural brings its 14th season to a close with a very personal episode for Jim Brass (Paul Guilfoyle), who must make...
- 10/28/2014
- Digital Spy
Two small-town murders, connected yet separated by a quarter of a century, will bring Treat Williams to CSI: Crime Scene Investigation for a guest stint on Wednesday's season finale, "Dead in His Tracks." (10/9c on CBS). The former Everwood star plays security guard Sam Bishop, who was an investigator on the first murder back in 1989 but retired from cop work in frustration when he couldn't solve the case. Now Bishop has reappeared and D.B. Russell (Ted Danson) is leery of him — but suspicion soon turns to awe.
"It turns out Bishop was a man way ahead of his time — a proto-csi," says Andrew Dettmann, who wrote the episode. "So much of our modern CSI work uses technology that wasn't available in Bishop's day, yet he was using his own inventions to solve crime — like a homemade recipe for detecting gunshot residue and a jerry-rigged camera and weather balloon that did...
"It turns out Bishop was a man way ahead of his time — a proto-csi," says Andrew Dettmann, who wrote the episode. "So much of our modern CSI work uses technology that wasn't available in Bishop's day, yet he was using his own inventions to solve crime — like a homemade recipe for detecting gunshot residue and a jerry-rigged camera and weather balloon that did...
- 5/7/2014
- by Michael Logan
- TVGuide - Breaking News
Who says irony is limited to the confines of narratives?
In 2002, Electronic Arts released the third game in its already-incredibly-popular Medal of Honor series (created by none other than the venerable Steven Spielberg, who thought that the opening Normandy sequence from his recently completed Saving Private Ryan would make quite the interactive experience). Its name was Allied Assault, and it was crafted by a relatively small, PC-only developer called 2015, Inc.
The game was a considerable success for both EA and the rapidly-expanding WWII first-person shooter market, which was quickly becoming, even at this early point, flooded with me-too titles. It was also a major success for the heads of the development team, Vince Zampella and Jason West, who immediately found themselves in a paradoxical situation: although having their horizons greatly expanded by their instant celebrity, they lacked the ability to plot their future creative course, as the mega-publisher would demand repetitive,...
In 2002, Electronic Arts released the third game in its already-incredibly-popular Medal of Honor series (created by none other than the venerable Steven Spielberg, who thought that the opening Normandy sequence from his recently completed Saving Private Ryan would make quite the interactive experience). Its name was Allied Assault, and it was crafted by a relatively small, PC-only developer called 2015, Inc.
The game was a considerable success for both EA and the rapidly-expanding WWII first-person shooter market, which was quickly becoming, even at this early point, flooded with me-too titles. It was also a major success for the heads of the development team, Vince Zampella and Jason West, who immediately found themselves in a paradoxical situation: although having their horizons greatly expanded by their instant celebrity, they lacked the ability to plot their future creative course, as the mega-publisher would demand repetitive,...
- 2/24/2011
- by Patrick Sauriol
- Corona's Coming Attractions
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