Originally posted by Anna
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Call the Midwife
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Originally posted by Anna View PostI saw the book in a charity shop, was tempted to get it just to check that point! I've seen Call the Midwife described as "a comforting mug of Ovaltine for a dreary Winter's night" I suppose much the same can be said about Downton Abbey now (my goodness the Christmas episode which I watched when it was repeated was about the most boring thing I've seen for a very long time) However, while CtM continues to get the ratings the programme will continue, whether Miranda Hart is the draw I don't know (like johncorrigan I have an aversion to her)
"...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 Anna View PostI saw the book in a charity shop, was tempted to get it just to check that point! I've seen Call the Midwife described as "a comforting mug of Ovaltine for a dreary Winter's night" I suppose much the same can be said about Downton Abbey now (my goodness the Christmas episode which I watched when it was repeated was about the most boring thing I've seen for a very long time) However, while CtM continues to get the ratings the programme will continue, whether Miranda Hart is the draw I don't know (like johncorrigan I have an aversion to her)
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostCTM had some pretty hard hitting stories and is pretty unflinching about the poverty in the EAst End in the 1950s . It is nonsense to compare it to Downton Abbey which is a right wing fantasy of a better world when people knew their place .
If Fellowes really were the fawning nostalgist some people assume he is, he would have made at least some of the upper-class characters sympathetic and interesting. Instead, he’s made every last one of them charmless, cold, stiff, rude, pompous, sour and, above all, ferociously boring. Only a fanatical Trotskyite could have created a constipated puffed-up bullfrog like the Earl of Grantham, or a simpering goose-faced drip like Lady Edith, or an acrid sneering crone like the Dowager Countess."I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostA relative worked as a midwife in the East End in the 1950s and watched the Christmas Day episode while the rest of us slept off our belated turkey lunch. Her comment was that it is full of mistakes.
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I've seen Call the Midwife described as "a comforting mug of Ovaltine for a dreary Winter's night"
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI saw the Christmas episode of Downton Abbey and that was full of this sort of anachronism
Alpen mentioned The Musketeers (note that they've dropped any mention of how many - leaving the it open to introduce any amount of new characters). I saw the first episode - the thing that got me mildly riled were the costumes - vaguely 'old' but not particularly 17th century, & leather, which I'm sure wouldn't have been the case. It seems to be following in the footsteps of the New Sherlock series & others in creating characters & plots very loosely based on the originals. What's wrong with the original stories?
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Post...except that every episode must have at least one actress reproducing the grunts, groans and screams of a woman in her travail, three more peering anxiously up between a pair of legs and a very bloody new-born greeting the world with a wail.
Still, as they've used up all the original stories there's scope to focus more on the extra-curricular lives of the characters, & reduce the bloody baby count (until the midwives get pregnant themselves ).
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A bit difficult making a series about the work of a group of midwives without showing any of that?
My point is that comparisons with Ovaltine are wide of the mark!
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True, although I think that in this type of programme there is a mandatory 'heart-warming' moment/moral at the end, which is where the Ovaltine might come in.
I did see the last 5 minutes of one episode recently (I've just spent a week visiting my mother - she goes to bed very early, which means that I end up watching lots of rubbish TV), and yes, there was a great deal of over-acting* resulting in a bloody baby & obligatory warm heart.
*Although it's probably nothing like the real thing.Last edited by Flosshilde; 28-01-14, 20:16.
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