Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaTrouble ensues for the Majestics, Scotland's "Kings of Rock", when a good-looking redhead joins the band on tour.Trouble ensues for the Majestics, Scotland's "Kings of Rock", when a good-looking redhead joins the band on tour.Trouble ensues for the Majestics, Scotland's "Kings of Rock", when a good-looking redhead joins the band on tour.
- Ha vinto 6 BAFTA Award
- 6 vittorie e 8 candidature totali
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John Byrne wrote a Scottish version of a Greek tragedy, structured very much like a play. The main characters are a group of ageing local rockstars who epitomise the US rock and roll explosion of the 1960s that ingrained itself working class British lives.
One of the central figures is Vincent Diver, a destructive, hedonistic rocker exploiting the lifestyle for the pleasures it brings. He has a tragic arc that goes from one disaster to the next. He is written and portrayed in a number of scenes that are pretty dark, but with a humorous edge due to Byrne's witty dialogue and Maurice Roëves committed performance.
Danny McGlone is the new band member, returning from a failed art career in America for his brother's funeral. He meets up with former college acquaintance Suzi Kettles and the two have a compelling romantic arc. Robbie Coltrane and Emma Thompson embody the characters and have epic screen chemistry.
Another strong double act is Richard Wilson and Katy Murphy, who are consistently funny as Eddie and Miss Toner, with great banter in numerous situations.
Other band members and supporting characters contribute well, such as Bomba, Fud and the two ladies in Vincent's life. Another noteworthy role for me is the play's chorus which comes in the form of roadie Dennis.
There are plenty of interesting themes on show such as the toxic masculinity of the Scottish hard case stereotype present in several characters. This goes hand in hand with the progressive attitude towards gender roles, as the treatment and objectification of "dolls" and "burds" is generally lampooned and contrasted well by some quite strong female characters.
The impact of American culture is shown by characters who identify far more with US pop music, movie stars and bohemian New York lifestyle than the drab everyday existence of working class Glasgow.
My favourite episode is the 4th "Don't You Rock Me Daddy-O", which flows beautifully towards a dark, but hilarious conclusion. Closely followed by the 5th "Love Hurts", that has some of the show's toughest moments.
It is not perfect, as I think there is a pretty slow build up in the first three episodes to the main events. Byrne was obviously given the freedom to write it his own way, so we have lots of long scenes of dialogue with characters he clearly loves. These are all well written scenes, but some feel slightly overlong if you are not fascinated by the characters and entertained by everything they say. All scenes involving McGlone and Kettles are top drawer though for me.
The production values have aged, but if you consider what was norm for the BBC in 1987, they cinematography and editing is pretty strong. I love the art direction for most scenes, particularly how certain environments are designed to reflect the characters.
For me it is 8.5/10, but I round upwards.
(I have also reviewed each episode individually on this site)
One of the central figures is Vincent Diver, a destructive, hedonistic rocker exploiting the lifestyle for the pleasures it brings. He has a tragic arc that goes from one disaster to the next. He is written and portrayed in a number of scenes that are pretty dark, but with a humorous edge due to Byrne's witty dialogue and Maurice Roëves committed performance.
Danny McGlone is the new band member, returning from a failed art career in America for his brother's funeral. He meets up with former college acquaintance Suzi Kettles and the two have a compelling romantic arc. Robbie Coltrane and Emma Thompson embody the characters and have epic screen chemistry.
Another strong double act is Richard Wilson and Katy Murphy, who are consistently funny as Eddie and Miss Toner, with great banter in numerous situations.
Other band members and supporting characters contribute well, such as Bomba, Fud and the two ladies in Vincent's life. Another noteworthy role for me is the play's chorus which comes in the form of roadie Dennis.
There are plenty of interesting themes on show such as the toxic masculinity of the Scottish hard case stereotype present in several characters. This goes hand in hand with the progressive attitude towards gender roles, as the treatment and objectification of "dolls" and "burds" is generally lampooned and contrasted well by some quite strong female characters.
The impact of American culture is shown by characters who identify far more with US pop music, movie stars and bohemian New York lifestyle than the drab everyday existence of working class Glasgow.
