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  • The Last Post is, remarkably, an interesting watch.

    On the surface, this series sounded downright dull. Military Police in one of the last bastions, of the fading UK empire. I watched the first episode as much out of a state of inertia, as genuine interest.

    Suffice to say The Last Post captured my interest and held it beautifully. This is an engaging series with a emphasis on human interest blended capably with action scenes, that mirror in a faded way, current conditions in places like Afghanistan and Iraq.

    Whats different is the prevailing sense of empire that blinds all but the most insightful British officers to the reality of life in Aden. There is still a rather naive view of empire as somehow benevolent and not oppressive, in spite of the torture of locals, the only accepted method of extracting information about resistance fighters. As one officer rightly points out to his commander "They hate us....".

    Its a series with a very 60's vibe that has at its core a transition from the view of empire as a polite unassailable fortress, to one of open conflict and chaos.Its an interesting watch for this reason as the British forces operate almost as if they live in a transplanted "England". They go about their business with a certain "urbanity" with all the usual petty personal conflicts and intrigues, that does not reasonably reflect the danger they face.

    I do not know where this series will go but thus far its started out with an interesting premise that could work very well or derail very badly. In any case so far its looking good. Eight out of ten from me.
  • I am a female civilian war reporter from the Vietnam War, and I was entrenched with the American troops. I find this series SPOT ON. I was struck by the truth of the men going off to fight and coming home to a dinner cooked by their wives, not being able to say where they had been or what they had done or seen. And the separate lives of the wives, the alcohol abuse, the risk of death from childbirth no less real than what the men faced every day or so. I found the battle scenes to be absolutely realistic. The odd, angry shot. Geurilla warfare.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    ...under the skin".Well,"The Last Post" is certainly a sufficiently Kipling - esque tale of crumbling Empires and deep undercurrents lying behind the façade of a Military Police Post in Aden where Colonial and Post - Colonial sentiments rub uneasily together. A local uprising is being fermented and the first rumblings coincide with the arrival of the new Captain and his honeymoon bride who has some naïve ideas about Army Life that must quickly be eradicated if her husband is to maintain authority over his troops. The C.O.'s wife is a brilliant portrait of a woman married to a career soldier.Patient,intelligent,calm and strong she has subordinated her life to encourage and support his career. In the appalling language of the day there is a " Bicycle - Officers for the use of" who,ten minutes into the programme is getting- also in the appalling language of the day "A good seeing - to" from the departing Captain who barely has time to make an unlikely speech about his "love" for his men before he is blown up by a terrorist/freedom fighter armed with with an ancient bazooka. As if that's not enough for Episode One there is the promise of cross - cultural love between an MP corporal and a Muslim girl working at the base and the "Bicycle - Officers for the use of" is also a drunk and married to a rather elderly Lieutenant who likes to wear a dish - dash and mix with the natives.No good will come from that I fear,a sentiment shared by the C.O.incidentally. By 1965 National Service had ended,an event welcomed by both the Services and the Conscripts,so all the soldiers were Regular Army with full - time soldiers' sentiments and attitudes which are well - portrayed. Provided we aren't ground down with Anti - Imperial lectures disguised as dialogue I think I am going to enjoy "The Last Post". It's "Our Girl" for grown - ups.
  • I was really looking forward to this series, however it is disappointing. I can ignore some of the issues such as the inaccurate process etc. The military action scenes are really pathetic. The portrayal of the SAS was disrespectful , they looked like a bunch of raw recruits . I hope it improves as many of the other scenes work well
  • Beamerman14 February 2018
    I'm really surprised by the number of negative reviews on here. The Last Post was a fabulous drama. I can't speak for the historically accuracy of the details but the cinematography, the scenery and the overall picture painted were beautiful and rang true to me.

    The story unfolded very effectively over the six episodes giving a mix of the overall political backdrop with a number of more personal dramas each of which was engaging and interesting.

    The acting was a delight. Just about every performance was perfect.
  • I only saw the first episode of this series and I loved it. It had enough teasers in to get me hooked on the promise of entertaining future episodes.

