Sunday 15 February 2015

10 CLASSIC BRITISH DRAMAS THAT ARE PERFECT FOR A BINGEWATCH

Bingewatch. 

It’s the word of the moment and the most fun you can have in front of a television without a subsequent feeling of moral emptiness. But it’s a term that seems to be reserved for modern series and, in particular, modern US series. Whilst there is no doubt that contemporary classics such as Breaking Bad and House of Cards reward being watched in one continuous stretch (indeed, were commissioned with this in mind) there are also many great British dramas from decades past that you can immerse yourself in. House of Cards was, after all, a brilliant Brit production originally. Here are ten more of the best classic dramas, all readily available on DVD, for you to get your retro on to.


10
TENKO (1981-1984)

Whilst both shows feature a group of formidable women incarcerated behind bars ‘Orange is the New Black’ is definitely NOT the new ‘Tenko’. This bunch of banged-up females are prisoners of war, held by the Japanese during World War II and, while there are the occasional moments of gallows humour, the emphasis is on heavyweight drama rather than sassy comedy. Much like another wartime series higher up this list the characters are well drawn and varied, ranging from the young and naïve to the pragmatic and practical and each has their own suspenseful and poignant journey to undergo throughout the show’s three series. Beware of becoming too attached to any of these ladies, however, as even the main characters aren’t safe from the soldier’s bullet. But those soldiers are characters too, in particular Bert Kwouk’s Major Yamauchi, an honourable military man who fervently believes that he is doing the right thing.

9
CRACKER (1993-2006)

Written by Jimmy McGovern, one of the most uncompromising screenwriters around, ‘Cracker’ is a crime drama that raises the bar for maverick telly detectives. Fitz (a breath-taking turn from alternative comedian Robbie Coltrane) is an odious individual – an alcoholic narcissist who makes Gregory House look like Bertie Wooster. Fortunately for the viewer he is also an incredibly charismatic and brilliant criminal psychologist whose similarity to many of the show’s perps enables him to get right inside their heads. By focusing on the inner workings of the murderer’s mind McGovern crafted a darker, more disturbing police series than anything that had gone before, as well as providing a springboard for the likes of Christopher Eccleston and Ricky Tomlinson to become the television A-listers they now are.

8
TINKER, TAILOR, SOLDIER, SPY (1979)

Tomas Alfredson’s big screen version may have looked the part and nobody disputes Gary Oldman’s acting chops, but there is only one George Smiley and that is the legendary Sir Alec Guinness in this elegant TV adaptation of John le Carre’s classic game of ‘whack-a-mole.’ The pace may be glacial and the ‘action’ consist largely of middle aged men trading codenames in darkened rooms, but it is drenched in the faded grandeur of a shadowy secret service that feels so authentic you can almost smell the tweed and cigars. Diving into its seven episodes is like submerging yourself in a gloriously suffocating subterranean world.

7

TRAFFIK (1989)

Funny how many of these series have been plundered by Tinseltown for (generally inferior) cinematic remakes. Here’s another. It’s hard not to glamourise drug use onscreen as otherwise great films like Trainspotting demonstrate; ‘Traffik’ gets it right by taking a very measured, almost documentary approach. An examination of all sides of the heroin trade from production to distribution to the end user the series is intelligent, realistic and forensic in its detail, yet still manages to pack an incredible emotional punch due to Julia Ormond’s entirely convincing portrayal of a middle class junkie and a stunning chase sequence through the streets of Hamburg that culminates in a truly explosive set piece.

6
EDGE OF DARKNESS (1985)

As one of the most gripping TV thrillers ever made it was inevitable that ‘Edge of Darkness’ would be watered down into a Hollywood friendly soup sooner or later. In a career defining role Bob Peck plays copper Ronald Craven whose daughter, an environmental activist, is gunned down before his eyes. His quest to uncover the truth leads him into all manner of sinister cover-ups that go to the top of the political tree not just in Whitehall but Washington as well. Originally broadcast in 1985 ‘Edge of Darkness’ captures the horrifying immediacy of potential nuclear war like no other drama and if its cold war shenanigans do tend to date it rather, the intensely human story of a man seeking the truth about his child’s murder is absolutely timeless.

