Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostAnd so far not a single memorable shot. It’s been done on the cheap sadly and looks it.
… but I must take issue with the above, or that “It’s all so penny plain”… That’s one thing it’s not, at least on my TV. The sumptuous sets & costumes & shot compositions (recreating contemporary images) are a visual treat, imho."...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 kernelbogey View PostHats off to all here for a very interesting & good natured debate about Wolf Hall. I recommend the three novels that the tv is based on: a good long winter's read.
Nick - yes the costumes are sumptuous but I find myself asking is that real sable and what’s behind those weird detached house style hats the ladies wear? All because I’m not gripped . I didn’t notice the music which might be a good thing .
Gradus - interesting point . I read a lot of contemporary fiction so consequently have a very high tolerance for tedium. I’ve read virtually all of Hilary’s books which with their rather quirky mix of the comic and the serious play to my similar nature. But I’ve started Wolf Hall three times and never read more than 20 pages. It’s pace is a bit glacial but no more glacial than My Struggle by Knuassgard where I only have one volume left. Maybe I just find Norwegians more interesting than the Tudors.
Theres a real trend in TV frame for overly slow pace - witness the moribund “The Jackal “ which has ruined memories of a wonderful film - a film that is beautifully paced and directed. The Jackal is terrible stuff - hugely over hyped by the press.
Just reading one of the “weaker” Shakespeare histories King Henry VI Part One . Put TMATL on at the Globe* and the groundlings would be reaching for the orange peel. The former has a real pace and the rants - the protagonists spend a lot of the time ranting and threatening each other - are just better written (fair enough he was a genius)
*brave repertoire choice admittedly and unlikely to get past the Lord Chamberlain or Keeper of the Queen’s whatever it was….
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
Well it’s a bit of a one sided one - EH contra forum as it were - but thanks for saying it’s good natured. In that spirit to answer various points at the risk of exhausting peoples patience.
Nick - yes the costumes are sumptuous but I find myself asking is that real sable and what’s behind those weird detached house style hats the ladies wear? All because I’m not gripped . I didn’t notice the music which might be a good thing .
Gradus - interesting point . I read a lot of contemporary fiction so consequently have a very high tolerance for tedium. I’ve read virtually all of Hilary’s books which with their rather quirky mix of the comic and the serious play to my similar nature. But I’ve started Wolf Hall three times and never read more than 20 pages. It’s pace is a bit glacial but no more glacial than My Struggle by Knuassgard where I only have one volume left. Maybe I just find Norwegians more interesting than the Tudors.
Theres a real trend in TV frame for overly slow pace - witness the moribund “The Jackal “ which has ruined memories of a wonderful film - a film that is beautifully paced and directed. The Jackal is terrible stuff - hugely over hyped by the press.
Just reading one of the “weaker” Shakespeare histories King Henry VI Part One . Put TMATL on at the Globe* and the groundlings would be reaching for the orange peel. The former has a real pace and the rants - the protagonists spend a lot of the time ranting and threatening each other - are just better written (fair enough he was a genius)
*brave repertoire choice admittedly and unlikely to get past the Lord Chamberlain or Keeper of the Queen’s whatever it was….
I'm not sure that it actually matters whether it's real sable or not, and the music is used sparingly and at telling moments.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post
...I’ve started Wolf Hall three times and never read more than 20 pages.….
I'm weak on history - I had a history teacher at grammar school who was quite mad, probably with PTSD - and a very poor teacher. The school's (or his) history curriculum went from the fourteenth century to, er, maybe the 19th, but I dropped it in favour of physics when obliged to make a choice, so for a time knew quite a lot about the Battle of Crecy but nothing about the rise of Nazi Germany - which had probably destroyed the teacher's mind.
So I found (and still find) it difficult to appreciate HM's large cast of characters. Watching the tv series I still find myself quietly rehearsing divorced-beheaded-died-divorced-beheaded-survived to be sure who I am watching on screen.
