Tv Series The Watch

The Watch is a fantasy police procedural television programme inspired by the Ankh-Morpork City Watch from the Discworld series of fantasy novels by Terry Pratchett.

The series, developed by BBC Studios for BBC America, premiered on 3 January 2021 and was released on BBC iPlayer on 1 July 2021.

The Watch
GenreFantasy
Police procedural
Created byTerry Pratchett
Based onAnkh-Morpork City Watch
Developed bySimon Allen
Starring
ComposerRuss Davies
Country of originUnited Kingdom
United States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes8
Production
Executive producersSimon Allen
Ben Donald
Richard Stokes
Rob Wilkins
Craig Viveiros
Phil Collinson
ProducerJohann Knobel
Running timeca. 40 minutes per Episode
Production companiesBBC Studios Drama Productions
Narrativia
Original release
NetworkBBC America
Release3 January (2021-01-03) –
14 February 2021 (2021-02-14)

Setting and plot

The series is inspired by the Ankh-Morpork City Watch from the Discworld series of fantasy novels by Terry Pratchett. Set in the fictional Discworld's principal city of Ankh-Morpork, The Watch was described by Terry Pratchett in 2012 as a "Pratchett-style CSI"; it was to have an episodic storyline, following the format of a "crime of the week" as tackled by the city's police force under the command of Sam Vimes. In 2018, Narrativia described it as a "punk rock thriller".

Cast

Episodes

No.Title Directed byWritten byOriginal air date  Viewers
(millions)
1"A Near Vimes Experience"Craig ViveirosSimon Allen3 January 2021 (2021-01-03) (US)0.274
Captain Sam Vimes' life in the City Watch is changed forever when a figure from his past returns to Ankh-Morpork. 20 years ago, Vimes watched his street brother and gang-leader Carcer Dun fall from a fatal height. Somehow, Carcer is back.
2"Ook"Craig ViveirosSimon Allen3 January 2021 (2021-01-03) (US)0.274
Using the policing of Constable Carrot, the Watch connects Carcer's evil plan to strange goings-on at the magical institution called Unseen University. Perhaps a missing library book has something to do with the dragon attacks in the city.
3"The What?"Brian KellySimon Allen10 January 2021 (2021-01-10) (US)0.248
As fear of the dragon keeps people off the streets, The Watch must heist The Assassins' Guild, the city's most secretive and dangerous institution, in a desperate effort to find the precious magical artefact known as Gawain before Carcer.
4"Twilight Canyons"Brian KellyJoy Wilkinson & Simon Allen17 January 2021 (2021-01-17) (US)0.242
Carcer is willing to do anything to find the sword for Gawain; the Watch is close on his tail, following him to Twilight Canyons, a place where the elderly residents await death; DEATH patiently waits for them to draw their last breaths.
5"Not on My Watch"Brian KellyCatherine Tregenna24 January 2021 (2021-01-24) (US)0.185
The Watch have the sword, and with it they could wield the force of the Noble Dragon. Vimes would much rather no one had power on that scale. The Watch must trek through the Unreal Estate to destroy the sword in a magical lake. Carcer isn't far behind.
6"The Dark in The Dark"Emma SullivanSimon Allen & Amrou Al-Kadhi31 January 2021 (2021-01-31) (US)0.233
In the race against Carcer for the second mystical artefact, Cheery, Angua, and Carrot venture into the Mines of Tak, Cheery must confront the darkness in her past. Vimes and Sybil defend the besieged Watch House from Doctor Cruces and her Assassins.
7"Nowhere in the Multiverse"Emma SullivanSimon Allen & Ed Hime7 February 2021 (2021-02-07) (US)0.143
Vimes wakes up with more than the usual hangover. He's slipped into an alternate universe where he's a prisoner in the middle of a jailbreak. In Ankh-Morpork, the alternate-version of Vimes is leading The Watch straight into Carcer's trap.
8"Better to Light a Candle"Emma SullivanSimon Allen14 February 2021 (2021-02-14) (US)0.130
Carcer's got everything he needs to control the Noble Dragon and destroy Ankh-Morpork. With hysteria on the streets and DEATH preparing for a very busy day, can The Watch, this band of misfits, step up and save the city from annihilation?

Production

Development

The Watch was announced in 2011 as under development by Prime Focus Productions, which previously created three two-part television adaptations of Discworld novels. It was later reported to be produced by Pratchett's own TV production company, Narrativia, which he founded in 2012 and which was led by Rod Brown, the erstwhile head of Prime Focus. In 2012, the series was variously reported to be written – under Pratchett's oversight – by either Terry Jones and Gavin Scott, or by Guy Burt, and to have a budget of either £13 to £15 million, or £26 million, for its projected run of thirteen 60-minute episodes, with Pratchett's daughter Rhianna as co-writer. In October 2016, after Pratchett's death, Rhianna Pratchett said in an interview that the project was still ongoing, but in 2019, announced she had not been involved in the project "for many years".

