Blame what you will, television is feeling the effects of interruptions in the entertainment supply chain. That isn’t to say there isn’t as much TV as ever, but up and down the platforms and around the dial, streamers and broadcasters are filling the gaps with shows bought from abroad.
As with cars and microchips, the patriotic thing would seem to be to advocate for products made in America with American labor — and, as a local booster, made in Hollywood. But art, of course, is international, we are long past the time when studio back lots doubled for anywhere on Earth, and imported content, even of a middling sort, offers its own distinct slant on the world and how people live in it.
Debuting domestically this week are two shows from opposite ends of the English-speaking world. From our closest television cousin, the United Kingdom, comes “Joan,” a true-crime story airing on the CW at 9 p.m. ET Wednesdays; “The Last Days of the Space Age,” on Hulu, flies in from Australia, the country that is also a continent. Both are period pieces, set in the later decades of the 20th century, and both feature actors who have been in “Game of Thrones,” though the odds of that happening are, after all, relatively high.
Set in a Perth suburb in 1979, “The Last Days of the Space Age” has something of the vibe of American dramedies of the 1990s — “Picket Fences” or “Northern Exposure,” though not as quirky or well-written — flirting with serious subjects but in such a way that you note the seriousness without taking it seriously. (It’s a small-town dramedy, attached to a larger town.) The series is full — very full — of characters, each with their delineated problems or aspirations, but in the four busy episodes (out of eight) available for review, only a hint of narrative drive. That’s not a bad thing, necessarily — television is generally more about character than conclusions, and some of these people make decent company.