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IMDbPro

The Owl Service

  • Mini serie TV
  • 1969–1970
  • 25min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,2/10
268
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
The Owl Service (1969)
DrammaFamigliaFantasiaMistero

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThree teenagers discover a mysterious set of owl and flower-patterned dinner plates in the attic and the magical ancient legend of the "Mabinogion" comes to life once again in their Welsh va... Leggi tuttoThree teenagers discover a mysterious set of owl and flower-patterned dinner plates in the attic and the magical ancient legend of the "Mabinogion" comes to life once again in their Welsh valley.Three teenagers discover a mysterious set of owl and flower-patterned dinner plates in the attic and the magical ancient legend of the "Mabinogion" comes to life once again in their Welsh valley.

  • Star
    • Dorothy Edwards
    • Gillian Hills
    • Michael Holden
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,2/10
    268
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Star
      • Dorothy Edwards
      • Gillian Hills
      • Michael Holden
    • 11Recensioni degli utenti
    • 13Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Episodi8

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    InizioI più votati1 stagione

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    Interpreti principali14

    Modifica
    Dorothy Edwards
    Dorothy Edwards
    • Nancy
    • 1969–1970
    Gillian Hills
    Gillian Hills
    • Alison Bradley
    • 1969–1970
    Michael Holden
    • Gwyn
    • 1969–1970
    Francis Wallis
    • Roger Bradley
    • 1969–1970
    Raymond Llewellyn
    • Huw
    • 1969–1970
    Edwin Richfield
    Edwin Richfield
    • Clive Bradley
    • 1969–1970
    Oswald Griffith
    • Villager
    • 1970
    W.H. Roberts
    • Villager
    • 1970
    W. Glyn Owen
    • Villager
    • 1970
    Sarah Vaughan
    • Villager
    • 1970
    Gwenfron Jones
    • Child
    • 1970
    Phillip Roberts
    • Child
    • 1970
    Edwart Hedd Pu
    • Child
    • 1970
    Alan Garner
    • Man in Phonebox
    • 1970
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti11

    7,2268
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    lazarillo

    Very off-beat and interesting; not like anything you've ever seen before

    I think I'm one of maybe two Americans who have seen this (the other being Steve Puchalski of "Shock Cinema" magazine on whose recommendation I recently bought this DVD, sight unseen, from Amazon UK). This short-lived but fondly remembered British TV series is a very offbeat, supernatural mystery set in the Welsh countryside revolving around a set of dinner plates (that's right--dinner plates) that a step-brother and sister and their housekeeper's son find in the attic of a country cottage. It's a low-budget and (especially by today's standards) low-key affair, but it is nevertheless effective and interesting, at times even unsettling.

    You could compare it to the offbeat, unsettling American TV series "Twin Peaks",I guess, but it really has indelible elements of 60's era BBC programming and high-quality children's literature (it was based on a children's book). I personally enjoy all of these things, and being one quarter Welsh, I find Welsh mythology very interesting (although I have to say the Welsh countryside is actually one of the most boring places I've ever visited).

    Due to it's roots in children's literature and television, this is obviously not chock-full of sex or violence. But what the mild violence it contains is eerily unsettling, and there is kind of a teen love triangle that is rather perverse in that two of it's members are step-brother and step-sister. Moreover, the step-sister is played by Gillian Hills, a gorgeous 60's-era, Swinging London dolly-bird who is most famous for a pair of three-way sex scenes in two classic movies of that era (with David Hemmings and Jane Birkin in "Blow Up" and with Malcolm McDowell and some other actress in "A Clockwork Orange"). She almost can't help, but bring SOME sex appeal to the proceedings. Still, by modern-day standards this is very tame and rather slow. But I liked it simply because it was offbeat and interesting, and not really like ANYTHING I'd ever seen before.
    8johnbirch-2

    Complex, remarkable story - but astonishing that this was considered children's/family viewing in the 1970s

    An 8-part TV series that includes a supernatural theme based on folklore, murder, (hinted, off-screen) sex, and demonic possession.

    So perfect Sunday teatime viewing for all the family in 1970, with the first episodes being shown just before Christmas 1969.

    No need to go into the story too much. It is retelling/updating/"inspired by" story based on a tale from the Mabinogion by acclaimed children's author Alan Garner, who was heavily involved in this TV version of his novel (and as a result it is a very faithful version). It features three young people (probably meant to be aged around 15-16) in an emotional triangle (to call it a love triangle would be misleading), living in a Welsh manor house in a valley cut off from the outside world (no electricity, phone, etc. - which was entirely plausible for the late 60s/early 70s).

