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MrOneLung said:is there a way o to watch Chernobyl without sky ?
Is it on any other platform ?
you can buy a stick with a month or 2 entertainment pass quite cheap at the mo1 -
golfaddick said:Lincsaddick said:The Sinner .. BBC4 Saturdays .. second round of the psychological detective series .. always interesting
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PragueAddick said:In case there is still any regular on here who has been even more tardy than me in getting round to Chernobyl, I can only say that all the praise you have read on here and elsewhere is richly deserved. I finished it in five nights which i don't normally do, and despite approaching each episode with a feeling of dread because the first episode in particular is a harrowing watch. It would be brilliant if it was just drama but the edge comes from it being a true story, much of which has been withheld from the world, for reasons the series also explains. On every dimension, the casting, the meticulous re-creation of Soviet era, the decision not to mess with phoney foreign accents, the vast re-creation of that dreadful scene, the inspired choice of an Icelandic composer for the music, it is film-making of the very highest quality, and you wonder whether nowadays the BBC could take on such a topic and do it justice.
There are of course controversies about its historic veracity, but then of course Cressida Dick thinks "Bodyguard" was all bullshit too.
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Watched the latest season of the Crown on Netflix over the last few days. On the whole very good albeit with a couple of dullish episodes. The fellah who played Phil the Greek absolutely nailed it. Mannerisms down to an absolute tee.War of the Worlds remake on the beeb. Lasted until ten minutes into episode 2. Really dull CGI fest with endless shots of Rafe Spall gazing into the sky in bewilderment.1
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Lincsaddick said:golfaddick said:Lincsaddick said:The Sinner .. BBC4 Saturdays .. second round of the psychological detective series .. always interesting1
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bolloxbolder said:MrOneLung said:is there a way o to watch Chernobyl without sky ?
Is it on any other platform ?
or maybe rock up on sky one0 -
Just started World on Fire really enjoying it at the moment1
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SantaClaus said:PragueAddick said:In case there is still any regular on here who has been even more tardy than me in getting round to Chernobyl, I can only say that all the praise you have read on here and elsewhere is richly deserved. I finished it in five nights which i don't normally do, and despite approaching each episode with a feeling of dread because the first episode in particular is a harrowing watch. It would be brilliant if it was just drama but the edge comes from it being a true story, much of which has been withheld from the world, for reasons the series also explains. On every dimension, the casting, the meticulous re-creation of Soviet era, the decision not to mess with phoney foreign accents, the vast re-creation of that dreadful scene, the inspired choice of an Icelandic composer for the music, it is film-making of the very highest quality, and you wonder whether nowadays the BBC could take on such a topic and do it justice.
There are of course controversies about its historic veracity, but then of course Cressida Dick thinks "Bodyguard" was all bullshit too.
The under 30s are more able to appreciate it without suffering personal flashbacks, naturally.2 -
MrOneLung said:is there a way o to watch Chernobyl without sky ?
Is it on any other platform ?1 -
Has anyone watched the third series of Sneaky Pete? Felt the second series ran out of steam and not sure whether to keep watching.
Out of date I know but enjoyed both series of Jack Ryan. Also the Leeds documentary.0 - Sponsored links:
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Started watching I-Land on Netflix the last week, I imagine its a bit like lost... although I have never seen it! 10 people turn up on a desert island with no memory. I quite like it, there is a bit of mystery involved and its not very predictable which is good.
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PragueAddick said:SantaClaus said:PragueAddick said:In case there is still any regular on here who has been even more tardy than me in getting round to Chernobyl, I can only say that all the praise you have read on here and elsewhere is richly deserved. I finished it in five nights which i don't normally do, and despite approaching each episode with a feeling of dread because the first episode in particular is a harrowing watch. It would be brilliant if it was just drama but the edge comes from it being a true story, much of which has been withheld from the world, for reasons the series also explains. On every dimension, the casting, the meticulous re-creation of Soviet era, the decision not to mess with phoney foreign accents, the vast re-creation of that dreadful scene, the inspired choice of an Icelandic composer for the music, it is film-making of the very highest quality, and you wonder whether nowadays the BBC could take on such a topic and do it justice.
There are of course controversies about its historic veracity, but then of course Cressida Dick thinks "Bodyguard" was all bullshit too.
The under 30s are more able to appreciate it without suffering personal flashbacks, naturally.1 -
Jessie said:bolloxbolder said:Has anyone watched the third series of Sneaky Pete? Felt the second series ran out of steam and not sure whether to keep watching.
Out of date I know but enjoyed both series of Jack Ryan. Also the Leeds documentary.