    Being exposed to the military myself (Not the British Army) I have seen a post in a hostile environment, where the military families (living on base, sometimes with vast different backgrounds) are flung together for periods of time - Those families do not have the luxury of failing to make it work.

    This makes for interesting living arrangements and dynamics. Women don't always have it easy, despite who you are and where you come from, you are pegged to your husband's status and position. A bit tricky to navigate when you are living in each other's pockets.

    Be aware that there might be small details that are not 100 % correct regarding the setting. However, looking past that, I am crossing my fingers that this series has potential.
  • I wasn't more than 11 years old when the incidents shown in 'The Last Post' were playing out but as a history buff I am very aware of the strife in Aden as the British were unwinding their overseas possessions. As a history buff and a retired field grade officer in the U.S. Army I saw the clinkers right off in the portrayal of the soldiers in the show. Yes, the folding stocks on the Sterling SMGs are never extended when in use. Yes, the troopers going into action failed to stand up the rear sight on the SLRs. Yes, there are other issues too, but the story surpasses them all. I've been the 'new man' myself joining a clubby unit and having to prove myself to the other officers and especially the NCOs. I was the newlywed who married and left for overseas duty immediately; my wife had to fly across the world to join me in a plane that had to make an emergency landing along the way to have duct tape applied to the tail to continue her journey. I was the Commander who had to make decisions that effected the lives of soldiers in my command. My wife and I first lived in a small compound of soldiers and their families in a foreign country with all of the stress and heartache that comes with this type of living. I absolutely loved this show. For once, put the military inconsistencies aside and immerse yourself in the lives of the show's characters. I watched all six episodes and found each one to be powerful and moving. I sincerely hope we get a second round of shows
  • chrishazy13 November 2017
    Warning: Spoilers
    As I lived in Aden for 2 years as an army brat aged 9/10; dad was the RSM of the Royal Anglians I was really looking forward to The Last Post. I have some vivid memories of my time there. I was even blown up in the grenade attack of the open air Cinema in Waterloo Barracks but I must admit I was really disappointed with the whole unbelievable story line. I cannot remember seeing many MPs, but there were hundreds of kids, of all ages so any Christmas party would have been mobbed.

    When the troubles picked up in 1965 free roaming was a thing of the past but all married quarters were patrolled 24/7. Us kids had a great time, and our favorite past time was collecting cap badges from squaddies.

    I agree with the comments made by several other reviewers about the SAS mission. It would never happen, the SAS would never have MPs attached to a mission. And their reaction to enemy fire was just completely wrong.

    It was clear to me that the advisers for this program were nowhere near the real action, shame!
  • Its always the case with any Historical drama, especially for some reasons those involving HM Forces of a certain era, that they manage to make a string of continuity errors. The Last Post didn't hold any surprises and it was clear the programme makers wanted to make an effort to re-create Aden in 1965. The first two glaring errors concern the aircraft at what I assume was the R.A.F. Base at Khormaksar. I'll skip comments about the lack of Hawker Hunters which filled the place at the time. The programme maker had caught wind that the English Electric Lightning was in service at the time. But however unlikely it was that Lightnings would have deployed to Aden at the time, they certainly wouldn't be painted in the Ghost and Sea Grey scheme with toned down markings. They were all in natural metal finish, that year in particular, the RAF's Lightnings carried striking fin and spine squadron markings. Another, the Vulcan seen far to quite whistling overhead and with out of date anti-flash white paint scheme further, roundels on the underside of the Vulcan, never. Most curious of all, however, were the cap badges of the RMPs, I've never seen such a thing! the initials inside the laurels should read E II R, with the roman numerals in the centre of the ER in miniature, surmounted by the St Edward's crown. Beyond this, the infantry weapons depicted were certainly of the era and of course the women looked straight out of a 1960s fashion catalogue. Back to the uniforms,something the telly usually can't get right are soldiers' Berets, but by thunder they got it right, rather than looking like small under inflated Balloons perched on each man's bonce as usual, they were actually shaped with the loose material pulled flat down the right side with the cap badge positioned over the left eye. Then again the redcaps redcaps looked like they'd been shipped to location squashed down too many in the container. The peaks did not point down to the bridge of the wearers nose with the crown of the red top pointing almost vertical at the front. As for the story line, it started to pick up after a while, but I can't for the life in me understand why a serving Military Police NCO failed to report a rifle shot that nearly killed his boss's small son. He may not have had an iPad but I'm sure there was a landline with a short dial number for the Guardroom to hand. Verdict, must do better!
  • Unlike several other reviewers, i didn't serve in Aden, and don't know what types of weapon the RMP used or what sorts of planes people few in on.

