Originally posted by Lat-Literal
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Hold the Sunset
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Originally posted by Pianorak View PostFor me characterisation and dialogue took an irrecoverable nose dive the minute the son appeared on the doorstep, IMV. Mercifully I never saw any of the trailers. That said, Alison Steadman can do no wrong in my book.
Sure, it's not Fawlty Towers or, thank god, Mrs Brown's Boys or The Thick of It, I'll grant you that, but in my humble opinion it's tracking Detectorists, Car Share and even Gavin and Stacey as well as more traditional series. They are not packed full of jokes but to varying degrees have merits. They align with slow tv. All we need now is slower radio and slower life.Last edited by Lat-Literal; 27-02-18, 18:44.
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostAlison Steadman. . . I'd call her a national treasure. . .My life, each morning when I dress, is four and twenty hours less. (J Richardson)
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Originally posted by Pianorak View PostJune Whitfield at 92 yes, a national treasure, but Alison Steadman at 71? Isn't she a bit too young for that? Actually not sure if there is a minimum age for that accolade.
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post'Mum' (BBC2) is much, much subtler and much, much funnier. What's not to admire about dialogue that can slip in the words 'inconsequentially inhomogeneous' to perfectly reflect the character of the dreadful woman who utters them?"...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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Originally posted by Caliban View PostAgreed LMcD - funny, often in a 'dig fingernails into arm of chair' sort of way, although slightly repetitive, and challenging even comic credibility that Lesley Manville's character would put up with the collection of gargoyles and morons who surround her!
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Comments about poor writing on Hold the Sunset will probably deter me from watching it. Watched Mum, being a fan of Lesley Manville. Enjoyable but might not stick with it. Great to see her career really blossoming in its later stages (opposite of John Cleese?). She was excellent with Jeremy Irons in Long Day's Journey into Night at Bristol Old Vic (now West End) and the film Phantom Thread. The best TV comedy I've seen recently was Channel Four's Derry Girls - also Catastrophe and Inside No 9.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostAgreed in turn! I find the character of Kelly irritatingly one-dimensional. However, there are plenty of compensatory moments of what is sometimes exquisitely painful comedy.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI love Mum albeit they have to be careful to move the story on and not just repeat matters - Pauline is quite magnificently horrible and vulnerable all at the same time. Jason I find the difficult character - his father must have been as thick as two short planks as he differs so much from his Mum.
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Originally posted by gradus View PostI sense the possibility of a funny performance from John Cleese in his irascible sarcastic mod...
There’s no way I want to work in TV, especially at the BBC. I have a nasty feeling a large proportion of the commissioning editors have no idea what they’re doing
Is he being deliberately unfunny in this thing, then? Could he do better if he chose?
I doubt it. Cleese hasn't been funny for years. Remember this. He wrote it himself.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI love Mum albeit they have to be careful to move the story on and not just repeat matters - Pauline is quite magnificently horrible and vulnerable all at the same time. Jason I find the difficult character - his father must have been as thick as two short planks as he differs so much from his Mum.
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