....Someone is being a bit clever clever useless expert ....I think....
'Endeavour' ITV 1
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My gripe, as ever, is that there seems to have been no attempt at all to make Endeavour fit the back-story well established by the Morse series (I'm ignoring the books). I've mentioned that Morse's mentor as a young detective was The Scottish MacNutt, who ends up dead in Morse's airing cupboard - not Thursday the Londoner, who presumably won't. But there's so much more, especially concerning Morse's love-life.
Then there's this. The young Morse has been shot and permanently crippled (because John THhaw limped). He doesn't seem to limp anymore, but you might have expected the adult Morse to have mentioned getting shot. Or being held in prison. Or foiling the Oxford spy ring - surely one of the most infamous occurrences in British history, if its Cambridge counterpart is anything to go by.
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I'm afraid I found the final episode of the series rather contrived. I gained the impression that, at the time the screenplay was written, nobody was quite sure whether there was to be a 6th series (it turns out that there will be). My overall view remains that, by concentrating on fewer issues per episode and eschewing the sometimes gratuitous violence that, for me, marred last night's episode of 'Endeavour' in particular, 'Inspector Morse' usually made more of less.
Incidentally, what happened to 'Bully' Blackwell? Is this one of the outstanding issues that we MAY see resolved in the new series?
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Richard Tarleton
I don't remember ever seeing a drive-by shooting in Turl Street (I think it was Turl Street).
The lower sixth was borrowed from Unman, Wittering and Zigo, the 1971 film. The cadet force's Lee Enfields kept in a cupboard....access to live ammo....all a bit unlikely (live ammo only on very special occasions, though you could blow your own boot off with a blank). I remember the rifles being kept in a locked armoury, chains through the trigger guards...(there was a case in the 1960s of the IRA breaking into a public school CCF armoury)....
Why does Morse do up the top button of his 3-button jacket? Adds to the general scruffiness and unworldliness I suppose.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostI don't remember ever seeing a drive-by shooting in Turl Street (I think it was Turl Street).
The lower sixth was borrowed from Unman, Wittering and Zigo, the 1971 film. The cadet force's Lee Enfields kept in a cupboard....access to live ammo....all a bit unlikely (live ammo only on very special occasions, though you could blow your own boot off with a blank). I remember the rifles being kept in a locked armoury, chains through the trigger guards...(there was a case in the 1960s of the IRA breaking into a public school CCF armoury)....
Why does Morse do up the top button of his 3-button jacket? Adds to the general scruffiness and unworldliness I suppose.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by LMcD View PostPresumably to suggest that he's buttoned up?
Sartorial advice here....
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostI don't remember ever seeing a drive-by shooting in Turl Street (I think it was Turl Street).
The lower sixth was borrowed from Unman, Wittering and Zigo, the 1971 film. The cadet force's Lee Enfields kept in a cupboard....access to live ammo....all a bit unlikely (live ammo only on very special occasions, though you could blow your own boot off with a blank). I remember the rifles being kept in a locked armoury, chains through the trigger guards...(there was a case in the 1960s of the IRA breaking into a public school CCF armoury)....
Why does Morse do up the top button of his 3-button jacket? Adds to the general scruffiness and unworldliness I suppose.
But one in particular I taught horn and general brass at for several years. The boys seemed happy, well fed, always occupied and had a good relationship with the staff in the right sort of way (including one headmaster who was liked by the boys but hated by his staff). And yes, there was a cadet force which paraded about, barked orders to each other and did target practice. One of the boys that I taught refused to take part in this and was thus allowed to do other things instead during that time - including having trumpet and organ lessons. He was regarded and respected as a star pupil. Bullying was apparently dealt with very severely. Was this unique?
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostIt's all gone a bit John Le Carré this week
We're in 1968, the Prague Spring......"...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 Once Was 4 View PostI have seen half of the last one and will watch the rest tonight.
And....
- "We listened to a concert on the radio didn't we?"
- "That's right. Mahler. The Five."
Has anyone ever said that? (Apart from the poor actress saddled with the line)"...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 Caliban View Post... the leaden dialogue signposting the plot for the hard-of-understanding-and-attention-span ...
(And what happened to Trewlove in this series? A genuinely interesting role in the past - could have been replaced by a budgie in a mannekin in this!)
And yet, and yet, and yet --- away from the plots, there is still the occasional glimmer of what these actors are truly capable of: that awkward "bloke chat" between Allam and Evans when they aren't saying what they're feeling - and the devastation and determination not to show weakness on Allam's face when Win walks out. The lost potential of this series is ... well ... a bigger crime than anything in the stories.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
And yet, and yet, and yet --- away from the plots, there is still the occasional glimmer of what these actors are truly capable of: that awkward "bloke chat" between Allam and Evans when they aren't saying what they're feeling - and the devastation and determination not to show weakness on Allam's face when Win walks out. The lost potential of this series is ... well ... a bigger crime than anything in the stories."...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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