My favourite episode is the 4th "Don't You Rock Me Daddy-O", which flows beautifully towards a dark, but hilarious conclusion. Closely followed by the 5th "Love Hurts", that has some of the show's toughest moments.
It is not perfect, as I think there is a pretty slow build up in the first three episodes to the main events. Byrne was obviously given the freedom to write it his own way, so we have lots of long scenes of dialogue with characters he clearly loves. These are all well written scenes, but some feel slightly overlong if you are not fascinated by the characters and entertained by everything they say. All scenes involving McGlone and Kettles are top drawer though for me.
The production values have aged, but if you consider what was norm for the BBC in 1987, they cinematography and editing is pretty strong. I love the art direction for most scenes, particularly how certain environments are designed to reflect the characters.
For me it is 8.5/10, but I round upwards.
(I have also reviewed each episode individually on this site)
Been looking for this for ages and finally managed to track it down. Why do the BBC think it's fine to repeat the same old crap over & over again, but sit on gems like this which never make it to UK Gold or Dave? I originally thought they must have deleted it or something, but looking on Google it seems the original cast aren't keen on a re-run for some reason. Look on ebay, there's a guy selling the whole 6 episodes on DVD, can't wait to receive mine, hope it's not a poorly recorded pirate copy. Even if it is it will still be worth the £7.50 just to relive some classic Scottish comedy, the genius stuff the BBC used to be good at knocking out.
Been a while (35years I think), and back on the BBC as a tribute to Robbie Coltrane, but it's not lost any of it charm. Every single actor from the main characters down to bit parts buying clothes in the managers shop plays a blinder. They really don't make them like this any more. It's a slow burning, takes it time kind of drama. It has shots that mean nothing to the narrative but look good and raise a smile. I think I only saw it once but I seem to remember loads of lines. In a way I like the fact that John Byrne hardly wrote anything else and it has hardly ever been seen by anyone I know. It made me fall in love with Emma Thompson and Robbie Coltrane, after this they could do no wrong. There's even a cool bit in the Glasgow School of Art.
A classic.
A classic.
This has to one of the best programmes to come out of Scotland if not the UK from the BBC. The acting and the script are just wonderful and combines great (Scottish/Glasgow) humours and rock'n'roll, can't get much better! The script was adapted for stage in late 2006 and had a run of shows in Aberdeen and Edinburgh. Managed to get to the Edinburgh show and it was just a good as the TV show! The cast played and sang and were very good, OK you can't compete with Coltrane/Thompson but they come close. They are coming to Glasgow in April 2006 so get there if you can!! The reason the show has never been repeated or issued as a video/DVD is to do with the licensing of the music used in the show. I believe they are trying to sort this out so maybe we'll get the chance to buy a DVD version soon.
Some DVD copies surface on ebay occasionally but the quality isn't that great...
Cheers, Al
Some DVD copies surface on ebay occasionally but the quality isn't that great...
Cheers, Al
Looking back this had a dream cast - Robbie Coltrane, Emma Thompson, Richard Wilson. And they were perfect in it. Even the supporting cast, particularly Maurice Roeves and Katy Murphy were fantastic. It was bright and funny, well written, well acted and the music was pretty good.
So of course it's been repeated (once?) and not available on DVD.
I remember loving this when it was first shown... and missing the last episode. And then it was repeated a couple of years later... and I missed the last episode. That it's not out on DVD yet is nothing short of criminal. Please... I'd like to see for myself just how it ends.
So of course it's been repeated (once?) and not available on DVD.
I remember loving this when it was first shown... and missing the last episode. And then it was repeated a couple of years later... and I missed the last episode. That it's not out on DVD yet is nothing short of criminal. Please... I'd like to see for myself just how it ends.
Lo sapevi?
- Quiz"Big Jazza" McGlone was played by Robbie Coltrane, but voiced by Scottish blues singer Tam White. This is only where Coltrane is portrayed playing his deceased brother in flashback. When Coltrane appears as main character Danny McGlone, he does his own singing.
- Citazioni
Fud O'Donnell: Black and Decker, Black and Decker, Black and Decker
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Glasgow School of Art, Mackintosh Building, Renfrew Street, Glasgow, Scozia, Regno Unito(Suzi and Danny's old school, revisited at several points)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
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