    However, i didn't watch this series in order to discover such details, and if you do, I fear that as well as being disappointed you may be missing the point. This is an entertainment, but also an allegory -- on the one hand a tale of decline and fall, on the other a tale of compromised decency. Evelyn Waugh meets the evil in war, as it were.

    If military verisimilitude is your thing, this may not work for you; but if you liked Parade's End, the Tudors, and Brideshead Revisited (as I did), I think it will.
  • The_Boxing_Cat24 September 2018
    The acting was really good (other than the journalist's fake American accent), it could have been better without making the British Army look like a bunch of clowns...I cannot go into it without spoiling it for you.
  • nacblackwell7 November 2017
    Rarely have I seen such a good series. Brilliantly acted, wonderful and fulfilling story, excellent scrip, outstanding cinematography. This was both gripping and moving from start to finish with such an original story. No doubt some will criticise the historical accuracy but I have to say you get a real sense of what it may have been like to live army life at the very end of the British Empire. Will definitely watch it all over again.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I can vouch for this show. I grew up during the 1960s in Britain and "the colonies" and can assure the viewer that this show is an accurate reflection. The sorts of things said and the way they say them, the attitudes and manners, the very British overriding culturalisms, these were all things I overheard, endured, saw, or cringed about when I was a boy. Oddly, this show reminded me of Mad Men, certainly in the fashion styles worn by the ladies. Ladies did wear bright colours in the 60s, though none of my lot ever had the fashion sense of tv stars, which is what I suspect you are really seeing here. The show also reminded me of Foyle's War. It's a very capable and beautifully filmed series, with very good actors and tonnes of charm. Here's a goof. In the 3rd or 4th episode a senior officer is visiting his wife whom has just had a baby and is in hospital. The hospital is right on the beach. If you watch the background carefully you can just see a modern surfer slide by out in the waves. Honestly, does anyone check modern tv shows before they leave post-production? I also noticed that the little boy in the show was told to have two puffs of his inhaler before bedtime. It's a tiny detail but it should have been checked. Both these things could have been corrected easily in post-production. Maybe they were left in intentionally, the surfer as a nod to a great time on location, and the inhaler because the Director wanted to recognise a huge 1969 invention (salbutamol). Who knows. Anyway, so why am I not giving the BBC a 8 or 9 for this quality show? It's not because of historical quirks, it is because the portraiture of the Arab rebels is so poor, in fact, as part of a development of story or character, it's almost non-existent. I've watched disc 1 of the dvd and have been patiently waiting for some insight there. Maybe it will come on disc 2. In truth I was so excited to have found a goof (the surfer/I've never spotted one before) I just had to tell the world. All in all, The Last Post is good news for lovers of BBC drama. I had no trouble spending an entire evening with the men and women of Aden, 1965.
  • I was stationed in Aden from October 1965 till the end in 1967. I found episodes 1 and 2 disappointing and far from realistic for that period. The dress, tactics and use of weapons and interaction between the ranks was wrong - certainly not 60s. There were no lightnings at RAF Khormaksar just hunters and the usual transport aircraft of the time and a couple of shackletons. Families were flown in using BUA not BOAC. The RMPs worked in unison with the RAF Police and did not have their own base. Their main task was to maintain discipline and investigate crime by service personnel and families in Aden. In addition, they provided control of access to various units/HQs, escort for VIPs (in spotless land rovers with silver hub caps and white cotton seats), and ran the military detention center/cells. Incidentally I was arrested one night by the by RMPs after too many pints of tiger beer and handed to the RAFP who took me to my billet to sleep it off (it was Christmas). Some RMPs/RAFPs also investigated terrorist incidents and serious crimes though they tended to have SIB experience. In no way did they carry out covert intelligence forays downtown or up country or, work with the SAS. These were probably added to give a bit of excitement to the series, but, the portrayal of SAS in action was shabby to say the least. Any joint operations were carried out with support by infantry units not the RMPs. I did not expect the series to emulate exactly what it was like out there but I did expect it to be better than this.
  • wmforbes6 November 2017
    This "British FUBAR" rant is political nonsense and ought to be deleted. It is of no help to the BBC viewers who watched The Last Post.

