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thirdlady
has no status.
Senior Member
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Quote:
I found mock of the week much funnier than saxondale because when I was watching saxondale I got bored 15 minutes into the show I just muted the tv and put a dvd in the PC and watched that instead it was Withnail & I (1987) "Happiness isn't sold in bottles you have to achieve it in your own lifetime!" |
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Joe Fraguela
has no status.
Senior Member
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As there wasn't much on the box last night and The British Films Forever Season (War Films) isn't my cup of tea. I watched the following films:-
One of the best films Hammer made, The Devil Rides Out (1967) Christopher Lee is brilliant in this film. Very good performances also, from Charles Gray and Sarah Lawson. Following that I watched Bitter Harvest (1963) starring Janet Munro, John Stride, Alan Badel and a whole host of other familiar brits. Janet Munro is brilliant in this film and is one of the best films she ever made. The last film was A Nice Girl Like Me (1969) starring Barbara Ferris, Harry Andrews, James Villiers and Gladys George. It's both a funny and touching film. Some lovely film locations and a brilliant title song sung by Vikki Carr. |
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Steve Crook
is cheeky
Moderator
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The Queen, as shown on ITV.
Damn, that was a great film with some amazing performances. Dame Helen was superb. That Oscar and the other plaudits were well deserved as were the awards for the film as a whole. Quite often I forgot it was Helen I was watching, she just seemed to totally inhabit the role. Sylvia Syms as the Queen Mum made me laugh, she played it perfectly. Michael Sheen as Tony Blair had just the right mix of the nervousness of the new boy in the job and slightly smarmy confidence that he always exudes. As for the film itself, a great job all round. The subject meant that they had to (or were able to) include a lot of real footage of the crowds and the news channels. That probably cut the costs quite a bit. |
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smudge
is a free man, not a number!
Moderator
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Quote:
The film was ITV derived, so they should have got the newcast sequences fairly cheap (if not gratis) for the most part except, of course, those from Auntie. Must agree - excellent film and, as you say Steve, you totally forgot you were watching Mirren... Smudge |
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Wolfgang
has no status.
Senior Member
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Mirren really is brilliant in it, isn't she? I liked its depiction of Tony Blair too - it is almost surreal to think about how he has gone from being able to so brilliantly gauge public mood to being so completely out of touch. I did wonder how accurate its portrayal of private moments were: Was Blair really anti-Diana? Did Campbell really think she had been done away with? Does Cherie really regard them as freeloaders? But more than anything thanks to Helen Mirren's frequent and generous nudity we can now envisage The Queen naked!
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Steve Crook
is cheeky
Moderator
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Quote:
AIUI the portrayals were quite accurate. Cherie was much more left wing and anti-monarchy than Tony ever was Blair really did understand the Queen's job and thought she did it well. Blair was never out of touch - he just thought he could get away with it ![]() As for Campbell, sliviest of the slivy toves <shudder> He just knew what a sneaky, conniving, backstabbing person he was and he thought everyone else was (or could be) as well Steve |
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Joe Fraguela
has no status.
Senior Member
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Before, settling down to enjoy the Arena documentary on the Other Side of British Cinema (1940's & 1950's). I watched the 1961 film Flame In The Streets with John Mills, Sylvia Syms, Brenda De Banzie, Johnny Sekka, Earl Cameron, Ann Lynn & Wilfred Brambell. Some excellent performances in this film.
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dremble wedge
is going to be the first to welcome our new insect
overlords...
Senior Member
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BURKE AND HARE (1972) Directed by Vernon Sewell
A low budget, semi-comic take on the Edinburgh murderers with lots of familiar faces from 70s TV shows (Glynn Edwards, Yootha Joyce, Francoise Pascal) and a great turn from Harry Andrews as Dr Knox. Derren Nesbitt has a variable Irish accent as Burke and to fill out proceedings there's a superfluous subplot set in a brothel! If you can get over the truly awful theme song it's a lot of fun with a fruity script that sticks surprisingly close to the facts. I preferred it to any other version I've seen so far. |
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