Got up to date by watching the three latest back-to-back yesterday. Brilliant stuff, gripping on every level.
Spiral (and other French police series)
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostYet another reason why the French title 'engrenages' [ cogs, gears... ] is so much better than the naff 'Spiral'. Indeed it is "la mécanique implacable de la Justice à travers les enquêtes croisées d'un procureur, une capitaine de police, un juge et une avocate" as their publicity has it.
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... we worrited abt the translation of this back in 2015 - from the archive :
04-02-15, 12:35
So vinrouge, what would your chosen English version of the title have been?
... tricky, isn't it?
My initial thought was somehow to use "Mesh", "Meshes" - which has the attraction of meaning both the engagement of cogs in gearing as well as the concept of woven networks, nets in which things could be caught etc...
Currently I'm favouring something which might involve* "Toils" - with its several meanings of verbal contention, dispute, strife, turmoil, struggle, laborious task, continuous work or exertion, nets enclosing a space into which a quarry is driven, a trap or snare etc.
* ... but also I think the word "involve" is good, might consider that...
In the end, I'll plump for "Imbrications"...
Imbrications - the overlapping / interlocking of tiles...
Further thoughts - "Involutions" "Anfractuosities" ....
... or perhaps (thinking of M. Maréchal's cogs) - "Engagement". Yes, I think 'engagement' covers a sufficient range of meanings...
The title that had occurred to me but which isn't quite right either is
Machinations...
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Well if you look at the credits, the BBC seems to have had more input than that - while not exactly a co-production, the series is credited as being "in association with BBC Four". I wonder what that represented in terms of involvement.[/QUOTE]
When French viewers see 'en association avec BBC Four', do they wonder why a cookery channel is involved in the making of Engrenages?
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostLe Boss: What gear were you in when you began following the suspect, Gilou?
Gilou: Zut alors, my usual jeans and T shirt, Boss!Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostGiven the new boss's close encounter with the loo, perhaps "Laure and Ordure"?Originally posted by underthecountertenor View PostWhen French viewers see 'en association avec BBC Four', do they wonder why a cookery channel is involved in the making of Engrenages?"...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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Only four more episodes to go. M Karlsson (with two ‘s’s as she pointed out) is not a women to be trifled with. But poor Roban, as expected just wanting the facts about the prognosis.
I thought the most touching scene this week was Gilou explaining his childhood to Laure. Very well written and acted.Steve
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Well, I'm sorry, but Spiral has got more and more sidetracked into pretty obvious 'uman intress', and further and further away from the very serious corruption themes in number of areas this series is investigating - or I thought they were so doing.
Is that the influence of BBC4 mentioned in credits?
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostIs that the influence of BBC4 mentioned in credits?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Of course, not saying the 'uman intress' is in itself not worth doing, nay, doing as well as it is here, but........
Silent Witness has gone the same way as well.
My quarrel is that the themes of corruption, rape, the practice of the law on both sides seem to me to be huge topics, and worth pursuing, but getting it on inside a van deliberately scheduled for quiet surveillance seems...well, a bit odd, and even a real anti-climax [sorry - pun not intended]. Just seems a bit undermining.
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