Originally posted by Maclintick
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Recommended Television Programmes
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I've had an on-and-off affair with P&P. I adore I know where I'm Going, A Canterbury Tale (these two I can watch endlessly) , The Tales of Hoffman, The Edge of the World. and Black Narcissus. But I don't care much for The LIfe and Death of Colonel Blimp (maybe it's too much 'of its time' to be relevant now) and I really don't like A matter of Life and Death at all ; I can't understand why it's so highly regarded.
Everything I've seen about Powell himself suggests to me that he was a very odd person: the sort of person who can't fit into ordinary life; maybe that's another way of saying I sense a touch of genius. Maybe cinematic auteurs need to be eccentrics: Tati, Bela Tar, Bergman, Ozu. .
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
I really tried to like 'I Know Where I'm Going', but my boat remained resolutely unfloated, I'm afraid.
In the first of a new series in which writers explain their favourite mood-lifting watch, an ode to a charming 40s romance
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Thanks for that link, vinteuil, which I would not otherwise have seen .
I think my favourite line is 'If you wanted to commit suicide , why couldn't you do it in Manchester?' .
Steam train buffs, who love to find errors in films, will note that the train taking Joan to Oban is actually an up train (i.e . going in the wrong direction through the Pass of Brander) . They had a lot of trouble getting the light right for that shot , as preserved out-takes reveal, and then only about three seconds were used!
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
BTW, Blimp is also currently on the I-Player as well as I know Where I'm Going , while Black Narcissus, 49th Parallel (score by RVW plus splendid comic turn by Laurence Olivier) & Peeping Tom can all be streamed free on TUBI.
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Originally posted by Maclintick View Postone in which Farrar is not obliged, fortunately, to don the ludicrously unflattering shorts he sports in the Himalayan epic.
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I see that this Thursday 21 November evening on BBC4 (button no. 9) they are showing -
8:00 Martin Scorsese remembers... Powell & Pressburger
8:20 I Know Where I'm Going!
9:50 I Know Where I'm Going : Fifty Years On
Documentary exploring the making of P&P's classic romantic comedy, first shown in 1994 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the film
10:25 - 01:05am The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp
On Saturday 23 November BBC2 are showing A Matter of Life and Death and The Red Shoes
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostI see that this Thursday 21 November evening on BBC4 (button no. 9) they are showing -
8:00 Martin Scorsese remembers... Powell & Pressburger
8:20 I Know Where I'm Going!
9:50 I Know Where I'm Going : Fifty Years On
Documentary exploring the making of P&P's classic romantic comedy, first shown in 1994 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the film
10:25 - 01:05am The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp
On Saturday 23 November BBC2 are showing A Matter of Life and Death and The Red Shoes
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A Canterbury Tale; a film shot through with nostalgia for a vanishing world. The tragic irony, of course, being that Britain's post war planners wreaked far greater havoc on Britain's cities and landscape than the Germans ever did. Powell's film is a salutary reminder to beware the enemy within as much as the foreign foe.Last edited by Sir Velo; 20-11-24, 08:06.
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Yes, I love that moment when Alison asks for directions and the lady says (referring to the destruction) 'yes, it's a terrible mess but you get a lovely view of the cathedral'.
A Canterbury Tale is much indebted in details to Humphrey Jennings' documentary Listen to Britain. If I were adept at editing I'd produce a mix of clips from both films. I think one wuld have to know them well to say which bit came from which film.
And what fine music P&P had. IKWIG has a lovely score by 'Allan Gray', the pen-name of Josef Zmigrod, a former Schoenberg pupil .
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Originally posted by smittims View PostAnd what fine music P&P had. IKWIG has a lovely score by 'Allan Gray', the pen-name of Josef Zmigrod, a former Schoenberg pupil .Last edited by Maclintick; 20-11-24, 16:39.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI find Canal Boat Diaries with Robbie Cumming quite soothing: the gentle pace of the travel, his quite relaxed accounts of the industrial history he is travelling through, and affectionate description of his day-to-day boating life. A 2021 series is about to come to an end on BBC4 and there are repeats on other channels.Last edited by kernelbogey; 20-11-24, 22:44.
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