5
THE SINGING DETECTIVE (1986)

Those who claim that HBO invented sophisticated, psychologically acute drama should devour Dennis Potter’s six part opus forthwith. Michael Gambon gives the performance of his career as the tellingly named Phillip Marlowe, a crime writer hospitalised with a chronic skin disease. The staggeringly audacious structure interweaves the real-time hospital scenes with the imagined world of his novel and flashbacks to his own youth. It quickly becomes clear how closely inter-related the three strands are and how the exciting conclusion of Marlowe’s novel mirrors the impending mental collapse of its author. If this all sounds frightfully challenging then that’s because it is, but, this being Dennis Potter, its enlivened by some stunning musical routines, lashings of bawdy wit and the kind of imagery that stays imprinted on your retina forever. Flawlessly written and acted this is the ‘Ulysses’ of British TV drama.

4
THE PRISONER (1967-1968)

From ‘Twin Peaks’ to ‘Lost’ and ‘Life on Mars’ we love a cryptic drama series that teases us with hidden meanings, freaky symbolism and impenetrable plot twists. ‘The Prisoner’ is the daddy of these types of shows and still the biggest basket case of the lot. Patrick McGoohan (whose warped brainchild this evergreen slice of head-fuckery is) plays a nameless spy who quits, is drugged and then wakes up in a quintessentially 1960s day-glo village where everybody is a number (he becomes Number 6) and the big boss keeps changing from week to week. There are basically two kinds of ‘Prisoner’ storyline: Number 6 tries to escape the Village (he fails, usually crushed by a giant inflatable ball) or his tormentors employ ever more outlandish schemes to get him to spill his guts (they fail). But within these parameters lies some of the most bizarrely psychedelic imagery ever witnessed on mainstream television. And just to round off the madness the order in which the episodes appeared in transmission (and are presented on the DVD) is completely different to the order McGoohan intended them to be shown. Be seeing you.

3
I, CLAUDIUS (1976)

Let’s just look at that cast list shall we: Derek Jacobi, Brian Blessed, John Hurt, Patrick Stewart, Sian Phillips. Do I really need to say any more? Oh alright then. Long before HBO’s sex and sandals vision of ‘Rome’ came this outrageously enjoyable romp through the lives (and messy, messy deaths) of the Roman Emperors. Seen through the eyes of the eponymous stuttering ‘idiot’ (Jacobi) it plays out like Coronation Street in togas – only better. You might think that a prestige adaptation of a classic novel would be stiff, pompous and inaccessible but not a bit of it. The stellar cast are clearly loving every second (although you’ll believe Brian Blessed can do subtle), the script is simultaneously highly articulate and deeply irreverent (and very funny) and the scandal, conflict and naughtiness is non-stop. ‘Quinitilius Virus, where are my eagles?’

2
SECRET ARMY (1977-1979)

The first thing you need to know about ‘Secret Army’ is that its narrative of Belgian evasion lines rescuing British airmen in World War II directly inspired the goonish innuendo-fest sitcom ‘Allo, Allo!’ But don’t run away just yet because, although it does have its fair share of stagey melodrama and ludicrous plotlines, ‘Secret Army’ actually lends itself perfectly to a right good bingewatch. Over the course of its three series there is credible character development (including some of the most three dimensional German officers depicted onscreen), high profile and genuinely shocking deaths of beloved characters (‘Game of Thrones’ eat your white-walking heart out!), profound questions about the nature of good and evil dressed up as rollicking adventure yarns and a steady increase of palpable suspense and tension which leaves you desperate to know how it all ends. And the answer is, not how you would expect it to.

1
PRESS GANG (1989-1993)

Yes, it is a children’s show but so is ‘Doctor Who’ and nobody shies away from bestowing glittering plaudits on the Gallifreyan gadabout so it’s about time Steven Moffat’s other great project got the recognition it deserves. No other TV drama, adult or otherwise, has blended the effervescent wit of the finest screwball comedies with storylines so jaw dropping harrowing it’s amazing they were broadcast on a Sunday teatime (seriously, for a show aimed primarily at young teens the body count is astonishing). ‘Press Gang’ is set in a school newspaper office with Spike and Lynda (Dexter Fletcher and Julia Sawalha) as the bickering Tracy-Hepburn lovebirds and an assortment of nerds and oddballs chasing the juiciest stories whilst dealing with all manner of angst and issues. Aside from the sparkling central duo the series’ greatest creation is Paul Reynolds’ Colin, the paper’s wannabe yuppie financial guru whose money making schemes and general Thacherite greed result in some inspired farce. ‘Press Gang’ ran for five series and remained remarkably consistent throughout. Particularly impressive were the bold framing devices used to create drama and suspense in the darkest episodes – the two part ‘Last Word’ is simply one of the tensest pieces of television ever broadcast. Never underestimate a good kids show, and ‘Press Gang’ is the greatest kids show of them all.                         

               

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