on 28-02-2019 00:43
So to run alongside the TV programmes they should bring back, how about the reverse side of the coin?
As I'm the creator of the thread, I get to cheat, I'll name TWO just off the top of my head
Any more great TV that disappoints when revived?
on 28-02-2019 12:35
on 28-02-2019 12:35
@Glory1I had a look and, according to Daily Telegraph of 6 Jan 2016, from the first episode of Midsomer Murders in 1997 to end of 2015, there have been the following in the fictional Midsomer county:
222 murders, 11 accidental deaths, 11 suicides, 7 deaths from natural causes;
murder weapons include:
cricket bat, iron, saucepan, microphone, camera strap, candlestick, doped horse, pitchfork, spear, nicotine, syringe, fungus, necktie, slide projector, razor, drinks cabinet, plough, hammer, hemlock, claret, bottles of relish, frog, arrow, guillotine, theatrical knife, trident, hatpin, Iron Maiden (not the band, medieval torture chamber).
Guess where I`m going for my holdays?
on 28-02-2019 12:42
on 28-02-2019 12:42
@Mi-Amigo wrote:@Glory1I had a look and, according to Daily Telegraph of 6 Jan 2016, from the first episode of Midsomer Murders in 1997 to end of 2015, there have been the following in the fictional Midsomer county:
222 murders, 11 accidental deaths, 11 suicides, 7 deaths from natural causes;
murder weapons include:
cricket bat, iron, saucepan, microphone, camera strap, candlestick, doped horse, pitchfork, spear, nicotine, syringe, fungus, necktie, slide projector, razor, drinks cabinet, plough, hammer, hemlock, claret, bottles of relish, frog, arrow, guillotine, theatrical knife, trident, hatpin, Iron Maiden (not the band, medieval torture chamber).
Guess where I`m going for my holdays?
As far away from Midsomer as you can get is my best guess
on 28-02-2019 12:52
on 28-02-2019 12:52
so Midsomer is a "no, no"; so is The Village (as in The Prisoner)....
I know where I`d probably be at home (after what I posted elsewhere
Hotel California
on 28-02-2019 13:22
on 28-02-2019 13:22
Jeremy Brett was never a patch on Benedicts Sherlock. He was just a Sherlock.He was devoid of Mind Palaces
Benedict portrays him as a high functioning sociopath. Martin Freeman is a superb Watson. Also Andrew Scott's interpretation of Moriarty is the most frightening I've ever witnessed
Veritas Numquam Perit
on 28-02-2019 13:46
on 28-02-2019 13:46
@Cleoriff wrote:Jeremy Brett was never a patch on Benedicts Sherlock. He was just a Sherlock.He was devoid of Mind Palaces
Benedict portrays him as a high functioning sociopath. Martin Freeman is a superb Watson. Also Andrew Scott's interpretation of Moriarty is the most frightening I've ever witnessed
Different times and different interpretations. Jeremy Brett played the Sherlock of the era in the books. Benedict Cumberbatch plays a modern version. Both great in their day, I think.
I do agree with you @Cleoriff about Moriarity. Andrew Scott's portrayal is pure evil
on 28-02-2019 13:54
on 28-02-2019 13:54
28-02-2019 14:18 - edited 28-02-2019 14:20
28-02-2019 14:18 - edited 28-02-2019 14:20
That's where we differ @Cleoriff. I read all the Sherlock stories and of the Conan Doyle era, I preferred Jeremy Brett on TV and Basil Rathbone in films.
Don't get me wrong I love Benedict Cumberbatch's Sherlock. But his interpretation is not Conan Doyle's Sherlock, which Jeremy Brett played to perfection.
But we do agree about Poirot. No one, and I mean no one is a better Poirot than David Suchet. He's what I envisaged when I read the novels and short stories.
on 28-02-2019 14:27
on 28-02-2019 14:27
I think it's probably because I didn't read ANY of the Sherlock books, so I had no preconceived ideas.
When the new Sherlock hit the TV screens I watched originally due to the writers Stephen Moffat and Mark Gatiss (Dr Who)
That was it for me, job done.
I know it's nothing to do with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's interpretation and that (for me) was a bonus.
Veritas Numquam Perit
on 28-02-2019 14:33
@Cleoriffand @Glory1 with regards Poirot, I agree that David Suchet was Poirot....
To illustrate that, at Christmas BBC screened a new version of the A,B,C Murders (which, in my opinion, was a deliberate attempt to rival ITV screening the same episode but with David Suchet) and the new one was nowhere near as good as the ITV version.
on 28-02-2019 14:34
on 28-02-2019 14:34
Well it was the writers plus Benedict Cumberbatch that started me watching as I was curious about the modern take on Sherlock. And I wasn't disappointed.