Agreed, absolute tripe and gave up after 2 as well.Good choice
Agreed, absolute tripe and gave up after 2 as well.Good choice
Just finished the first series of the above. 7 episodes in total but 3 totally different stories so no over-padding, drawn out tosh. Some interesting themes not usually touched upon. One involved female boxers fighting rabid dogs. Never get that in Midsomer Murders !For those who like a crime drama try Bordetown on Walter Presents on Channel 4.
I gave up after watching the advert on skyThe Iris Affair is dreadful. Gave up after 2 eps.
The Iris Affair is dreadful. Gave up after 2 eps.
It was great, some top acting talent on show.Death by Lightening (on Netflix) is excellent. Only 4 episodes. Like a beautifully crafted movie.
It was great, some top acting talent on show.
I gave up after the first episode. EB actually makes it even worse.ITV’s “Coldwater”
Despite Ewan Bremner being in the cast it is comfortably the worst drama this year.
There is only one EBI gave up after the first episode. EB actually makes it even worse.
ITV is terrible. Slag the BBC to high heaven but its creates great tellyITV’s “Coldwater”
Despite Ewan Bremner being in the cast it is comfortably the worst drama this year.
TV today is a reflection of our society. Younger people are no longer socially aware and are obsessed with social media rather than the real world. I grew up in a time when young people were politically active on all sorts of issues and took to the streets on a variety of issues. Today I hardly know of any young person who buys a paper.Caught the last 2 episodes of Edge of Darkness on BBC 4 last night. Full blown political writing from Troy Kennedy Martin, covering the Nuclear deep state, class stratification in the civil service as well as the environmental movement and the then current miner's strike.
It was originally shown in autumn 1985 on BBC 2 then due to the impact it made was repeated a few weeks later on BBC 1. It had a genuinely great cast of supporting actors you'd recognize but the 2 leads were I thought rather special. Bob Peck as a dour York's police inspector and Joe Don Baker as Jedburgh made a huge impression on me as the guy who saw visions of his dead daughter and the larger than life CIA spook.
It's tone is bleak but I think that's one of it's strengths, as is the amazing score by Eric Clapton. The director Martin Campbell would make Goldeneye 10 years later.
Just a world away from reality tv with z listers or relationship nonsense or by the numbers cop shows. The revived play for today on C5 is similarly anodyne and lack any of the impact of those plays of the 70s and 80s. Taking risks making drama about unexpected subjects, there's literally no will to stray from the conformist path these days. Edge of Darkness is a reminder when tv drama was daring and challenging.
Criminally underused in that recent mini-series. Raylan Givens was the star of Justified but, for me, Boyd and Ava were what kept me watching.