Friday, August 30, 2013

The Dream


The documentary maker has a simple goal; to tell a story. But this central function is complicated by a myriad of factors: who to interview, what footage to use, choice of music, balance of the programme etc. So, by any criterion, 'Martin Luther King and the March on Washington' (BBC2) had a high bar to reach. And it cleared this bar by a mile. Narrated by Denzel Washington, this was a tale from the not to distant past of how Martin Luther King's Dream speech came to be given and the events on that extraordinary day in 1963. The American South was blighted by vile post-Civil War racist segregation. The mobilisation of tens of thousands of Blacks and Whites to protest the 'urgency of now', the soaring rhetoric of Dr King, the eventual persuasion of the Kennedy Administration to act - all combined to make this event one of the most empowering in American history. JFK's team feared endorsing the event because of the prospect of violence - this was a very real concern for Kennedy's advisors; contingency plans were made for the possibility of rioting on the Mall. But there was no violent protest, just the attendance of thousands rapt in awe, crying, riveted by Dr King's peroration. The 'Dream' lives on - and the courage of those who used passive resistance and civil disobedience eventually led to Barack Obama in the White House. Dr King's speech still as the power to reduce the listener to tears: 'Free at Last, Free at Last, Thank God Almighty, we are free at Last!'

Flying Dinosaurs in Montana?


Dinosaurs and TV go hand-in-hand - 'thetvreviewguy' blames Steven Spielberg for most of the Hoop-lah. Before 'Jurassic Park', dinosaur-mania wasn't quite as fevered. ‘Horizon - Dinosaurs: the Hunt for Life’ (BBC2) looked at our wiped out ancestors (again), through the eyes of Dr Mary Schweitzer, a smart, and to this dinosaur of a reviewer, hottie of a scientist who says she is this close to extracting DNA from a dinosaur fossil. She does a lot of her field-work in Montana, and the viewer was spared none of that State's beauty and wildness – but was spared from the crazy part of the population that lives there. Dr Shweitzer has pioneered work looking at the biology of dinosaurs rather than focusing purely on the palaeontology. We followed her on her trip to the Gobi dessert and heard why she believes dinos and birds have more in common than you might think. These sort of programmes can make 'thetvreviewguy' feel quite inadequate about his career, which doesn't involve looking for T Rex Fossils or work-travel to Mongolia. This 'Horizon' was a lot more hit than miss but perhaps in looking to centre the narrative exclusively on the doubtless excellent work of Dr Schweitzer, the programme makers missed an opportunity to give a more rounded presentation of all the latest research in the dinosaur world. Chewy though.

Tears of a Clown - Miller on Hancock


Poor Tony Hancock. A giant of 1950s and 1960s British television comedy, he died at his own hand and is one of the great comic heroes for a generation of comedians. In an affectionate and moving portrait, 'Ben Miller - My Hero Tony Hancock' (BBC1), Miller interviewed friends and writers who knew and worked with the legend of the small screen. What came across was a man who, crippled by anxiety, peaked to too quickly and couldn't cope with his 'fame' which never compensated for his depressive tendencies. Ben Miller never judged, and the tone was mixed - respectful of Hancock's achievements - a prime time BBC comedy slot at 32, married to a model - and, to 'thetvreviewguy', amazement that Hancock ever looked less than middle-aged. But there was sadness around the man - he drank excessively, was unable to sustain his success and ultimately succumbed to taking his own life. As a TH enthusiast, Miller was careful not to slip into hagiography; this was a full picture of a remarkable and in many ways admirable human being. The sad clown is a cliché but perhaps never so true as in Hancock's case. His suicide was all the more tragic for him not being able to see the joy and laughter he gave to millions. Poor Tony, he didn't realise that he had made a difference.