Romojo

IMDb member since January 2001
    Lifetime Total
    5+
    Lifetime Trivia
    1+
    IMDb Member
    23 years

Reviews

Time and the Conways
(1985)

A wonderful version
Just saw this for the first time in some thirty years... Priestley wrote three 'Time' plays: "Dangerous Corners" is the best known other one (I think). He's also the author of "An Inspector Calls" which manages to be paranormal without spooky.

As for this one ..we meet the Conways in 1919, at a daughter's 21st birthday. The Conways are attractive, well-liked, affluent, and survived the war well (with the exception of the father). They banter with each other, tease each other a little - brother Robin comes home that night, friend Gerald brings in a man who's been dying to meet them...

Then we're twenty years later; the teasing and bickering is now with malice. Some of the daughters married badly, careers went awry, there's been a death, the family is on hard times.

Then we're back to 1919 again - and now we see where the second act came from. We now see the effects of the words and actions that the characters do in this 'past' that we know will affect the future we've seen.

It's a clever play - Priestly wrote some excellent books and drama. There's a touch of melodrama in it, and maybe some fatalism - but the content will stay with you. The acting (as are most British plays of this vintage) is superb. Claire Bloom (as the mother) is wonderfully touching, then catty, then dominant, the manipulative.

Well worth a look. Let's pray for the DVD - the 'youtube' print is welcome but the quality isn't the best.

Richard III: Martyr or Monster?
(2013)

Dreadful and dreary
This show seems to be mainly a quickly-made piece to cash-in on the publicity surrounding the findings of Richard's bones under the car park in Leicester. We see talking heads of actors, authors and the lady who led the findings - but no historians and very little history. The piece is badly edited and includes a lot of Shakespeare irrelevant to the story. And the Shakespeare clips are a silent Richard III (I guess Olivier's is still copyrighted...). It's more a "Myth of Richard III" than "Martyr or Monster".

The presentation from Bosworth field could be anywhere - Bob Carruthers stands in front of the camera, taking up 50% of the frame. Maybe the camera was self-operated and on a tripod? Avoid - unless you want some fashion advice on what to wear in the cold weather. Bob Carruthers does wear some very nice jackets. He should have spent less on clothing, more on research and wages for a cameraman.

See all reviews