    Its author does not understand the difference between 'discreet' and 'discrete' -- and his claim that Colonel T.E. Lawrence, CB was a knight, specifically a KBE, is typical of his ignorance.
  • Liked a lot about this, the characters are well drawn, it could have been more authentic around the tactical stuff and fleshed out with some more characters but its got heart.
  • I also was suprised to see so many negative reviews, I served in the military and I can see how some vets would pick it apart and point out all the indescepancies because that's how soldiers are made to pay attention to the details, so that doesn't surprise me at all. I just finished the first episode and I was glued to the TV, and honestly I didn't have high hopes in the beginning. I didn't expect it to be historically accurate 100% which didn't matter , it's not a documentary or a biography so it doesn't matter, it's entertainment /Fact based. Acting was great, the adultery and drunkenness has been going on since man picked up his first beer so spot on there. Looking forward to the rest of the season and I'm sure it'll be great. Thanks for the great show well done!
  • I found the plot line very gripping on many levels.Here is a tale of the soldiers Empire clinging on,the men and women in the frontline facing ideology and forces they don't understand.It is very relevant to today's Middle East,especially ISIS .The claustrophobic lives of the wives,the rules the men live by which are starting to fail are vividly captured. Fine acting by everybody! Congratulations,a great series with something real to say.
  • mbarryellis12 March 2018
    One of best done jobs of writing, directing and acting I've experienced in quite some time

    Both my wife and I loved it

    Beautifully done

    Thank you
  • clivef-8862417 October 2017
    Warning: Spoilers
    Good program shame about the 2017 hair cuts. Just waiting to see a top knot. LOL well as i have to fill five lines i will waffle on. I was a child of that era and spent time in Egypt and Malaya so i remember my dad who was in the army at the time telling the squaddies to get there hair cut .Short back and sides.
  • imdb-2153910 August 2018
    Firstly, the good... Jessie Buckley is great, and Jessica Raine is even better, in fact quite extraordinary. A few of the other actors (mostly the women, as well as young Toby Woolf) also aren't bad. But there "the goodness" stops.I am not even going to bother with comments about the landrovers, weapons etc, as this is not meant to be a kit-spotters film. But I have never seen a film which managed to get so many aspects of the story wrong. The interrelationships are written with every last cliche possible, and mostly are utterly unrealistic. Just one example out of literally hundreds: a Major who is unable to make up his mind about what to do when under fire in the field, and has to get his Captain to decide, has lost all credibility - it is inconceivable that the next day he would carry on as before. There is inconsistency after inconsistency, often within minutes of each other in the same episode. The story is infantile - despite the publicity blurb, the entire writing and editing team clearly do not have the faintest clue about anything military - there were so many errors in the plot, that came so frequently, that I gave up bothering trying to note them down. The dialogue contained anachronism after anachronism. In summary, the 3 stars I gave this film are solely for the 2 lead actresses - the rest would get none.
  • Loved the performances of this cast. Riveting and unusual script brought to life by excellent acting. Of all the Series on networks and cable these days, this was a most unusual setting and story. It really took hold and kept me In the setting and events right up to the end. Oh please make another season! It is desperately needed. Take a chance and View this most exciting and unusual story. It may be a movie series but it feels like a good book when your done.
  • Wow. What acting, photography, dialogue, story drama. About a time in history and the will of human spirit. Such a shame that BBC will not continue this series. One of the best I've seen. I really hope it will return.
  • oruphotograph30 April 2018
    8/10
    Dude.
    Thought this looked lame.

    Literally didn't watch it right away until I was bored.

    I was wrong. It was a solid view.

    It had a "Stranger Things" vibe (purely because of the background music/tone/tension).