In March 2018, Deadline Hollywood reported that BBC Studios was developing The Watch as a six-part series and as the basis of a "returnable franchise". On 30 October 2018, BBC America announced that it had ordered an eight-episode series of The Watch written by Simon Allen together with Joy Wilkinson, Catherine Tregenna, Amrou Al-Khadi and Ed Hime. Hilary Simon and Phil Collinson were the executive producers; the director was Craig Viveiros. Narrativia retained an executive producer credit but was not involved creatively. The series premiered on 3 January 2021.

Casting

Richard Dormer was cast in the role of Sam Vimes in September 2019. Adam Hugill, Jo Eaton-Kent, Marama Corlett, Lara Rossi, and Sam Adewunmi also joined the cast the same day. The next month, Anna Chancellor and James Fleet joined the cast, as Lord Vetinari and the Archchancellor of Unseen University, respectively, as well as Ingrid Oliver as Doctor Cruces and Ruth Madeley as Throat. In 2019, the series announced it would be recasting several major male characters as women. Joe Vaz was later cast as Urdo van Pew.

Filming

In September 2014, Pratchett's agent Colin Smythe said that the script was in development and shooting would commence in 2015. After Pratchett's death in 2015, his assistant Rob Wilkins said that pre-production was still ongoing, but that no further announcements would be made until filming had begun. Filming began in Cape Town, South Africa.

Reception

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, The Watch has a 'rotten' score of 53%, an average rating of 5.9/10, based on 19 reviews. The website's consensus states: "Despite fantastic production design and a solid cast, The Watch simply doesn't capture the wonder, whimsy, and world building of Terry Pratchett's beloved novels." Kiko Martinez of Variety dubbed it a 'tonal mess' and stated, "the show's generic worldbuilding, one-dimensional characterizations and lack of consistent wit will disappoint the kind of niche audience it’s trying to attract." The Hollywood Reporter praised the show's "imaginative world-building" and humour, but said, "the plots are crushingly rote and uninvolving" and found them too familiar. Writing in The Daily Telegraph, Ed Power cautioned that "The Watch takes everything devotees loved about Pratchett: the wryness, the whimsy, the Tolkien-goes-Monty Python setting of Ankh-Morpork. And then chucks it out the window."

Deviations from source material

Even before the series' release it attracted a large amount of attention for departing from the books' old-fashioned setting, delving into "punk rock" visuals, changing the gender, personality, or origins of characters, and removing some characters completely. These changes angered some Discworld fans, which was exacerbated when Simon Allen, head writer for the series, failed to mention Terry Pratchett during his post commemorating the end of filming. After the 9 October 2020 New York Comic Con panel, Rhianna Pratchett stated it shared "no DNA with my father's Watch", and Neil Gaiman compared the series to "Batman if he's now a news reporter in a yellow trenchcoat with a pet bat".

Notes

References

This article uses material from the Wikipedia English article The Watch (TV series), which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license ("CC BY-SA 3.0"); additional terms may apply (view authors). Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.
®Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wiki Foundation, Inc. Wiki English (DUHOCTRUNGQUOC.VN) is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wiki Foundation.

Tags:

Tv Series The Watch Setting and plotTv Series The Watch CastTv Series The Watch EpisodesTv Series The Watch ProductionTv Series The Watch ReceptionTv Series The Watch

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Princess Margaret, Countess of SnowdonStand by Me (film)Google TranslateBongkrek acidList of solar eclipses in the 21st centuryCarrie FisherElizabeth HolmesMaundy ThursdaySolo LevelingCrocus City Hall attackHenry Cavill4B (movement)Curb stompSandra BullockDune (novel)NATOSama-BajauJenny McCarthyLana Del ReyUFC 302Joey KingWashington, D.C.AustraliaMaura TierneyRajasthan RoyalsC (programming language)Dark webThinking, Fast and SlowMount TakaheThe Beekeeper (2024 film)MonsterVerseA. GaneshamurthiThe Pirate BayRamadanLee GreenwoodSaudi ArabiaTimothée ChalametThe Dark ForestLate Night with the DevilJoanne McNallyStations of the CrossHeath LedgerList of Twenty20 cricket recordsPornhubTajikistanClaudia Sanders Dinner HouseJustin TimberlakeFreddie BartholomewCoco ChanelLeBron JamesJosh PeckPoor Things (film)YG MarleyCultural RevolutionHanu-ManAbbas (photographer)Palm RoyaleCatherine, Princess of WalesKurt CobainFord v FerrariWeWork2024Shōgun (novel)Chicago P.D. (TV series)National Basketball AssociationMarcus GarveyThree-body problemChaturbateRuby FrankeJulius CaesarKerry Von ErichHiroyuki SanadaShogunNick Mohammed🡆 More