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Old 08-06-2008, 02:51 AM   #11
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Got Harrys Game on video years ago.....somehow never got into Prime Suspect.

I'd rate McCallum as one of the great series...even the one that McCallum wasn't in.

That and Callan, of course.
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Old 08-12-2008, 12:57 PM   #12
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Deadwood. I never thought I'd see Ian McShane in anything worthwhile (remember Lovejoy ?), but this is great. Some ace swearing, gratuitous violence and nudity...oh, and the stories are good too.
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Old 08-12-2008, 06:44 PM   #13
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Got Harrys Game on video years ago.....somehow never got into Prime Suspect.

I'd rate McCallum as one of the great series...even the one that McCallum wasn't in.

That and Callan, of course.
The chase scenes in Harrys Game were filmed in Leeds. I was an extra in the riot scenes. They were filmed in a derelict area close by where I lived then called the Greenhoughs.

The Greenhoughs were due for demolition, the only thing left open was a pub called the Cardigan Arms (it is still open and one of the best pubs in Leeds). I played for the rugby team that was based there. They built a cordon round the streets to keep it private, but of course we nipped in for nosey.

We 1st noticed something was going on when they started painting murals and anti-British slogans on the gable ends just like you see in Belfast. Then they moved in a load of Saladins and Land Rovers and burnt out cars, they filmed them over about 3 weeks.

Our club and lots of others in the area were approached by the production company to supply some bodies over one Saturday and Sunday. We were all told to turn up in leather bomber jackets, jeans and docs. Seeing as how that was what we all wore anyway it was easy.

Stunt men and actors did all the technical stuff, they kept us well away from any petrol bombs, but we did get to rampage up and down and chuck a few rubber bricks at things. We did the same thing about 20 times. I recall I even got paid, a fiver or a tenner each day sticks in my mind. They fed us as well.

The thing is, in the 25 or so years since they knocked the Greenhoughs down and built a spanking new estate the place is now more like Baghdad than Belfast. They should have left it as it was.
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Old 08-12-2008, 08:58 PM   #14
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The thing is, in the 25 or so years since they knocked the Greenhoughs down and built a spanking new estate the place is now more like Baghdad than Belfast. They should have left it as it was.
I remember them....Brian and Jimmy wannit?
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Old 08-13-2008, 08:52 AM   #15
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Dont know if you Aussies or Sepo's can get it but I'd deffo recommend The Long Firm. Mark Strong is a great actor imo and would of made a better choice for 007 than his colleague from Our Friends in the North Daniel Craig.


The dark underbelly of 1960s London is brought into sharp focus in Joe Penhall's adaptation of Jake Arnott's critically acclaimed novel, The Long Firm.

The four-part series tells the story of Harry Starks (Mark Strong), as seen through the eyes of four characters that come into his life - a Tory Lord, an actress, a low-life speed dealer and an academic.
"Starks is a charismatic nightclub owner, racketeer, porn king and avid Judy Garland fan who makes and loses his fortune in 1960s Soho," says producer Liza Marshall.

"He is no regular gangster - Starks is a complex man; intelligent, vulnerable, violent when he needs to be, but all the while yearning for something more than the rough and tumble of criminal life. Everyone that he encounters is changed forever by the experience."

Harry Starks is in the gutter but reaching for the stars.

Mark StrongAward-winning writer, Joe Penhall, is full of praise for Mark Strong's portrayal of Starks: "Pound for pound, I think Mark is one of the best actors in Britain at the moment, and this piece will bear that out.

"He has done a very complex, cinematic performance which is very endearing and intelligent, yet also immediate, inclusive and easy to grasp."

The other characters are Lord Teddy Thursby (Sir Derek Jacobi), a cash-strapped politician; fading movie star Ruby Ryder (Lena Headey); Starks' toyboy Tommy (Joe Absolom); Jimmy (Phil Daniels), a petty criminal and general lowlife who gets caught up in Harry's world; Lenny (Shaun Dingwall), a young lecturer and radical criminologist who becomes enthralled by Starks when he teaches him in prison; and bent copper Detective Sergeant Mooney (George Costigan).

The Long Firm was directed by Billie Eltringham (Kid In The Corner, This Is Not A Love Song) and written by accomplished playwright Penhall, winner of Evening Standard and Olivier Awards. The producer was Liza Marshall (The Sins, Eroica) and the executive producers were Hilary Salmon, Laura Mackie and David Bernath for BBC America.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/drama/longfirm/
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