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Category:    Home > Reviews > Science Ficiton > Thriller > British TV > Torchwood – The Complete First Season (2007/BBC DVD)

Torchwood – The Complete First Season (2007/BBC DVD)

 

Picture: B     Sound: B     Extras: A     Episodes: A+

 

 

The new Dr. Who has proven nothing short of wonderful, and has been a great success for its producers at the BBC.  Following up on that success is the spinoff Torchwood, detailing the adventures of Captain Jack Harkness, an immortal adventurer who traveled with the good Doctor and who now runs the quasi-governmental entity that forms the title of the show.  Torchwood's mission finds its members hunting and collecting the strange technology left behind in the aftermath of the Doctor's many clashes with the Earth's alien foes.  They also do a fair job of encountering their own unique alien visitors, and even manage to imprison a few in their facility.

Torchwood strikes an edgier, more sexually charged tone than Dr. Who, but features many of the same critical elements that make its parent show great. Tight scripts, excellent casting, and wonderful location shots of England (Cardiff, mostly) blend to make each episode a fast-moving sci-fi romp.  John Barrowman is excellent as Harkness, and Eve Myles is at once sexy and tough as ex-copper Gwen Cooper.  Her character provides not only the moral center of the Torchwood team, but as a late-comer, also lends a layman's perspective to the weirdness the other team members seemingly accept without question.

Did we mention the show has plenty of snogging (kissing)?  It seems in one episode or another, everyone gets a chance to do a little lip-wrestling.  And when your lead character (Harkness) proves to be equally interested in paramours of both sexes, things can and do get a little wild.  Beyond the physical aspects of his relationships, Harkness can be deeply introspective, his character as complex as any of the alien devices he seeks to protect.  There is a deep and abiding sadness about him that is explored and revealed as each episode builds toward the first-season climax.

The extra edge of this show doesn't just manifest itself sexually.  Barrowman's Harkness, and the rest of his team, aren't afraid to blast aliens with conventional weapons or the more exotic stuff found in their adventures.  This represents of a departure from the mostly non-violent approach taken by Dr. Who and his normal companions.

The box contains the requisite bevy of extras fans of the Dr. Who series have come to expect. Commentaries, documentary pieces, and other extras abound.  The anamorphically enhanced 1.78 X 1 picture and Dolby Digital 5.1 sound are both solid from episode to episode and facilitate enjoyable viewing of the story and action.

Although Dr. Who could never be considered a kid's show, it is still mostly safe to watch with kids in the room.  Not so with Torchwood.  It's sexy, gory, and edgy enough to warrant sending the kids off to bed, but it still manages plenty of moments of levity for all that snogging and shooting.  "Everything Changes" marks the show's tagline, one often quoted by Jack Harkness, but the Russell T. Davies and his fellows at the BBC have remained as sharp as ever with this snazzy spinoff.

 

 

-   Scott R. Pyle


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