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First Review: Rain Shadow

The overwhelming mood from the first hour of the new ABC drama series Rain Shadow is one steeped in the stillness of time.

The landscape is spare, the people are unhurried, and the images, script and performances are languid. All of which is perfectly in harmony with a land struggling merely to hang on amid this debilitating drought.

As seasoned veterinarian Kate McDonald (Rachel Ward) tells her new assistant Jill Blake (Victoria Thane), the property dwellers in the dying district of Paringa merely hope to "make do." Meanwhile their land is fatally thirsty, their animals diseased and hope is merely a memory.

Blake is a city vet working under McDonald, a "bitch on wheels" according to one colleague. The two share an empty post of a surgery, that comprises little more than two ramshackle huts. McDonald has stayed on the job years after the death of her veterinarian husband, but with her abrupt and grim manner, she hasn't managed to hold down an assistant. In this unforgiving environment is it any wonder?

The script by Tony Morphett (Blue Heelers) is suitably less ambitious than his recent
Sea Patrol pilot, which sought to package a slicker, more contemporary television hour. Rain Shadow's best assets are not as readily identifiable. As a 6 parter, the series arc is neither necessarily apparent, but this works to great effect as the charms of the characters and the land itself creep up on you. Under the hand of director Shawn Seet (The Alice, MDA, Secret Life of Us, Loot) there is enough trust in the material and performers to allow some real resonance here. Producer Gus Howard (Blue Heelers) is equally at ease with the freedom of an uninterrupted story canvas. Writer Jimmy Thomson is co-creator.

The cinematography captures the overwhelming brown-ness of the South Australian bush, and the score by The Audreys evokes a haunting, placid, rural spirit. They are employed to illustrate the isolation and despair of the challenges faced by our farms, but with less melodrama than McLeod's Daughters and less passion than the foreclosing banks of The Farm, another ABC drama.

The ABC has had great success with genial Sunday night dramas, Seachange and Hamish Macbeth, and even the other animals in All Creatures Great and Small to name a few. Likable characters have been pivotal to these successes.

Rain Shadow, which slowly introduces us to its true-blue Jill and a cast of jackaroos, may not aspire to quite the same dizzying heights, but that's to our advantage.

Rain Shadow premieres 8:30pm Sunday on ABC.

Gallery: Rain Shadow.
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Dumped: The Wedge

Technically this is a case of Bumped not Dumped, but the new timeslot for first-run episodes of The Wedge is so inglorious, it's a moot point.

On October 20th the show will appear at the dead-zone slot of 10:50pm on a Saturday night.

Hardly a vote of confidence for a show that TEN trumpeted as forming part of its 2007 line-up.

Arguably, the only reason the show is even screening is for its local quota points. TEN can still benefit from those if the show screens in prime-time 6pm - midnight. At this rate they just sneak it over the line.

The show will follow a repeat screening of the movie Back to the Future III.
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To John and Bacharach

Australian Idol's Mr. Nice Guy, John Foreman will present a TV special celebrating the music of legendary songwriter Burt Bacharach.

With a string of guest performers, Foreman will highlight the songs from the man behind such hits as "This Guy's in Love", "Walk On By", "Always Something There to Remind Me", "I Just Don't Know What to do with Myself" and "What The World Needs Now."

Guest performers will include Kate Ceberano, Leo Sayer, Ricki-Lee, Diesel, Katie Noonan, Dean Geyer, Dallas Crane, Paulini and Amy Pearson.

And there will be a rare television performance by Burt Bacharach himself. Sounds like a treat!

John Foreman presents: Burt Bacharach airs 9:30pm Friday October 19 on TEN.
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Practice makes perfect, so far...

Officially the weekly ratings from the early US Fall Season are out Tuesday (US), but the top new show of the season was Private Practice, the spin-off from Grey's Anatomy. It took in 14.2m viewers.

Next was Bionic Woman (13.6m) which screens here on Thursday.

Cane from CBS had 11.2m, Dirty Sexy Money (10.4m) and Life which airs on Wednesday on TEN had 10.1m.

Chuck and Big Bang Theory had 9m each.

Aussie networks are scrambling to crow about the results of their new acquisitions, but so far none of the new shows are creating a Desperate Housewives or Lost-style buzz.

Figures are likely to be adjusted after DVR adjustment by Nielsen.
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Foxy dancers

In case you hadn't heard, tonight's Dancing with the Stars will include a dance by one Kath Day Knight and hubby Kel.

Yes, the Seven show that hardly needs any more cross promotion (and which show am I referring to there?) will have a helping hand from another.

Since Kath and Kim has moved from the public broadcaster to Seven we are seeing more and more stunts such as this. It's something The Chaser could consider in any future plans.

Jane Turner has always been hysterical at her physical comedy, including old dance routines on Fast Forward. I have no doubt this will be more of the same.

No word on whether Kim will be sitting in the audience...
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Dave vs Paris

Last night's edition of The Late Show with David Letterman showed why he is such a cool host. Paris Hilton was there to chat about her "fashion line, movie and perfume" but Dave just wanted to chat about her time in prison. He didn't let her get away with it.



Clip runs for 8.47 mins.
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Hairworld. Be afraid.

If you've ever seen one of Christopher Guests hilarious mockumentaries, (particularly 'Best in Show') , then check out the kooky contestants in the ABC's too-scary doco, The Pursuit of Excellence: Hairworld.

In Moscow last year, eight hundred stylists from fifty countries competed at the International HairWorld Championships for coveted gold, silver and bronze medals in timed tests of hairstyling skill. Tuesday October 2 at 8pm on ABC-TV.



Next week it's the world of Synchronised Swimmers.
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