La vida cotidiana, profesional y personal, de los médicos, enfermeras y pacientes que se encuentran, por diversas razones, en las salas de la frenética unidad cardíaca del Holby City General... Leer todoLa vida cotidiana, profesional y personal, de los médicos, enfermeras y pacientes que se encuentran, por diversas razones, en las salas de la frenética unidad cardíaca del Holby City General Hospital.La vida cotidiana, profesional y personal, de los médicos, enfermeras y pacientes que se encuentran, por diversas razones, en las salas de la frenética unidad cardíaca del Holby City General Hospital.
- Ganó 1 premio BAFTA
- 7 premios ganados y 23 nominaciones en total
Opiniones destacadas
The episode where she drove in at the beginning bedecked in full scarf and sunglasses, femme fatale garb, only to crash into Will was one of my favourites.
I've heard people say her stuffs repetitive but I think it's great fun seeing her boss the boys around and dish out her scathing comments.
The storyline with Will is a joy to behold - it may just be me being insanely sad but every week I can't wait to see what she'll throw at him.
I only hope she stays for a long time.
Today HOLBY is a rushed, badly written and sometimes badly acted Soap Opera, in the real sense of the term, Soap Opera.
Back in the day it was new, fresh, well written and the Actors were believable!.
One was invested in the lives and struggles of Patients, Doctors, Nurses and the Paramedics and crews.
Not anymore!, instead of the quality TV it once was, today you find yourself looking at your watch, almost wishing it to end!.
So very Sad!, If the Actors do not deserve better, then surely the Viewers should.
The formula of eager young surgeon kept in check by irascible veteran with a God complex works a treat here, thanks largely to the chemistry between Michael French (Nick Jordan) and the sublime George Irving as Anton Meyer.
Unlike French, Irving's lack of TV baggage has made his character here all the more believable. Roles in The Professionals, Bergerac, The Bill and Boon have given him a good grounding in TV drama and his current role as the self-assured Cardio-Thoracic Consultant Surgeon seems to have been tailor-made for the South Shields-born actor.
The second run has seen the character develop, largely thanks to the arrival of his old sparring partner Mike Barrett (Clive Mantle) who manages to keep Meyer in check while dispensing a few dreadful gags.
"I had this one patient who swallowed a spoon - I told her not to stir."
It its latter years, the quality crashed, it turned into a melodramatic soap opera, it was such a shame, the original tightly written storylines transformed into something more fitting of an early afternoon soap opera.
It was always well made and authentic looking. If you get the chance to see the earlier episodes, I'd say they're still worth seeing.
I was sad to see the show axed, but it's fair to say it was long since on borrowed time, it ran out of steam many years before it ended. The latter years I'd rate as 4/10.
Overall, 6/10.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaOne of the scriptwriters is called Elliot Hope, the same name as the fictional character, played by Paul Bradley, in the series.
- Citas
[reading patients' comment cards in the family-planning clinic]
Mickie Hendrie: [smirking] We've got some really good comments.
Donna Jackson: "I never knew you could get free condoms here. Now I won't have to re-use my old ones." How gross is that?
- Créditos curiososBeginning with episode (#11.10)} the credits were redesigned so the actors who played the main characters were listed (though without their character names) before the episode, and the actors and character names for the minor or guest characters were listed at the end. The opening credits were identical for every episode and included actors even if they did not appear in that episode.
- ConexionesFeatured in Tommy's Story (2007)
Selecciones populares
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