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1970s Los Angeles – the city of angels and broken dreams. Three remarkable women keep the West Coast safe from alien attacks – they are Torchwood Los Angeles.
So many young girls come to this city hoping for something better. For some, luck is just around the corner. For others that golden ticket never arrives and they just fade away. But it’s not that simple. Everyone has a value to someone, and Torchwood are about to discover Hollywood’s darkest secret.
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67 primary booksBig Finish Torchwood is a 67-book series with 73 primary works first released in 2015 with contributions by David Llewellyn, James Goss, and Emma Reeves.
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This is, essentially, a spoof of Charlie's Angels that happens to be using some of the Torchwood setting as a backdrop. Three attractive women in '70s Los Angeles are hired by Torchwood, via a disembodied male voice, and take part in adventures that involve hunting down aliens and (presumably) wearing flared trousers a lot.
There is both good and bad in this. On the plus side, there's more genuine female empowerment and a more ethnically diverse cast than in the story's '70s inspiration. The plot is also a reasonable one, with women being kidnapped for purposes that eventually turn out to be quite creepy - and are arguably a critique of archaic male attitudes to feminine beauty. The music is good too, the sort of thing one could well imagine in an American show of the era.
On the downside, it really doesn't feel much like Torchwood. It's American (and what is Torchwood doing with a branch in LA anyway?) and done in the style of a glitzy TV show of the era. As a parody of Charlie's Angels, sure, it's quite effective, but that's quite a clash of tones, regardless of the details of the plot. Whether you'll enjoy it will depend a lot on what you're expecting to get. I found myself liking the characters and finding it a fun ride... but it's very much out of place in this particular series.