"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....
Showing posts with label Western. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Western. Show all posts
Sunday, 30 August 2015
The Pinkertons
A series based on the real-life cases of the Pinkertons' National Detective Agency sounds like a good idea. Allan Pinkerton, here played by our own Angus MacFadyen, founded the first major detective firm in America, joined after the American Civil War by his rough and ready son William (Jacob Blair) and Kate Warne (Martha MacIsaac) as the first female detective, whose modern ways incline towards what we would term forensics.
A good premise alone does not a good series make, however. It needs decent writing, a fair cast and reasonable production values. This lacks two, and the third is compromised by the lack of the rest. This is Canadian, and we have to say that if Canada feels superior to its southern neighbour, it's not justified by the television they sell to us. You might expect Canada to try producing the likes of 'Mad Men', 'The Wire' and 'Breaking Bad', but this feels more like 'Bonanza' or 'The High Chaparral' with slightly less slush and more brutality. With a banal script and looking bizarrely like it was filmed on a hand-held camcorder by a tourist at a wild west show, the fascination was in watching the actors battle to gain even an ounce of verisimilitude. MacFadyen, who has presence and delivered some good performances in his back catalogue, sounds like he is putting on an accent even though Scottish is presumably second if not first nature.
Anachronisms are inevitable, no matter how small and despite all efforts at attention to detail, but the 'CSI 19th Century' franchise is much better served by 'Ripper Street', in the form of Captain Jackson, and even by Canada's own 'Murdoch Mysteries', which at least has charm and a modicum of tension, even if the female pathologist clearly races back and forth a hundred years between each episode. This Pinkertons tale of bushwhackers was curiously bloodless, and the buddy banter failed to establish any rapport between the characters. Crime and the Old West, on this occasion, are not a great combination.
Labels:
Angus MacFadyen,
Canada,
Crime,
Drama,
Jacob Blair,
Martha MacIsaac,
Pinkertons,
review,
TV,
Western
Tuesday, 6 November 2012
Hatfields & McCoys
They sure were ornery back in them days, way out West. Well, west of the UK. To Americans it's a sort of Eastern Western. Everyone wore brown (or maybe they were just downright dirty); the men carried guns, spat tobacco at every opportunity and cussed all the time. The women just looked about ten years older than they were and wore cross expressions, which is hardly surprising given the stupidity of their menfolk.
This is a feud so famous that their names have passed into a colloquialism for discord, but as this TV series shows, it had its origins in nothing very much more than a difference of opinion, and continued for decades to the detriment of several members of both families, who were either killed or, in one case, kept apart from their loved one. (Not that Johnse Hatfield was exactly faithful to Roseanna McCoy - he eventually married her cousin Nancy. Nice.)
The production features, under all those beards, Kevin Costner, Tom Berenger and a fair few English actors, who assume Virginian/Kentucky accents with varying success. Sarah Parish (sans beard) also appears as Hatfield's long-suffering wife and matriarch of the clan, while Mare Winningham, ex-brat packer, is her opposite number in the McCoy tribe. It's all quite fun in a so-glad-I-didn't-live-then kind of a way, and it looks and feels suitably grimy and backwoods, but... while at bottom it's a condemnation of the futility of violence, we can't quite get beyond the feeling that it's one lot of ignorant hillbillies with grubby beards attacking another lot of ignorant hillbillies with grubby beards for no very good reason. Well, it is a Western, so what did we expect?
Labels:
Drama,
Jena Malone,
Joe Absolom,
Kevin Costner,
Mare Winningham,
Nick Dunning,
review,
Sarah Parish,
Tom Berenger,
TV,
US,
Western
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