Originally posted by Richard Tarleton
View Post
Undercover
Collapse
X
-
Richard Tarleton
Hmm, bit of a coincidence that, not only children the same age, not only both got into Oxford, but the same college.....
As for being dropped off by your parents, how things have changed - mine knew which university I went to, but that was as far as it went
Comment
-
This article sums up my misgivings about this series:
The TV drama is well produced but based on such an implausible premise it is misleading and inauthentic
On another thread I called it "hideously gentrified" and the whole successful, wealthy family set-up - sustained over 20 years - with a successful lawyer going for the DPP job was surely a world away from the real stories on which the series was supposedly based. And one of the real-life victims has now confirmed it. I think it was intellectually dishonest and a waste of two excellent performers in Sophie Okonedo and Adrian Lester.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by jean View PostIt's also very unlikely that a barrister who'd never done prosecution work would be appointed to this role.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
She's had serious fits and been diagnosed with epilepsy...and she's still driving a car!
It's a minor point perhaps, but an accumulation of small incredibilities contributes to the irritation.
Originally posted by aeolium View PostThis article sums up my misgivings about this series:
http://www.theguardian.com/commentis...eries-tv-drama
It seems not. No wonder the women are angry with this fictionalisation.
Or - if it did happen - wouldn't such an officer (in the words of the article) come clean straight away about his true identity rather than be bullied back into working for his old employers?
.Last edited by jean; 25-04-16, 09:28.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI think it's becoming clear that she was "planted" into the role, manipulated by shifty political types for nefarious reasons yet to be disclosed.
And the original case she's so anxious to resume - how could that be so important to the police twenty years on, give the number of deaths in custody they've managed to cover up?
Comment
-
-
However, my fear is that Undercover is to our stories what The Boy in Striped Pyjamas is to the Holocaust. A well-produced narrative based on an implausible premise that is both misleading and inauthentic.
The Boy in Striped Pyjamas* seems to be a very good comparison. Would people really want to watch if the reality of such an uncomfortable story were told 'tell it as it is'?
*I didn’t know this was made into a film though not surprising. It is a very attractive story.
(As I didn’t watch the programme, I can’t tell the quality of the drama but I thought the comparison interesting.)Last edited by doversoul1; 25-04-16, 21:04.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by doversoul View Post[I]
The Boy in Striped Pyjamas* seems to be a very good comparison. Would people really want to watch if the reality of such an uncomfortable story were told 'tell it as it is'?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by aeolium View PostNo, I don't think The Boy In Striped Pyjamas was a very good comparison in that article. No imaginary filmic representation could conceivably give even the faintest idea of the horror of the Holocaust, and it could not be graphically portrayed. Yet since Undercover was supposed to be based on the real experiences of victims of police undercover operations it could have done a much better job of making its plot more dramatically plausible even if it did not need to replicate too closely what happened in real life.
I was thinking about the book which did not need to involve visual representation but it is an ‘attractive’ (I know this is an inappropriate adjective but a useful one) subject, as is this drama. It is this comment I thought was apt;
‘A well-produced narrative based on an implausible premise that is both misleading and inauthentic’
I suppose it would be possible to make a plausible and authentic drama based on what actually happened but then would the BBC, or any mass media for that matter, want it? However I won’t discuss any further, since I don’t watch television and have little ideas about how things are.
[ed.] This drama seems to me to be a variation of Madam Butterfly; it isn’t the reality or authenticity but a fantasy that fits in their expectations that people enjoy.Last edited by doversoul1; 25-04-16, 22:47.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by doversoul View PostI suppose it would be possible to make a plausible and authentic drama based on what actually happened but then would the BBC, or any mass media for that matter, want it?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by aeolium View PostWhy not? It was presumably with the view of making the drama plausible and authentic that the writer of Undercover went to interview one of the victims of a real-life undercover operation...
Not that I think that meant it was a good idea to make the drama they did make.
Comment
-
-
Richard Tarleton
Comment