BBC

  • David Attenborough – The First Eden: The Mediterranean World and Man (1987)

    1981-1990BBCDavid AttenboroughDocumentaryTVUnited Kingdom

    Quote:
    The First Eden: The Mediterranean World and Man is a BBC documentary series written and presented by David Attenborough, first transmitted in the United Kingdom from 8 March 1987.

    It comprises four programmes, each of 55 minutes’ duration, which describe man’s relationship with the natural habitats of the Mediterranean, and is a glorious portrait of the landscape, wildlife and plants of the Mediterranean. From the earliest human settlements to the cities of today, from the forests of the North African shore and the Middle East to Southern Europe, this series tells the dramatic story of man and nature at work.Read More »

  • Simon Rawles – Inside the Secret World of Incels (2019)

    2011-2020BBCDocumentarySimon RawlesUnited Kingdom

    As passions rise over Brexit many of the UK’s female MPs have received death threats and rape threats online. I struggled to comprehend the source of this tide of rage which seemed out of all proportion to a mere difference of political opinion. Then I watched this documentary about the online “incel” community and it all started to make a little more sense. “Incel” is short for, “involuntary celibate”, in other words, a guy who isn’t getting any sex.Read More »

  • Various – The Ascent of Man (1973)

    1971-1980BBCDocumentaryTVUnited KingdomVarious

    Synopsis

    Dr. Bronowski’s magnificent BBC television series The Ascent of Man traces our rise both as a species and as moulders of our own environment and future. It covers the history of science, but of science in the broadest terms. Invention from the flint tool to geometry, from the arch to the theory of relativity, are shown to be expressions of man’s specific ability to understand nature, to control it, not to be controlled by it.Read More »

  • Jonathan Glazer – The Fall (2019)

    2011-2020BBCJonathan GlazerShort FilmUnited Kingdom

    A mob’s punishment of a lone man proves cruel and unusual in this nightmarish short film.Read More »

  • Rudolph Cartier – BBC Play of the Month: An Ideal Husband (1969)

    1961-1970BBCComedyRudolph CartierTVUnited Kingdom

    An Ideal Husband (BBC1, 1969, dir. Rudolph Cartier)

    Rudolph Cartier’s Play of the Month version of Oscar Wilde’s An Ideal Husband (1895) shares the same aesthetic of visual pleasure realised through detail as Cedric Messina’s Pygmalion (BBC1 16 December 1973), as well as many common features of setting and dressing; ballrooms, studies, morning rooms, elegant dresses and eveningwear. However, Cartier’s directorial technique demonstrates a greater awareness of the possibilities of studio technique to comment upon the action of a play, and is an exemplary production in its use of finely realised period detail to achieve dramatic effects, as an interpretation that works on deeper levels than surface aesthetic visual pleasure. Read More »

  • Werner Herzog – Nomad: In the Footsteps of Bruce Chatwin (2019)

    2011-2020BBCDocumentaryUnited KingdomWerner Herzog

    Channel BBC Two
    Nomad: In the Footsteps of Bruce Chatwin (21 Sept 2019) When legendary writer and adventurer Bruce Chatwin was dying of Aids, his friend and collaborator Werner Herzog made a final visit to say farewell. As a parting gift, Chatwin gave Herzog the rucksack that had accompanied him around the world.
    Thirty years later, carrying the rucksack, Herzog sets out on his own journey, inspired by Chatwin’s passion for the nomadic life. Along the way, Herzog uncovers stories of lost tribes, wanderers and dreamers.
    He travels to South America, where Chatwin wrote In Patagonia, the book that turned him into a literary sensation, with its enigmatic tales of dinosaurs, myths and journeys to the ends of the world. Read More »

  • Stuart Burge – The Importance of Being Earnest (1986)

    Comedy1981-1990BBCClassicsStuart BurgeUnited Kingdom

    Algy and Jack discover that they have both been Bunberrying, that is, assuming different identities in order to enjoy themselves in a guilt-free manner. Jack’s pretending to be his foolish younger brother, Ernest in order to be a model of moral rectitude to his young ward, Cecily. Jack intends to propose to Gwendolyn–that is until he discovers that she loves him because his name is Ernest. He sets about being rechristened. And when Cecily intends to meet her bad cousin Ernest, and Algy seizes the opportunity, it will take the imperious Lady Bracknell, Miss Prism’s recollections about her handbag, and an army list to clear the matter up, and allow true love to run its course.Read More »

  • Harold Pinter – Mountain Language (1988)

    Drama1981-1990BBCHarold PinterTVUnited Kingdom

    Synopsis:
    ‘Inspired by a visit to Turkey and Pinter’s experience of the suppression of the Kurdish language, this short, sharp shock of a play explores the increasing intolerance of dissent.
    Written in cold fury, it’s a play that shows how, in dictatorial states, the suppression of language becomes an extension of physical brutality.’
    – BFIRead More »

  • Alastair Reid – Artemis 81 (1981)

    1981-1990Alastair ReidBBCSci-FiTVUnited Kingdom

    Paranormal novelist Gideon Harlax is drawn into a battle between the forces of good, represented by alien angel Helith, and the forces of evil, represented by Helith’s evil brother Asrael. Ranging from Oxford to Denmark, a North Sea ferry to an alien planet, Harlax unwittingly becomes part of an ancient plot that may result in the destruction of Earth…Read More »

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