Archive for the 'GENERATION KILL' Category

Generation Kill competition winners

 Generation Kill book

The US Marines of Generation Kill will complete their mission this Sunday on FX when they roll into the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.

Our Generation Kill competition has also drawn to a close, and thanks to everybody who entered. Our six winners correctly answered that the US invasion of Iraq started in 2003 and they will all receive a copy of Evan Wright’s Generation Kill, the book on which the series is based.

The winners are: Dom Stancombe from Carshalton, Sarah Sharrock from Bolton, Sandra Astbury from Liverpool, Andrew Hindley from Blackpool, Ruth Tesdale from Chesterfield, Joanne Green from Tamworth.

Congratulations! Your prizes will be with you soon.

30 Rock competition winner

Blimey, there are a lot of 30 Rock fans out there. We were inundated with entries for our competition to win a box-set of the first series on DVD, but sadly there can only be one winner - and that person is… drum roll… Robert Coupee from Poole in Dorset. Royal Mail permitting, the DVD will be winging its way to you in the next couple of days, Robert!

Meanwhile, don’t forget there’s still time to enter our competition to win a copy of Generation Kill and keep an eye out for more great competitions over the coming weeks.

Your chance to win a copy of Generation Kill, the book behind the US drama series

 Generation Kill book competition

As US Marines advance into Iraq in the drama Generation Kill, a Rolling Stone reporter stays close to the action as he rides with the troops in the back of a Humvee.

The reporter, Evan Wright, spent two months with the battalion and told the story of their experiences of combat in his award-winning book Generation Kill.

David Simon and Ed Burns, the men behind the acclaimed series The Wire, turned his book into the gritty drama that’s now showing on FX on Sunday nights.

Our friends at FX have given us six copies of Evan Wright’s book, Generation Kill, to give away. To win, just answer the following question:

Q. In which year did President George W Bush launch the invasion of Iraq?

Send your answer, clearly marked Generation Kill Book Competition, in the subject line, to tvspy@ipcmedia.com

Competition closes Friday 27 February 2009. We will collect your personal email data solely to process your competition entry. Prizes will be awarded to the first six correct entries drawn at random under independent supervision after the competition closes at midnight on 27 February. We will notify the winners by email within 21 days of this closing date. The prize consists of one Generation Kill novel per winner. Promoter: IPC Media. Prize supplier: FX.

For full terms and conditions see here

Jim returns with his weekly review | Here’s the lowdown on Generation Kill: Get Some

generation-kill.jpg

Our sometime reviewer Jim is back, and this time he has enlisted for a weekly viewing of Generation Kill, the new US drama from the men behind The Wire, David Simon and Ed Burns. Here’s what he made of the first episode, ‘Get Some’…

“The Marines Corps is like America’s little pitbull. They beat us, starve us, and once in a while they let us out to attack somebody.”

David Simon and Ed Burns’ Generation Kill started its seven-episode run on FX last nighty and, as you’d hope and expect from the creators of The Wire, the episode ‘Get Some’ didn’t pull any punches in its depiction of US Marines preparing for war in Iraq.

As they wait in Kuwait for the order to invade, the troops bond by practising their martial arts, reading porn mags, mocking supportive letters from schoolchildren back home, and trying to find out if rumours of J.Lo’s death are true. They also fix their Humvees out of their own pockets, deal with appalling wind storms in the desert, and question why they’ve been sent woodland camouflage for a desert war.

The series is based on a book by Evan Wright, a Rolling Stone reporter who was embedded with the Marines of First Recon Battalion. Although treated with suspicion by the soldiers when he first arrives, he gains their confidence when he tells them he used to write for the porn mag, Hustler.

Generation Kill is like a hardcore Band of Brothers. It’s not comfortable viewing, but that’s its strength. Evan Wright has said that the series aims to portray the Marines as they are, not as people back home think they ought to be. It’s not a series where you’ll find any Hollywood-sentimentality or emotive music.

The first episode ends with the order to tell surrendering Iraqis to return to their own lines and an uncertain fate. It’s a disturbing sign of things to come. As one Marine comments: ‘Iraqis first contact with Americans – we **** ‘em’.

Eleven brand new US shows we just can’t wait to see (9/11) | John Adams

JOHN ADAMS

Starts More4, late-September

John Adams may not be the most familiar name in American history, but the onetime American President’s importance is recognised in the excellent HBO drama John Adams, coming to More4 later this month.

The seven-part series chronicles the life of Adams and the turbulent era that saw the United States break away from Britain – its colonial ruler – to assert its independence. Adams became the second President of the United States and had a huge influence in establishing the nation’s values.

The story begins in 1770 with clashes between British redcoats and the citizens of Boston, and ends on 4 July 1826, the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence and the date of Adams’s death at the age of 90. The series was highly praised when it aired in America earlier this year and has been nominated for 23 Emmy awards.

Its top-notch cast includes two of my favourite actors, Paul Giamatti, as Adams, and Laura Linney, as his wife Abigail, as well as Brits Tom Wilkinson and Rufus Sewell.

The series looks great, with high production values, and is as much a love story as a political drama, with some of the dialogue taken from John and Abigail’s own correspondence. I’ve found it frustrating that so many recent historical dramas have had all the history removed (one national newspaper coined a new word for this, a ‘historyectomy’), so it’s great that John Adams promises to tell an entertaining story without messing around with the facts. Watch it. Take my word for it, you won’t be disappointed. Here, to get you in the mood, is a trailer from makers HBO…You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube videoClick here for more great new US shows coming to a screen near you this autumn