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Unlike EH I find The Mirror and the Light without fault from every aspect - its production values and shot composition, it’s measured and subtle screenplay, where reticence and silence can be used as a weapon, and the quality of the acting by the principals and incidentals. It’s a remarkable achievement.
Where I agree wholeheartedly with EH is over The Jackal, which is bloated and lacks the plausibility that made the original so compelling. The principal fault lies through opening up the lives of the assassin and his hunter. It’s interesting that the scene where the Jackal tests his new rifle in the countryside is recreated, shot for shot, from the original - because it cannot be improved upon. (But I’ll still watch the final episode).
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI remember struggling with Wolf Hall, i.e. the first of the three novels, chiefly because HM consistently uses 'he' throughout to indicate Cromwell's interior monologue, and I found it a confusing literary device. She stopped doing that in the second book.
I'm weak on history - I had a history teacher at grammar school who was quite mad, probably with PTSD - and a very poor teacher. The school's (or his) history curriculum went from the fourteenth century to, er, maybe the 19th, but I dropped it in favour of physics when obliged to make a choice, so for a time knew quite a lot about the Battle of Crecy but nothing about the rise of Nazi Germany - which had probably destroyed the teacher's mind.
So I found (and still find) it difficult to appreciate HM's large cast of characters. Watching the tv series I still find myself quietly rehearsing divorced-beheaded-died-divorced-beheaded-survived to be sure who I am watching on screen.Last edited by LMcD; 10-12-24, 16:08.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI remember struggling with Wolf Hall, i.e. the first of the three novels, chiefly because HM consistently uses 'he' throughout to indicate Cromwell's interior monologue, and I found it a confusing literary device. She stopped doing that in the second book.
I'm weak on history - I had a history teacher at grammar school who was quite mad, probably with PTSD - and a very poor teacher. The school's (or his) history curriculum went from the fourteenth century to, er, maybe the 19th, but I dropped it in favour of physics when obliged to make a choice, so for a time knew quite a lot about the Battle of Crecy but nothing about the rise of Nazi Germany - which had probably destroyed the teacher's mind.
So I found (and still find) it difficult to appreciate HM's large cast of characters. Watching the tv series I still find myself quietly rehearsing divorced-beheaded-died-divorced-beheaded-survived to be sure who I am watching on screen.
Indeed I’ve been doing the same mnemonic to keep the eyes open . I guess I’m just bored with the Tudors - massively over exposed on TV . I much preferred the Crown not least because of its sumptuous production values
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Originally posted by Belgrove View PostUnlike EH I find The Mirror and the Light without fault from every aspect - its production values and shot composition, it’s measured and subtle screenplay, where reticence and silence can be used as a weapon, and the quality of the acting by the principals and incidentals. It’s a remarkable achievement.
Where I agree wholeheartedly with EH is over The Jackal, which is bloated and lacks the plausibility that made the original so compelling. The principal fault lies through opening up the lives of the assassin and his hunter. It’s interesting that the scene where the Jackal tests his new rifle in the countryside is recreated, shot for shot, from the original - because it cannot be improved upon. (But I’ll still watch the final episode).
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostMichael Lonsdale
How R3 has changed...
"La lampe donne sur ses yeux" with Mich(a)el Lonsdale, a play in French, broadcast in 1982 on R3. Auntie still has it in her archives.
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Black Doves with Keira Knightley. My wife loves it so I will probably be condemned to watch the whole thing. As far as I am concerned it’s a tired rip off of The Americans. In the latter show one at least understands the ideological underpinnings of the characters; the new show just likes the double dealings and the action for its own sake
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostBlack Doves with Keira Knightley.
There have been some turkeys here of late - Black Doves, the Day of the Jackal series.
To compensate for which there have been some excellent things - Slow Horses, The Diplomat with Keri Russell and Rufus Sewell ...
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