Last weekend I watched an 8-episode Amazon series "Modern Love" and loved it very much. Each episode is an individual little story based on the New York Times column Modern Love. It has a great cast including Anne Hathaway, Andy Garcia, Tina Fey, Andrew Scott, Olivia Cooke. It is probably more for the female audience and not everyone will like it. But I must say I found it so touching and I haven't cried as much watching a film or TV series for a long time.1 -
It's a couple of years old, but I watched the Japanese series Re-Mind on Netflix. An intriguing premise – a group of female classmates awake on their graduation day to find themselves seated around a table in a Baroque room with their feet stuck in wooden clamps. An alarm clock rings, the lights go out, and when they come back on, one of the girls has gone...0
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Exiled_Addick said:Any Phillip Pullman fans watching the 'His Dark Materials' adaptation on BBC/HBO? What are your thoughts?I really love the books so I was nervous they might make a dogs dinner of the source material like the dire film did. They're messing around with the timelines a little bit, but I think they seem to be capturing the essence of each character much better. It's been a bit slow starting, as these epic HBO series often are, but I felt it kicked into gear last night with the arrivals of Iorek Byrnison and Lee Scorsby.1
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PragueAddick said:In case there is still any regular on here who has been even more tardy than me in getting round to Chernobyl, I can only say that all the praise you have read on here and elsewhere is richly deserved. I finished it in five nights which i don't normally do, and despite approaching each episode with a feeling of dread because the first episode in particular is a harrowing watch. It would be brilliant if it was just drama but the edge comes from it being a true story, much of which has been withheld from the world, for reasons the series also explains. On every dimension, the casting, the meticulous re-creation of Soviet era, the decision not to mess with phoney foreign accents, the vast re-creation of that dreadful scene, the inspired choice of an Icelandic composer for the music, it is film-making of the very highest quality, and you wonder whether nowadays the BBC could take on such a topic and do it justice.
There are of course controversies about its historic veracity, but then of course Cressida Dick thinks "Bodyguard" was all bullshit too.
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SantaClaus said:PragueAddick said:In case there is still any regular on here who has been even more tardy than me in getting round to Chernobyl, I can only say that all the praise you have read on here and elsewhere is richly deserved. I finished it in five nights which i don't normally do, and despite approaching each episode with a feeling of dread because the first episode in particular is a harrowing watch. It would be brilliant if it was just drama but the edge comes from it being a true story, much of which has been withheld from the world, for reasons the series also explains. On every dimension, the casting, the meticulous re-creation of Soviet era, the decision not to mess with phoney foreign accents, the vast re-creation of that dreadful scene, the inspired choice of an Icelandic composer for the music, it is film-making of the very highest quality, and you wonder whether nowadays the BBC could take on such a topic and do it justice.
There are of course controversies about its historic veracity, but then of course Cressida Dick thinks "Bodyguard" was all bullshit too.
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Agree on Chernobyl, particularly the casting. First rate.
Mystery of the year - why put The Sinner (excellent) on BBC4 yet give prime time on BBC1 Sunday to War of the Worlds? Three hours of my life I shall never get back. The final 10 minutes....beggars belief how turgid that was.1 -
His dark materials is really good.1
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Watched the first couple of episodes of Modern Love this week. It's an enjoyable show and it gets the wife off my back (I choose too many 'men's dramas' apparently).1
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Really struggling with His Dark Materials
Not much happening and cant get invested in the main character.0 -
MrOneLung said:Really struggling with His Dark Materials
Not much happening and cant get invested in the main character.0 -
Dugdaleclass said:Agree on Chernobyl, particularly the casting. First rate.
Mystery of the year - why put The Sinner (excellent) on BBC4 yet give prime time on BBC1 Sunday to War of the Worlds? Three hours of my life I shall never get back. The final 10 minutes....beggars belief how turgid that was.2 -
Sillybilly said:Dugdaleclass said:Agree on Chernobyl, particularly the casting. First rate.
Mystery of the year - why put The Sinner (excellent) on BBC4 yet give prime time on BBC1 Sunday to War of the Worlds? Three hours of my life I shall never get back. The final 10 minutes....beggars belief how turgid that was.2 -
Sillybilly said:Dugdaleclass said:Agree on Chernobyl, particularly the casting. First rate.
Mystery of the year - why put The Sinner (excellent) on BBC4 yet give prime time on BBC1 Sunday to War of the Worlds? Three hours of my life I shall never get back. The final 10 minutes....beggars belief how turgid that was.2 -
Missed It said:Sillybilly said:Dugdaleclass said:Agree on Chernobyl, particularly the casting. First rate.
Mystery of the year - why put The Sinner (excellent) on BBC4 yet give prime time on BBC1 Sunday to War of the Worlds? Three hours of my life I shall never get back. The final 10 minutes....beggars belief how turgid that was.2 -
The Sinner has already been shown on netflix or something.0
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mendonca said:The Sinner has already been shown on netflix or something.
The ending of the 1st series had a serious plot-hole. Didn't bother with the 2nd series.1 -
I thought The Sinner was okay, worth a go if you’re running out of Netflix shows but nothing special.
Mr Robot on the other hand – that has 3 or 4 episodes left until its final finale and I think in future years will really take off. It’s wasted on Amazon Prime but Rami Malek is going to be too big/popular for people not to go back to it. I’d put it up there with Fargo, Gomorrah, Better Call Saul, that kind of quality & mix of slow build ups + payoffs.1 -
War of the Worlds in the right locations? Horsell Common?0