Having watched Vengeance Most Fowl on the iPlayer, I left the tv on only to find that the next programme up was the film of Professor Branestawm with Harry Hill and a wonderful cast. Strongly recommended if like me you remain amused by things that made you laugh as a child.
Recommended Television Programmes
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I enjoyed 'Mr and Mrs Edgehill' ,a 1985 BBC film with Judi Dench and Ian Holm, currently on iPlayer.
It's an original plot . Mrs. has stuck to Mr. through thick and thin, his latest failure being a pineapple plantation on a fictional British Pacific colony called 'Somola' in the late 1930s. Pan American want to build a flying boat refuelling station on an uninhabited island called Cowri, because it is halfway between Hawaii and Australia, and the Colonial Office feel there ought to be a British Resident there,as the lsland is nominally British. So Edgehill is chosen and sent there. Afte many mishaps they settle,and are still there when the Pacific war breaks out and we are left to presume that the Japanese have conquered Somola, leaving the Edgehills marooned , PAA having evacuated after the Pearl Harbor attack.
I was disappointed that it ended there. I had hoped they'd either be rescued by the US Navy or still bethere, forgotten and rediscovered, in 1945, when they'd be acclaimed as heroes at last.
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... have been enjoying the four-part Archie on ITVx - telling how Archie Leach turned himself in to Cary Grant.
Exemplary performance from Jason Isaacs as Cary Grant, magisterial Harriet Walter (when is she not) as his Mother, Laura Aikman perfect as Dyan Cannon, his fourth wife and the mother of his only child.
Recommended
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... have been enjoying the four-part Archie on ITVx - telling how Archie Leach turned himself in to Cary Grant.
Exemplary performance from Jason Isaacs as Cary Grant, magisterial Harriet Walter (when is she not) as his Mother, Laura Aikman perfect as Dyan Cannon, his fourth wife and the mother of his only child.
Recommended
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I caught the second of Simon Schama's Story of Us on BBC2. Interesting and very personal account of postwar British society and culture.
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Originally posted by gradus View PostHaving watched Vengeance Most Fowl on the iPlayer, I left the tv on only to find that the next programme up was the film of Professor Branestawm with Harry Hill and a wonderful cast. Strongly recommended if like me you remain amused by things that made you laugh as a child.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI caught the second of Simon Schama's Story of Us on BBC2. Interesting and very personal account of postwar British society and culture.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI caught the second of Simon Schama's Story of Us on BBC2. Interesting and very personal account of postwar British society and culture.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... have been enjoying the four-part Archie on ITVx - telling how Archie Leach turned himself in to Cary Grant.
Exemplary performance from Jason Isaacs as Cary Grant, magisterial Harriet Walter (when is she not) as his Mother, Laura Aikman perfect as Dyan Cannon, his fourth wife and the mother of his only child.
Recommended
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The Lost Music of Auschwitz - a brief notice in The Guardian - Sky Arts 2100 - 2230. Probably a tough programme to watch.
Also a shorter, and more general programme on BBC1, What Happened at Auschwitz: 2030 - 2100.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostThe Lost Music of Auschwitz - a brief notice in The Guardian - Sky Arts 2100 - 2230. Probably a tough programme to watch.
Also a shorter, and more general programme on BBC1, What Happened at Auschwitz: 2030 - 2100.
The Sky Arts one is very moving. Leo Geyer has recreated the music played by the camp orchestras, composed of Jewish prisoners, who played in the camp. In one case he recreates a piece for which only a melodic line had survived. The recreated orchestra which is filmed here is based on his researches about what instruments were available at the camp. There is a review in the Guardian which explains much that I cannot write here.
The shorter film which I mention second is of course available on BBC iPlayer.
If anyone knows how to access the first one on Sky - is there a Sky equivalent to iPlayer? - please post it. (I watched via Freeview.)Last edited by kernelbogey; 20-01-25, 23:09.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post
Both these films are extraordinary.
The Sky Arts one is very moving. Leo Geyer has recreated the music played by the camp orchestras, composed of Jewish prisoners, who played in the camp. In one case he recreates a piece for which only a melodic line had survived. The recreated orchestra which is filmed here is based on his researches about what instruments were available at the camp. There is a review in the Guardian which explains much that I cannot write here.
The shorter film which I mention second is of course available on BBC iPlayer.
If anyone knows how to access the first one on Sky - is there a Sky equivalent to iPlayer? - please post it. (I watched via Freeview.)
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