Showing posts with label acorn-media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label acorn-media. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

The Crimson Petal & The White



Sensual, intoxicating visual experience for adults
Compulsory & addictive, it mimes froth of Victorian London Sts. Cinematography, costumes & sets force viewers deeper into its dark psychological story. The plot and writing are less than stellar. Lead characters portrayals leave one mesmerized by the despicable dearth and poverty of a Dickensian era. Catherine Cookson's poor and low-class tales come to mine too. Don't expect glamor and Victorian gaiety, but every form of crime and dereliction known of the time, 1874. No sympathy, it's lost in strong crass depictions that leave little to imagine. Mad, cunning women are played so well the viewer begins to hate, not adore these characters. Yet it's a mini-series you'll love hating.

The camera's eye, focused on the disgust of the dirty streets and rooms, is filmed so cunningly it resembles Impressionism art done with dark color. Not a love story, but debauchery glistening from mud, vomit, blood and ale. Stunning visuals obligate viewing. Romola Garai (Emma; Amazing Grace) turns...

Glorious Misery: A Relentlessly Downbeat Tale Of Madness, Obsession, And Betrayal
The four part British production "The Crimson Petal and The White" showcases a world with little hope and much depravity. And yet, it revels in this exquisite misery! It is so bleak and so dark, in fact, it is sure to turn off certain viewers. But its willingness to push into this unpleasantness (and beyond) is just what makes this miniseries so compelling and so very different. It is a masterful presentation, to be sure, recreating a London of the 1870's with rich period detail in both costuming and sets. But this is no staid and refined period piece. It is explicit and graphic in depicting the underbelly of the city. Set partly in the streets and the brothels of London and partly in the realm of the aristocracy, "The Crimson Petal and The White" tells the story of one prostitute's efforts to bridge this gap by any means necessary. And what she finds as she moves toward better conditions are every bit as alarming and disturbing as what is shown on the mean streets! Really, there is...

Unexpectedly addictive
I won't summarize the story, as it has been done perfectly by several fellow reviewers. I will say that this was a very interesting and absorbing series. When I started, I thought it would be simply too bleak, an attempt at Dickens or so, but after a bit I had to know what would happen. You begin to care about Sugar is is much more than the strangely aloof girl she fist appears as. I won't spoil the end for anyone, but it left me wishing for an epilogue of sorts, the only slightly unsatisfying part, but I suppose it stayed quite true to the book. The way it was filmed, the colors of costumes and the set was excellent and created the perfect atmosphere for every scene. The acting, by everyone, especially the very versatile Garai, was top notch and deserving of some award or other. Overall it is absolutely worth the four hours:)

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Sunday, September 8, 2013

Midsomer Murders: Mayhem & Mystery Files



The fourth Midsomer combined-sets offering.
John Nettles made Barnaby famous. These episodes in a new package is perfect for anyone who's had not already bought the separate sets. Never a bad Midsomer Murder. It has been a TV hit since Noah loaded both the TV and DVD player. One of the greatest successes in British crime mystery series that has ever been produced, and it still rolls on. New episodes no longer have Nettles as star, but all of this mega set has him in the lead. There is a good supporting regular cast, and each episode has guest stars. High-profile stars beg to be killed or become a murderer on this show, it's been said.
Other packaged groups of the series: "Midsomer Murders-The Early Cases Collection", "Midsomer Murders-Barnaby's Casebook", "Midsomer Murders-Village Case Files", and now Mayhem and Mystery Files."

Subtitles on each episode, one per disc. Most Midsomer episodes run about 100 min. each.
Former set 13: 1 Dance with the Dead - Death by vintage automobile. Where's the...

Love the series!
Love this series! From what I can tell this particular product is a compilation of series 13, 14, 15 and 16. The price might look a touch high but the product is definitely worth watching! Wait for a sale then snap it up fast!

Bad package No subtitles
Wonderful series to watch, will entertain you ! But the money you pay for it, you get really bad package. Mine came with several broken plastic corners and more breakage as I opened to continue with each disc. To pay that much money for BREAKING PLASTIC package!!! Also be warned, HEARING IMPAIRED NO SUBTITLES!!!

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Friday, September 6, 2013

New Tricks: Season Eight



Great Show, But Season 8 DVDs Have Been Edited
UPDATE x2: Unfortunately, I've had to deduct a star, and return this review to its original 3-star rating. Acorn (whom I purchased the DVD from) made a very public spectacle of attempting to put things right with me regarding the edited DVD situation. Unfortunately, it's been over 3 months, and they never sent a new, unedited DVD to me as promised. To make matters worse, attempts to contact them via their Facebook page have gone unanswered.

The product itself ("New Tricks" Season 8) is definitely a 4-star affair, and I don't want to harm its rating. As it stands with the distributor (Acorn), however, that is decidedly a 1-star operation, and so this review once again goes back to 3 stars.

UPDATE: Since this review was published, Acorn have responded (both on Facebook and in the comments section of this review), and have been a class act in their acknowledgement of the issue, and how they plan to address it. I wanted to make readers aware of this, and that I am...

New Tricks
This show is fantastic! There's nothing like a British who-dun-it. They always do things with style and grace. With New Tricks, you have one gritty, attractive female, Superintendent Sandra Pullman (played by Amanda Redman) who's in charge of three disfunctional, misfit retired copers who don't always like to play by the rules. In fact, they often ignore proceedures altogether. But that's part of what makes this show so great. Actors James Bolam, Alun Armstrong, and Dennis Waterman brilliantly play their characters - Jack Halford, Brian Lane and Jerry Standing, who encounter some strange cases at their ever-moving U.C.O.S. (Unsolved Crime and Open-Case Squad) headquarters. They solve the crimes no one else wants to deal with. They may do some unconventional detective work in the process, but these "old-timers" are far more "experienced", "clever" and "vastly knowledgeable" - compared to their younger counter-parts. This is definitely not like American cop shows (thankfully)...

Another Excellent Season
It is very hard to come up with a police series which is truly original as the subject has pretty much been done to death from every angle over the years. However, the producers of New Tricks managed to do just that when they launched the pilot in 2003. Not really surprising that the show has run and run and we are now up to the eighth series and it has reached a total of 66 episodes. Good to see that we had 10 episodes this time round as in Series 7, rather than the 8 in earlier series.

Despite the long running nature of New Tricks, the script writers still seem to come up with original and sometimes quite offbeat plots. For example the last in the current series concerned the case of a zoo keeper whom it had been assumed had been mauled to death by a tiger, but whom the team suspect was killed before being put in the tiger's enclosure. As is usually the case, the truth, when it is teased out, is far from straight forward. Also good to see that we were not left with a...

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