jackie-107
Sept. 2003 ist beigetreten
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Bewertung von jackie-107
I watched this on TV out of nostalgic remembrance of the classic TV Saint series with Roger Moore which I grew up with in the 1960s. Not expecting similarity but hoping for some swashbuckling action in Simon Templar style, I was not disappointed. A thoroughly enjoyable Saturday evening viewing with a stylish Val Kilmer (an actor I'm not familiar with) who combined the Templar characteristics with James Bond finesse very well, and a cute Elizabeth Shue playing her part in the manner of the unlikely earlier Saint female leads (I've never seen a mini-skirted, sexy blonde scientific genius in all my years spent in Oxford!) but adding her own feisty zest to the proceedings.
I particularly liked tongue-in-cheek references such as the repeat use of the first bars of the original Saint theme tune interrupting the background music, and the stick-pin Emma produces at the end which mimics the original Saint logo, and the voice of Roger Moore on the final voice-over car radio. I also liked the device of imagining a childhood background for Simon Templar. The original character (and I have read all the books) has a suitably hazy and enigmatic past of which his readers as well as the other characters (including his girlfriend Pat and sidekick Hoppy Uniatz) know nothing about. Adam Smith made an angelic young Simon and the orphanage setting was highly appropriate.
Altogether an under-rated movie.
I particularly liked tongue-in-cheek references such as the repeat use of the first bars of the original Saint theme tune interrupting the background music, and the stick-pin Emma produces at the end which mimics the original Saint logo, and the voice of Roger Moore on the final voice-over car radio. I also liked the device of imagining a childhood background for Simon Templar. The original character (and I have read all the books) has a suitably hazy and enigmatic past of which his readers as well as the other characters (including his girlfriend Pat and sidekick Hoppy Uniatz) know nothing about. Adam Smith made an angelic young Simon and the orphanage setting was highly appropriate.
Altogether an under-rated movie.
I was 12 when I watched Katy on TV. We had only just acquired television and Katy was one of the series run during the children's hour between 4 and 5 p.m. I had loved the Katy books at the age of 8-10 and the series was no disappointment. Susan Hampshire was a delight and I have followed her star ever since, sympathising with her as Fleur - never seeing her as nasty and venomous, only desperately disappointed in the one thing she wanted (Jon Forsyte) - relishing her portrayal of Becky Sharpe in Vanity Fair, impressed by her performances as Sarah Churchill (The First Churchills) and Lady Glencora (The Pallisers). She was always a TV actress first and foremost and her brief forays into film, such as Cliff Richard's leading lady in 'Wonderful Life', were not entirely successful. In the overblown TV soap opera 'The Grand' she leaves the rest of the cast way behind. Her latest star role as Molly in Monarch of the Glen shows her just as playful, as attractive, as appealing in her sixties, as she was as Katy or Fleur, and with Richard Briers, she raised the rather bland, soaked in Scottish whimsy, soap story to an acceptable level of acting standards.
I consider Susan the leading British TV actress of the second half of the 20th century. Though few people remember Katy now, it was a good start for an actress full of personality and skill, but unassuming and whose natural qualities bring a refreshing breeze of talent every time she appears.
I consider Susan the leading British TV actress of the second half of the 20th century. Though few people remember Katy now, it was a good start for an actress full of personality and skill, but unassuming and whose natural qualities bring a refreshing breeze of talent every time she appears.