"That Would Never Happen!" Dan and Ali write the real reviews of UK TV drama serials (stuff marketed as quality, if you please), telling it like it is rather than the my-mate's-the-director, I-get-party-invites, or the I-need-my-job reviews that often appear. Not to mention the I've-not-watched-it....
Tuesday, 19 June 2012
True Love
'Mad Men' is the honourable exception to our Sky avoidance. Or more accurately, it's the only thing non-terrestrial and non-freeview that we bother to tune in for or tape. Hence the recent silence, since it's the only channel featuring anything that hasn't been shown 58 times already. With the summer lull upon us, the schedules are full of cheap stuff, like dud Jubilee coverage and Olympics promos. We were hoping for a pleasant diversion in bite-sized chunks, set in the faded, tawdry splendour of Margate. The trailer promised much, not least a starry cast, and on this at least it's delivered.
Admittedly, we are only one down with four still to go, but on the strength of the first story, featuring David Tennant, Joanne Froggatt and Vicky McClure, it's going to be a struggle. Hurrah for scriptwriters. Hurrah for Mike Leigh for coaxing decent dialogue via workshopping and improvisation. Either would have been welcome here, but instead we got actors with rabbit-in-headlights expressions, obviously uncomfortable at being given banal storylines and having to come up with lines on the spot. Needless to say, they conveyed love by saying "I love you" and "I love you too", and on unexpectedly bumping into an old acquaintance they say, "Well this is..." and "Yeah, yeah, it's...yeah." It was like watching well-known actors appearing in something like TOWIE. What's worse, the advance publicity suggests that the next four episodes will be essentially the same story (person either bereft or in relationship fancies alternative) with slightly tweaked scenarios. Sad to say, but there were also some likely TWNH moments: would Serena really fly over from Canada to look up old flame Nick, rather than attempting, initially, to find and friend him on Facebook? Would Nick be so hung up on her that he jumps straight into an affair that he hides from his wife but no-one else? Would said wife be so quick to forgive him?
Good on the actors for being game, and all that, and good old Margate for being a better backdrop than most would credit, but slight stories and even slighter lines make an extremely underwhelming watch.
Labels:
Ashley Walters,
Billie Piper,
David Morrissey,
David Tennant,
Dominic Savage,
Jane Horrocks,
review,
TV,
UK
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