ब्रिटेन को जीवित और अच्छी तरह से रखने के लिए जूझ रहे एनएचएस डॉक्टरों और नर्सों के कठिन और समर्पित काम के बाद ब्रिटिश टेलीविजन श्रृंखला.ब्रिटेन को जीवित और अच्छी तरह से रखने के लिए जूझ रहे एनएचएस डॉक्टरों और नर्सों के कठिन और समर्पित काम के बाद ब्रिटिश टेलीविजन श्रृंखला.ब्रिटेन को जीवित और अच्छी तरह से रखने के लिए जूझ रहे एनएचएस डॉक्टरों और नर्सों के कठिन और समर्पित काम के बाद ब्रिटिश टेलीविजन श्रृंखला.
- 1 BAFTA अवार्ड के लिए नामांकित
- 1 जीत और कुल 1 नामांकन
एपिसोड ब्राउज़ करें
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
I had binged through the first few seasons (on Amazon Prime) of the episodes made at King's and rated it an emphatic ten. The production was pitch-perfect: Continuity, the cases they picked, the engaging focus on nurses, doctors and staff. Waiting room conversations, patients and relatives. Wuth perfect timing, it was just right, amazing camerawork (with one excellent must-see behind the scenes episode).
A few days ago I caught an episode of what appeared to be a different show, 24 hours in Emergency, on free to air. At a different hospital, King George. And slowly realized with great disappointment that most of the things that I loved had dropped away. Summarized in one term: production values. Gone was the focus on the doctors, nurses and emergency teams at work, replaced with long and interminable patient and relative interviews, ruined by bad editing.
Editing which was suddenly like a bad music video, a mashup of disconnected shots every few minutes. Always a sign of desperation at knowing the quality is sliding. And an across-the-board mess-up of just about every aspect if the early eps. But so uniform that it gets hard to find a clear reason. It just went bad.
I hate that this has happened to a brilliant series, and I would still exhort people to watch it.
And stop when they switch hospitals - or a bit before, because I think the slide started before the switch. Maybe budget, maybe production team changes.
A damned shame.
A few days ago I caught an episode of what appeared to be a different show, 24 hours in Emergency, on free to air. At a different hospital, King George. And slowly realized with great disappointment that most of the things that I loved had dropped away. Summarized in one term: production values. Gone was the focus on the doctors, nurses and emergency teams at work, replaced with long and interminable patient and relative interviews, ruined by bad editing.
Editing which was suddenly like a bad music video, a mashup of disconnected shots every few minutes. Always a sign of desperation at knowing the quality is sliding. And an across-the-board mess-up of just about every aspect if the early eps. But so uniform that it gets hard to find a clear reason. It just went bad.
I hate that this has happened to a brilliant series, and I would still exhort people to watch it.
And stop when they switch hospitals - or a bit before, because I think the slide started before the switch. Maybe budget, maybe production team changes.
A damned shame.
I, honestly, was shocked to see A & E workers laughing on TV about their patients' problems. . We NEVER ever even talked about parecentesis, amputation, cancer, catastrophic problems outside of closed doors. I cannot get over it. The giggling on camera is what offended me the most. These patients need help. I totally understand gallows humor behind the scenes, because I was there, but on television? You people know better. The doctors appear respectful and able. Anyone else on this show does not. I hope I never end up in a U K hospital with you clowns in charge. I feel sick. I am really sad. I never thought that you doctors were leaving a bunch of passive aggressive twits in charge.
I've never given a 10 for anything I've watched. They could do a live broadcast of the rapture and I'd probably still not give it a 10. This show however I might give a 10 if it wasn't so impossible to watch in the US. Here, the idiots who own this production, make it as difficult to impossible as can be to watch it. Nine seasons (out of 26) you can watch on prime, and 6 more on tubi but that's it as far as I can tell. The first nine seasons were pretty easy to watch because you could start, stop and come back to where you left off but with tubi, if you don't watch continuously you'll lose your spot (otherwise know as 'continue watching'). Yep, it's gone, there's no history and so if you don't write down or remember where you left off, well you just have to start over. And there's ten seasons you can't watch at all after that. I would pay to watch these if it wasn't a big needle in the eye, but no, but far as I can tell, they don't care to make this watchable in the states. I guess it's an NHS thing or something. Ok, I'll go back to watch reruns of breaking bad instead.
Ok, so except for being unwatchable, the episodes that are, are pretty interesting. Of course it's tv, and specifically reality tv and so there's a lot of editing, and healthcare in the UK isn't the industry it is in the US. And, I've never met people like profiled on the show. If that's real life in england, I want to visit because everything about the show is moving, as much as any art you've ever seen in the way it captures the best. I don't believe it but I'd like to find out for myself.
Ok, so except for being unwatchable, the episodes that are, are pretty interesting. Of course it's tv, and specifically reality tv and so there's a lot of editing, and healthcare in the UK isn't the industry it is in the US. And, I've never met people like profiled on the show. If that's real life in england, I want to visit because everything about the show is moving, as much as any art you've ever seen in the way it captures the best. I don't believe it but I'd like to find out for myself.
I just found this series and started binge watching it. I found seasons 1-6 particularly good. The doctors, introducing themselves to the patients by first name -- definitely not a practice in the U. S. The bedside manner of all the staff was just a treat to watch, so caring & friendly. I was also quite interested in how they mixed in the loved ones talking about their the injured person and how important family was to them. Really very well done. (though why they don't get the patients more pain killers when they perform a procedure is a mystery to me.) When they moved to another hospital in seasons 7+ the staff was quite different. Not as friendly, caring, not really bantering with the patient and the staff. And I do miss the staff at King's, who you get to know well.
I was super hooked on this show right up until season 9. And then I have to agree with some other reviews, after season 9 they screwed the show up. The doctors they chose weren't nearly as friendly or likeable, the the doctor dialog was almost non existent. Sadly the show lost its flavor. Up until season 9 the doctors were funny and enjoyable to watch. They seemed to generally care about the patients. Nothing like our care in the USA, doctors even introduce themselves by first name. I absolutely loved watching the show, but after season 9 when I had the show on it merely became background noise as it couldn't hold my attention at all. So I would strongly recommend season's 1 thru 8. I mean go ahead and try the rest of the seasons, they just did nothing for me.
क्या आपको पता है
- भाव
Nurse: It's a typical story of the NHS, really, you need 3 deaths to save a Life...
- कनेक्शनFeatured in Gogglebox: एपिसोड #5.3 (2015)
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रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How many seasons does 24 Hours in A&E have?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
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