    And that tone/tension lasted throughout the season.

    Bravo, Amazon. Bravo, indeed.
  • jrarichards1 August 2018
    Warning: Spoilers
    As a Brit who was a kid in the 60s, I came to "The Last Post" a little warily. The United Kingdom had the biggest Empire the world has ever known, and parts of it were still in place well into my lifetime. One of those pink dots on the map (a tiny one) was Aden, in fact a highly-significant port of incredibly key strategic location. Aden was British from 1839 to 1967, which makes it by no means the longest-lasting colony, but that's still 128 years - maybe 5 generations. Looked at from today's perspective that's already an incredible, near-impossible story. Now the Yanks go in with shock and awe and then the awful contractors to achieve regime change, and expect to be able to withdraw after a decade or something with everything sorted.

    History makes that approach look unlikely to succeed.

    Given that Britain had dozens of colonies large and small, and given that many also lasted under imperial rule for decades, there are countless stories in there, and in theory at least each could choose a different setting to tell - to sell - the same story of merciless exploitation and repression, slavery, human-rights abuses, racism and so on. That would be the story.

    And then there is the much more interesting, much more nuanced TRUTH of the matter.

    The Empire did indeed last for centuries, and it involved countless millions of variously-motivated people, including family members of EVERY British person alive today (of whatever creed or colour, BTW). If we choose, we can hate and condemn everything they did back then, detach ourselves from our own flesh and blood and start again with a new history. This is after all what Germans have had to do, in respect of an empire of unmitigated evil.

    In the BBC's "The Last Post", as the name suggests, it is the UK's last few years in a hot, staggeringly beautiful, bustling, historic port-city plus hinterland of rather tiny dimensions that is featured in all its hypocrisy and absurdity and occasional desperation. The last chapters of the imperial story are being written, the UK has already lost quite a bit of its power, many of the locals are not happy to be a colony, but the Brits have to play their roles, and keep their stiff upper lips, as best they can through to the end.

    I say "as best they can", as few aspersions are cast upon our main characters here, soldiers and officers of the Royal Military Police and - crucially - the posted spouses thereof. Although Jessica Raine as the wife of Lt. Laithwaite pushes the limits with her unstable character, she ultimately does a good job also, while there are sterling, at times stellar, performances of class and full plausibility from on-screen couples Jeremy Neumark Jones and Jessie Buckley, EXCELLENT Ben Miles and Amanda Drew; and Stephen Campbell Moore as Laithwaite himself. Young, non-officer Redcaps are also very well played by Tom Glynn-Carney, Chris Reilly, Louis Greaterex and (a somewhat-underused) Kevin Sutton as Corporal Israel Orchover (who is touchingly and tellingly portrayed as one of the 10,000 Jewish children taken in by Britain in the context of the "Kindertransport" and is now a quiet, good, thoughtful, painstaking soldier, who does indeed know a truly evil empire when he sees one).

    There is a gripping main story to tell here, as well as several side incidents, and the other characters are Aden locals, British industry (BP) employees, British spies, the colonial administration, a female American reporter and so on - it's a heady mix, allowing for plenty of soapy and less-soapy, Army and less-Army storylines; but ultimately no (very) bad things are said about our soldiers, even if others behave in underhand ways quite routinely. Given the British people's long term love and respect for their armed forces, this tack taken by the makers of "The Last Post" cannot really be surprising; but in the process the "opportunity" to condemn imperialism outright and unthinkingly was lost ... and thank goodness for that.

    Indeed, this series is brave enough to present rebel enemies (led by (the British-educated) Kadir Hakim very well-played by Aymen Hamdouchi) as stop-at-nothing bad guys who are INDEED as much terrorists as they are freedom fighters.

    Given what happened to Aden after the British left in 1967 this stance is more truth than political correctness ... and thank goodness for that.

    Surprisingly, "The Last Post" does not obviously come from a book, being screenwritten by Peter Moffat - a veteran of TV series, including "The Village", with its much more subversive (but also pastiche) take on British history. Here in "The Last Post" it is serious, subtle realism that seems to be to the fore, and it's an intruiging, compelling, touching, dramatic, thought-provoking and enjoyable watch.
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