....I haven't read this novel recently....but surely it is not a black farce....the speed of the Schiegel sisters + brothers delivery is like an Abbot and Costello skit on Amphetamines....some really bizarre stuff going on [surely]....really thought someone would come running through a door at any moment with their trousers around their knees a la Brian Rix Whitehall farces....one wonders if the dirty hands of Stephen Poliakoff are on this production (no, but please excuse my attempt to get this bete noire git fingered)....Oh well next week they may bring CGI versions of Stanley Hollaway and Joyce Carey into the production....This drama and its short comings made me angry....ANGRY Glusburn, North Yorkshire
Howards End....
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Yes - I greatly enjoyed last week's first episode, but last night increasingly wanted to slap Tibby: and the "33rpm played at 45" dialogue: pleeease, just shut up!! And Joe Bannister is just too wet here - what on earth is a woman as dignified as Jacky doing giving him the time of day?
OTOH, Matthew McFadyen is very good - completely different from Anthony Hopkins in the Merchant Ivory film, but as convincing and moving if not more so.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Richard Tarleton
Yes this all talking at once bit is just too much. I hope the chap playing Tibby is a great actor and that he's not really like that.
I have to say I gave up on the novel, 50 years ago, not very far into it (I tried it on the heels of A Passage to India) as I found all the characters dislikeable or uninteresting - I didn't care what happened to any of them. Nowadays, thanks to Merchant Ivory, it's no longer necessary actually to read EM Forster. Though each film has its duff note (Alec Guinness blacked up in APTI, Daniel Day-Lewis's appalling hamming in ARWAV)....I did see the M. Ivory Howard's End, and thought the star turns rather swamped it - at least this is a fine ensemble piece. But - I just don't find most of the dialogue remotely believeable.
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That's what I thought.
But as Forster is examinig so minutely the subtleties of class, he would surely have been explicit about it if he'd wanted to consider issues of race as well?
And then, for her to be as dignified as she is here flies in the face of the character as she appears in the book; but to portray her otherwise would offend modern sensitivities around race.
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Originally posted by jean View PostThat's what I thought.
But as Forster is examinig so minutely the subtleties of class, he would surely have been explicit about it if he'd wanted to consider issues of race as well?
And then, for her to be as dignified as she is here flies in the face of the character as she appears in the book; but to portray her otherwise would offend modern sensitivities around race.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostI hope the chap playing Tibby is a great actor and that he's not really like that.
I enjoyed both my readings of the novel (before and after the film came out; so some years ago now) - the dialogue was less rushed, and less silly in content in my head. I also much enjoyed Zadie Smith's On Beauty - a clever "updating" of the themes of Forster's novel, which you might find more believable (and enjoyable), Richard.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostYes - I greatly enjoyed last week's first episode, but last night increasingly wanted to slap Tibby: and the "33rpm played at 45" dialogue: pleeease, just shut up!! And Joe Bannister is just too wet here - what on earth is a woman as dignified as Jacky doing giving him the time of day?
Including all the chattering among the Schlegels - I've known families just like that, and have had to suppress the urge to punch the more precocious among them and/or run screaming from the building to escape the jabber of people talking over one another... it rings terribly true in this adaptation. And after all, Margaret does say at one point that it seems to her that they are all "chattering away at the edge of a great abyss" - not a phrase from the book, but one which underpins the direction style for their scenes together I think.
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostOTOH, Matthew McFadyen is very good - completely different from Anthony Hopkins in the Merchant Ivory film, but as convincing and moving if not more so.
Originally posted by LMcD View PostToo much talk. Too much (unnecessary, irritating) music. (Sadly, the latter comment also applies to Blue Planet 2)."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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I agree with Caliban's points above, having enjoyed the acting and the photography and not really noticed the music. I didn't know Philippa Coulthard and have been very impressed. I like the sparky interplay with her sister, Hayley Atwell, whose qualities we were aware of, having seen her twice on the stage in Shaw's Major Barbara and Miller's View from the Bridge.
Re Blue Planet: I agree about the music and am slightly irritated by the incessant soundtrack noises which they have deemed it necessary to add.
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....ref music....may have meant the spirited loud playing of piano while shrill double talk conversations between siblings....drove me to despair datspair too....Last edited by eighthobstruction; 21-11-17, 10:51.bong ching
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI agree with Caliban's points above, having enjoyed the acting and the photography and not really noticed the music.
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