Travesty seems to be the accumulating verdict of the broadsheet press as well. OK, Lord Patten........what do you think now?
"Great Expectations" (BBC1, 2011)
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Norfolk Born
Originally posted by Anna View PostYes, I think she did now you mention it. The adaptation was still a travesty of a brilliant novel.
Tonight 21:00 BBC2, Sue Perkins on Mrs. Dickens' Christmas. According to the RT, Dickens was egotistical, fickle and who saw women as virgins or frumps and couldn't cope with anything between the two.
RT also says It's got plenty of laughs
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But the damn book is NOT about Miss Havisham!! This is what gets me: she is important but funnily enough not quite as pivotal as Pip who needs to be acted with some care and subtlety. The more you read the BBC carp about it, the more you realise that for the triumphant Beeb this is the Gillian Anderson Show and this version of Great Expectations merely a convenient peg on which to hang a decent fee day for La Anderson and bag her for a Christmas BBC One treat, and as FF says, thus tick the box marked high culture, no matter how shabby a tick it was.
THEY clearly think the book is about Miss Havisham, the set designers and production team also think it is judging by the bewildering number of scenes shot there, and I suppose if you have Gillian Anderson, you have to build the show round her guest appearance and what's in her contract.
Erm..........let me just whisper it to you, BBC TV Drama, there's a teeny little clue in the fact that the book is a first person narrative throughout....so erm, guess what, Beeb, it's Pip's story.
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostTravesty seems to be the accumulating verdict of the broadsheet press as well.
I could only find this one covering all 3 episodes: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/t...bbey-ITV1.html"...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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austin
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PatrickOD
Originally posted by DracoM View Postthere's a teeny little clue in the fact that the book is a first person narrative throughout....so erm, guess what, Beeb, it's Pip's story.
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Originally posted by Norfolk Born View PostBut then, Radio Times said that 'Great Expectations' was 'brilliant..unmissable' and Gillian Anderson was 'mesmerising'.
But - erm - on this occasion, I agree with the school bully.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostOh, for heaven's sake, that wasn't "Radio Times". It was the nausiating, opinionated, smug, schoolgirl playground bully who always thinks her prattle is more important than the actual programme.
But - erm - on this occasion, I agree with the school bully.
Cue the usual remarks......Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostWell, interestingly, The Guardian comment blog on the production has just been closed with over 170 messages on it - the biggest on a TV show I have ever seen. I do hope someone at BBC TV Drama has read it.
I loved this comment from a contributor named "oliveblaksmith" at 11.13am on 28th December:
"Everyone has missed the most important bit and that is that this is the first time I have seen a blacksmiths forge depicted on tv or film that actually looked like a working blacksmiths forge. The iron was even the right colour for forging and Joe really did look like a blacksmith.
One more point though, for those of you you have said that pip is too good looking to be a blacksmith!!! well I have been a blacksmith for 25 years and I'm still good looking."
You can't argue with that!
It's a bit esoteric for a joke, so is perhaps deadly serious..."...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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Anna
I watched the Sue Perkins Mrs Dickens. Not knowing much about Dickens, the man, his biography, I found his treatment of his wife rather disturbing as regards his callous treatment of her and his seeming preoccupation with her virgin sisters and almost, that he was Quilp lusting
However, austin's posted link references Bleak House, that BBC adaptation was, to me, perfect. I have Nicholas Nickleby here, I think I will start on that tomorrow.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostExactly! Traddles' Boy. What a little gem! Love him for his insolence! You know, you cannot condense Dickens into 3 hours, this is the problem.
I have not watched this GE ( the 2000 version the BBC did was very good as I recall with Charlotte Rampling as Miss Havisham and Hugh Lloyd as Aged P ! ) but Ms Phelps butchered Oliver Twist a couple of years back - an atrocious adaptation so I do not expect great things from it . Why the BBC felt the need to do it again so soon baffled me.
The fatuous reason for letting Ms Phelps loose on Dickens is that he was the soap opera writer of his day and left cliffhangers in each episode of the story so this is the modern day equivalent . Utter nonsense and a complete failure to understand that for all the brilliance of the form in which Dickens wrote his works the reason thaat they have lasted is their substance as works of art and not the form they were written in.Last edited by Barbirollians; 31-12-11, 00:27.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostI watched the Sue Perkins Mrs Dickens. Not knowing much about Dickens, the man, his biography, I found his treatment of his wife rather disturbing as regards his callous treatment of her and his seeming preoccupation with her virgin sisters and almost, that he was Quilp lusting
However, austin's posted link references Bleak House, that BBC adaptation was, to me, perfect. I have Nicholas Nickleby here, I think I will start on that tomorrow.
Didn't take to Ms Perkins on Dickens. On the other hand, I am finding that the 5 podcasts of R3's The Essay are rewarding: http://www.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/series/essay Current novelists (as opposed to a comedienne) talking about aspects of his work."...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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Anna
Originally posted by Caliban View PostWhich Nick Nick, Anna?
Originally posted by Caliban View Post
Didn't take to Ms Perkins on Dickens.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostI thought you may have flung Audi alteram partem and A fortiori into the mix, M'Lud, knowing your wont for a bit of sixth form Latin
Originally posted by Anna View PostErr, it's a bluddy book wot Dickens wrote! Simples, printed, on paper. Penguin.
Nice split quotes, ma'am, by the way"...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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