Originally posted by Nick Armstrong
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Recommended Television Programmes
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI really love this channel - in its own field it caters for my own age demographic, something which certainly cannot be said of Radio 3 these days.
I recall seeing a great many 'War' films in my early teens, which don't invariably stand up to scrutiny now. The Dam Busters is an exception, though on close observation lately it looked to me as though they'd filmed it all with only three Lancasters! From time to time I've wondered whether that plethora of British war films was supported in some way by government funding - to emphasise that we had been the good guys and that the consequent sacrifices, including postwar austerity, were all worthwhile.
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View PostGood to read I agree.
I emailed TPTV about the solitary episode and received a commendably rapid reply, saying:
yes there are more on their way - so you don’t miss the others , please do sign up for our FREE Sunday newsletter, sent to you by email every Sunday. Sign up via www.talkingpicturestv.co.uk In it we list what’s coming up on the channel
So that’s good news. Might be worth signing up, uct. I shall try and post alerts here as and when further Maigret episodes turn up in the schedule.
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Originally posted by underthecountertenor View PostYes, so it would appear. A great shame: I had never seen Cremer's Maigret before and was grateful for your tip-off. I greatly enjoyed "Les Plaisirs de le Nuit" (rather amusingly bowdlerised in translation as "Maigret in Montmartre," presumably by the same smelling-salts-inhaler who subtitled "Je vous dis merde" as "Break a leg," though I suppose that is the only real equivalent). Cremer was almost exactly how I have always imagined Maigret (and extraordinarily 'lived-in' compared to his younger days) and the filming caught the atmosphere perfectly for me. I was quite surprised by how explicit the club scenes were. Music good too.
I was also unaware of Talking Pictures TV until now, so thank you for that too. It does seem like a rather random treasure-trove, as if someone had bought blind a few cardboard boxes of assorted DVDs in a house-clearance auction. But it's rather charmingly presented in its way.
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Originally posted by underthecountertenor View PostExcellent news. Thanks for enquiring, Nick, and I take back my initial characterisation of TPTV. I'll certainly sign up."...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 underthecountertenor View PostExcellent news. Thanks for enquiring, Nick, and I take back my initial characterisation of TPTV. I'll certainly sign up.
Somewhat random programming but better than nothing…"...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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Enjoying this ballet on BBC four.
Birmingham Royal Ballet perform Don Quixote in a production by Carlos Acosta.
Based on Spain’s most famous novel, the classic ballet follows Don Quixote’s extraordinary adventures as he helps young lovers Kitri and Basilio find happiness.Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...
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I enjoy the Digging for Britain series. It's largely escaped gimmickry so far and I often learn something new and unexpected. Tonight it was the Iron Age method of grain storage - pits in the ground. At first that doesn't seem very likely, but apart from the obvious of choosing suitable ground conditions - well drained - they had another trick. When the grain was put in the ground the outside edge in contact with the soil started to germinate, at which point the pit would be sealed with turves to create anaerobic conditions to halt germination. The grain could be stored for years so long as it remained sealed. If the grain did spoil the pit was cleaned by burning before being re-used. In other parts of the world such invention is either still in use or not long superseded I would think, which perhaps helps to inform such discoveries. The more I find out about ancient and primitive people's ingenuity the more I think we aren't always as clever as we like to think, and it behoves us to at least keep a record of such things and try them out. They might come in handy.
Something for the denizens of the far west tonight also - Romans in Cornwall.
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Originally posted by JasonPalmer View PostInteresting program on BBC four about impressionists especially informing us of the new tools available to artists and other such titbits.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b012rvkl
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Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...
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