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.
Friday, August 30, 2013
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.
Friday, July 26, 2013
Just the Ticket
Buses...they
get us from routes A-Z, we love them, we hate them, but,if you're
stuck with public transport, we can't do without them. 'The Route
Masters...Running London's Roads' (BBC2) looked at the Bus network
in London. Similar to a to a slew of transport
fly-on-the-wall documentaries, this was a nostalgic, informative
and, at times, moving look at the lives of the drivers, controllers, managers and some of the passengers that try to get from Home to Work and Back Again on a
daily basis. It worked as a documentary as it allowed the subjects
and participants to speak for themselves; the portraits rang true
instead of seeming patronising or staged. So whether it's the
retired merchant banker that now drives a bus., the daughter
continuing in her father's footsteps as a driver or the retirees,
talking of the glory days of conductors and being able to nip of
the back of the bus for some shopping, all the tales added to a
warm fuzzy of a joint enterprise (not the reality though of being stuck on the top floor with a sod-casting violent yob). There wasn't really a golden age, however, as
forty years ago, a huge amount of the Routemasters ran late -
now, computerisation makes control of traffic flow a lot easier,
but certainly not easy. These are enjoyable little social
histories of Britain, and this is ethnographic television that
will be looked on with the same nostalgic glow sixty years from
now as we look on some 60s and 70s period pieces now. Worth waiting for.
What Did The Greeks Ever Do For Us?
The
Greeks, just like the Romans, have given us an awful lot. But so have
television programmes about them and 'Who Were The Greeks?
(BBC2) presented by Dr Michael Scott discoursed on ground so
covered that its threadbare. So how do you make this stuff new?
You can't. But you can
let the material speak for itself and Scott did a great job of re-hashing the facts about Athens, classical architecture, drama and philosophy in only an hour. Surely anyone who watches BBC2 knows about Socrates by now? How, (in a pre-Christian) reality as allegory, he was put to death for standing up for his beliefs? Maybe some don't - so we got another telling of the tale. The film-pieces in Athens were of particular interest to 'thetvreviewguy' having been on the Acropolis less than two years ago and having been suitably impressed. Greece might be going through the wringer now, but the history and literature of Classical Athens is still breath-taking. We even got a re-cap on the original Olympic Games which were anything but 'sporting' as we could understand the concept today. Dr Scott did a more than competent, highlighting, again, how Greek sculptures were not the monochrome marble art works we see then as now but were coloured and this made a huge difference to the aesthetics of the pieces. A good History about Greeks, for all, not just geeks.
let the material speak for itself and Scott did a great job of re-hashing the facts about Athens, classical architecture, drama and philosophy in only an hour. Surely anyone who watches BBC2 knows about Socrates by now? How, (in a pre-Christian) reality as allegory, he was put to death for standing up for his beliefs? Maybe some don't - so we got another telling of the tale. The film-pieces in Athens were of particular interest to 'thetvreviewguy' having been on the Acropolis less than two years ago and having been suitably impressed. Greece might be going through the wringer now, but the history and literature of Classical Athens is still breath-taking. We even got a re-cap on the original Olympic Games which were anything but 'sporting' as we could understand the concept today. Dr Scott did a more than competent, highlighting, again, how Greek sculptures were not the monochrome marble art works we see then as now but were coloured and this made a huge difference to the aesthetics of the pieces. A good History about Greeks, for all, not just geeks.
Out for the Count
'Count
Arthur Strong' (BBC2) is one of the funnier comedies this Summer.
Co-written by Fr Ted author Graham Linehan, its an adaptation from
that bastion of quality, BBC Radio 4 (where it was
originally authored by Steve Delaney, who plays the epponymous
'Count'). As laugh out loud family comedies go, this is really up
there (yes, this may not be a category festooned with original
offerings but give this show a chance and you will have a laugh).
The 'Count' is a retired 1970s TV half of a double act who forgets things.
Not only does he forget things, he...eh..uhm...where was I? Ah
yes...Arthur Strong...the setting has moved from Doncaster to
London...and Roy, sorry, RORY Kinnear is the amiable Sancho Panza.
This week's episode, where Arthur tries to learn the Internet and
ends up as a 'troll' within ten minutes had this reviewer really
enjoying the craft on display from the actors and writers. This is
gentle, affectionate, yet clever character-based comedy - just
been commissioned for a second series - is full of, er, uhm,
great, eh, diversions and whimsy - an Ice Cream Van that doesn't sell
Ice Cream but is to hook peple into Jack the Ripper Tours, who Arthur
thinks did all the killings in Balham. There's an art to adaptations
and this one has 'thetvreviewguy' rushing back to listen to as
many of the radio shows as he can. This is a silly
programme, sometimes extremely silly, and all the better for it.
Arthur is a brilliant comedic creation and this show is well worth
a look.
Monday, June 10, 2013
Fighting Them on the Beaches
Peter Snow is an interesting presenter - smart, on the viewer's side and a somewhat manic, enthusiastic, bringer of 'the fun' presenter you don't get that often these days. His 'D Day As It Happens' (Channel 4), a two-parter over June 5th and 6th in 'real-time' was a fine example of making History interesting, relevant and contemporary. Assisted by the TV Friendly ex- Colonel Tim Collins and War Camerawoman Lorna Ward, Snow 'followed' the progress of six men and one woman for over this, the Greatest Day. We are so used to the 'Band of Brothers' WWII format of story-telling now that we see battles and crucial events as involving heroic and not so heroic individuals rather than forces of History (which also apply). The format worked because the time-line was re-constructed so accurately; we knew what Soldier X or Y was doing at 10.43 due to painstaking research of the photographic and other archives. D Day was an incredible turning point in World History and it is right that it be remembered so often, and in this instance, so well. Allied mistakes were highlighted as was Hitler's cause of eventual downfall - hubris and a gross overestimation of his military intelligence (falling for the feint 'Operation Fortitude' while 'Overlord' kicked into action). Good History and very watchable Television.
I'm a 21st Century Time Traveller, Get Me Out Of Here!
'Groan!', 'thetvreviewguy' hears you say...'not another TV History Programme about Queen Elizabeth's 1st's Reign!' Dr Ian Mortimer's new series, 'The Time Traveller's Guide to Elizabethan England' (BBC2) is a cut above the rest (although, worryingly, produced by arch-Tory David Starkey). A simple conceit (based on a best-selling book) - imagine you're a Time Traveller in this distant epoch - what do you encounter, what are the customs, how are they different from today? It has to be said that Elizabethan England was a pretty vile, sadistic, backward, superstitious and frightening place to live. Forget Shakespeare, here was a land where sadism reigned - from bull baiting through to domestic violence through to capital punishment. Thank Fuck for the Enlightenment, is all this time traveller can think when confronted with a country where you could be put do death in a cruel and unusual manner for not believing in God, being a Witch, being a Catholic, robbing a Chicken or being a vagrant. Prisons were mere holding pens until execution. This was a bad place to be alive and to be poor (or a woman from any social background) - really grim, not cool at all. Elizabeth and the Court were a bunch of blood-sucking leeches that relied on terror and violence to maintain their status. A horrible Age brought to life by Dr Mortimer.
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