Originally posted by Northender
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TV detectives
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Originally posted by antongould View PostCould it be that this thread is becoming mildly regionalist with these none too complimentary remarks about Lewis and Vera? At the last census only 38% of us still kept coal in the bath!
"...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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Northender
Originally posted by antongould View PostCould it be that this thread is becoming mildly regionalist with these none too complimentary remarks about Lewis and Vera? At the last census only 38% of us still kept coal in the bath!
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostGood call Pab - in which case, what about that fine actor Alex Jennings?
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amateur51
Originally posted by aeolium View PostNot so much the programme, as Stratford Johns' part in it. He was very good in the spin-off series Softly, Softly, too (and in plenty of other roles).
And Barry Foster in Van der Valk cannot go unmentioned - he was a much underrated actor imo.
All I remember of Van der Valk is the theme-tune Eye Level
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Z-cars? Blimey, I was still in short trousers when that first hit our TVs in 1962. A great cast and always very gritty, quite a revelation after watching Jack Warner as PC Dixon.
No mention of the "We're the Sweeney son and we ain't had our dinner!" yet. I know, I should shut it.
Not really a detective at all, but as we're reminiscing, what about Callan?
I enjoyed the recent radio4 extra re-broadcast of Brian Cox as the Victorian Edinburgh detective Inspector McLevy. Who needs TV when you have your imagination.
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Originally posted by Pegleg View PostZ-cars? Blimey, I was still in short trousers when that first hit our TVs in 1962."...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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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Pegleg View PostNo mention of the "We're the Sweeney son and we ain't had our dinner!" yet. I know, I should shut it.
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Richard Tarleton
Re The Sweeney - during the Winter of Discontent I was a long-term volunteer at a well-known RSPB nature reserve in East Anglia, living in a derelict caravan near reception. It was a long and frozen winter as some may recall. One weekend a volunteer turned up who was a card-carrying member of the Sweeney. He was a birdwatcher in his spare time to get away from the stress of the job. He dossed in my caravan. He drove - yes, a bronze Ford Granada. I was in the habit of cycling over to a relative's house a few miles away on Saturday nights for a bath and a meal. He lent me the Granada. His one instruction: "Listen, son, don't bend it". I was on eggshells, but...bliss.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostRe The Sweeney - during the Winter of Discontent I was a long-term volunteer at a well-known RSPB nature reserve in East Anglia, living in a derelict caravan near reception. It was a long and frozen winter as some may recall. One weekend a volunteer turned up who was a card-carrying member of the Sweeney. He was a birdwatcher in his spare time to get away from the stress of the job. He dossed in my caravan. He drove - yes, a bronze Ford Granada. I was in the habit of cycling over to a relative's house a few miles away on Saturday nights for a bath and a meal. He lent me the Granada. His one instruction: "Listen, son, don't bend it". I was on eggshells, but...bliss.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostHe drove - yes, a bronze Ford Granada. I was in the habit of cycling over to a relative's house a few miles away on Saturday nights for a bath and a meal. He lent me the Granada. His one instruction: "Listen, son, don't bend it". I was on eggshells, but...bliss."...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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If I've missed them, I apologise, but I thought Dalziel and Pascoe were good (though the series went on too long, so that they became 'multi-purpose stories' in the end). The books are good.
There are several series that have not been filmed. Warren Clarke in younger days would have been excellent as Peter Diamond (Peter Lovesey's curmudgeonly detective, who's crying out for TV treatment).
And then of course there's Matthew Shardlake (C J Sansom). Kenneth Branagh was once tipped to play him.
The series I'd most like to see, though, would be Mike Ripley's Fitzroy Maclean Angel. A contemporary equivalent of the young Denis Waterman would be needed, though.
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Northender
Not many US series have been mentioned. I used to enjoy 'Hill Street Blues' for its overlapping storylines, but found Columbo's mannerisms irritating and not really relevant to the plot (cf. e.g. Morse, whose prejudice and snobbery often lead him initially to jump to the wrong conclusion).
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