    The discovery of a strange dinner service results takes over the young girl - Alison - (played very well by an actress some 10 years older than the part she is playing) who is compelled to trace the pattern on the plates and make paper owls. And so the story begins.

    After this it gets quite complex - to the extent that the summary of the previous episode that starts episodes 2-8 is absolutely required viewing, even if you are binging the entire series (its available on YouTube) because you will have missed something!

    The three young actors (though they are significantly older than the parts they play) do a great job holding together a tale that basically only has six parts in it (the others being the father of two of the children, a live-in housekeeper and mother of the third, and a strange and apparently a little mad handyman/gardener.

    Spread over 8 25-minute episodes the story will seem a little slow to modern viewers, with not a great deal of action (you can literally count the number of spots of blood that are shown), but what is hinted at and what probably happens off camera is another matter entirely.

    Perhaps this is where the family viewing comes in because adult viewers will likely get the hints that children will miss, such as - to take one fairly mild example - why is Alison "ill" and in bed at the start, in her red nightdress, despite actually appearing quite perky? Not that hard for an adult to guess.

    Each episode pushes the story forward with the last one being quite strong stuff, with what is essentially a form of demonic possession centre screen. A suspect a few viewers choked on the Sunday tea when this was shown.

    But it is not just the story that would raise eyebrows - and actually make this unfilmable today (for children anyway) - it is also the style of filming. There may be little blood, but the camera loves Alison's legs in their 1960s short skirts to an extent that would be very worrying if you did not know that the actress was 25.

    Overall this is a dark, complex, difficult but brilliant drama that uses folklore and the supernatural in a way that would be utterly impossible for the target audience today.
    9pgmtheatre

    A classic Childrens TV serial

    It's sad and disappointing that some reviews fail utterly to appreciate that this serial was an absolute classic of its time. It was bold in its conception, using real locations instead of studio-based sets which was unusual for its time. Its many years now since I first saw it but I remember it vividly as a very disturbing piece of story-telling thanks to the wonderful writing of the great Alan Garner and the brilliant direction of Peter Plummer.
    PamerEldritch

    Ancient Celtic Myth updated.

    This is not actually a movie but a TV series adapted from an award winning novel. Although Garner's work was marketed as children's fiction at his best he is multi-layered and this is one of his best. Alison is on holiday with her newly re-married mother, stepfather and stepbrother at a house in a remote Welsh valley. She begins a relationship with Gwyn, the son of the housekeeper, much to the disgust of her mother but soon parental disapproval is the least of their worries when Gwyn finds an owl-patterned dinner service - the Owl Service of the title - hidden away in the loft and releases an ancient magic into the valley. The past is re-enacted in the present, the tragedy of what has happened over and over in the valley is relived with a modern slant. A brief description like this can't do justice to the creeping tension of the story where even the tiniest, seemingly innocuous, event resonates with unfolding significance. I have the series on video,taped on its last TV outing in 1985 so now twenty years old, and it's not going to last for ever.

    Since I wrote this post originally in 2005, and after some lobbying of Granada and Network DVD, the series has now been released. If you've never seen it before buy it, you won't be disappointed. If you have seen it before no doubt you will have already bought it as I have.
    10gawayne7

    TV as it should be

    This is one of the best TV shows ever produced, in the same vein as the "Prisoner". It has an edge that is missing from drama nowadays. The 60's and 70's were a unique time for culture- film, drama and music and this is no exception. Imaginative and eerie at the same time, with solid performances from all the cast- it is well worth buying the DVD. which includes a booklet that gives some insights into the making of the series and the Welsh legend which was the inspiration. A classic and a rare masterpiece of TV.

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      As the first fully scripted colour production by Granada Television, the series takes full advantage of the color red, not only in the form of Gillian Hills's stunning red hair, but her wardrobe is almost entirely made up of red miniskirts, bikinis, hats and raincoats.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in The Worlds of Fantasy: The Child Within (2008)
    • Colonne sonore
      Ton Alarch
      Performed by Jean Bell

      [closing music for each episode]

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    • How many seasons does The Owl Service have?Powered by Alexa

    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 21 dicembre 1969 (Regno Unito)
    • Paese di origine
      • Regno Unito
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Dinas Mawddwy, Gwynedd, Galles, Regno Unito
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Granada Television
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 25min
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.33 : 1

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