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IMDbPro

Cold Lazarus

  • TV Mini Series
  • 1996
  • 5h
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
808
YOUR RATING
Albert Finney in Cold Lazarus (1996)
Dystopian Sci-FiDramaSci-FiThriller

Writer Daniel Feeld, first seen in Dennis Potter's "Karaoke," returns three centuries later as a disembodied head.Writer Daniel Feeld, first seen in Dennis Potter's "Karaoke," returns three centuries later as a disembodied head.Writer Daniel Feeld, first seen in Dennis Potter's "Karaoke," returns three centuries later as a disembodied head.

  • Stars
    • Albert Finney
    • Ciarán Hinds
    • Frances de la Tour
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    808
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Albert Finney
      • Ciarán Hinds
      • Frances de la Tour
    • 11User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 nominations total

    Episodes4

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    TopTop-rated1 season1996

    Photos7

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    Top cast75

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    Albert Finney
    Albert Finney
    • Daniel Feeld
    • 1996
    Ciarán Hinds
    Ciarán Hinds
    • Fyodor
    • 1996
    Frances de la Tour
    Frances de la Tour
    • Emma Porlock
    • 1996
    Grant Masters
    Grant Masters
    • Tony Watson
    • 1996
    Ganiat Kasumu
    • Luanda
    • 1996
    Carmen Ejogo
    Carmen Ejogo
    • Blinda
    • 1996
    Henry Goodman
    Henry Goodman
    • David Siltz
    • 1996
    Saffron Burrows
    Saffron Burrows
    • Sandra Sollars
    • 1996
    Diane Ladd
    Diane Ladd
    • Martina Masdon
    • 1996
    Joe Roberts
    • Chris…
    • 1996
    Tara Woodward
    • Beth
    • 1996
    Rob Brydon
    Rob Brydon
    • Karl
    • 1996
    Anna Chancellor
    Anna Chancellor
    • Anna Griffiths
    • 1996
    Claudia Malkovich
    • Kaya
    • 1996
    David Foxxe
    • Andrew Milton
    • 1996
    James Peck
    • Fyodor's Apartment Guard
    • 1996
    John Light
    John Light
    • Student Daniel
    • 1996
    Terence Maynard
    Terence Maynard
    • 1st MSC Guard
    • 1996
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    7.5808
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    Featured reviews

    2thenewamericanarmy

    Karaoke (good) but Cold Lazarus (bad)

    karaoke was really good, i liked the story and how it developed...kept me watching. cold lazarus was awful, i could not follow the story because the production and acting was horrible...the British really suck at doing science fiction..it was like the 70s version of doctor who...but i am writing this after only watching the first episode. i am fast forwarding now to get to albert finney's role in this ugly thing, maybe he can save it...but i doubt it. I don't understand how there could be such a disconnect between the karaoke and cold lazarus productions. i can't imagine the writer could have had such different visions of the two, so how did the people involved with actually bringing the written story to TV, misinterpret the writing
    jim-600

    An amazing accomplishment by Dennis Potter.

    I consider Dennis Potter's "The Singing Detective" the best thing ever to appear on TV. "Karaoke-Cold Lazarus" are contenders for second place. It is vital to see Karaoke first because Dennis Potter wrote them as a part of a whole.

    Potter racing against the clock to finish Lazarus before he died. They are funny, weird, mysterious and profound -- a rare combination for any medium. It helps to know a bit of Potter's bio to fully appreciate the depth of this accomplishment.

    My favorite moment came when slimy TV producer Siltz exults in the opportunity to own a writer's mind (literally) in order to exploit it. I can imagine the smile on Potter's face when he first conceived that scene, seeing it as a metaphor for his showbiz struggles with the Siltzes of the world.

    Anyone who appreciates great writing will love this. Dennis Potter wrote a brilliant script about his own death. I doubt anyone will top his feat for a long time.
    8Lejink

    Erasing the Dead

    I remember first watching this series back in 1996 and immediately being struck by the originality of Dennis Potter's idea about raiding a person's memory and using it as the ultimate form of television entertainment. Now, rewatching it 25 years later, I can't help but think that if Mr Potter were only alive today to see today's ever-growing fascination with reality TV, he could justifiably say "I told you so".

    It can't be stressed enough that viewers to this four-part series really must watch its predecessor "Karaoke", set in the present-day and establishing the central character of Albert Finney's troubled Daniel Feeld, a writer suffering with health problems. As he approaches his end, we learn that he has devoted a large portion of his personal fortune to a medical organisation specialising in cryogenics. At the time, that minor detail just seemed like an oddity, but it becomes in this series the fulcrum of the succeeding story as we see his disembodied head still functioning neurologically in a cryolab sone 400 years later. A small team of scientists led by Frances De La Tour's Professor Purlock and prominently including a rebellious Slav doctor played by Ciaran Hinds have found the means to unlock and indeed visualise Feeld's old memories but given that the work is funded by a harridan megalomaniac Martina Masdon, played by Diane Ladd, who watches every penny spent by the lab, at least when she's not indulging her sexual needs with dimwitted scantily-dressed young hunks, the question arises as to whether she will continue to bankroll their expensive research.

    Also interested in Feeld's memories is sleazy American media-baron, the appropriately-named David Siltz, played with grubby elan by Tony Goodman, who sees the commercial possibilities in packaging Feeld's subconscious recollections into TV entertainment and will stop at nothing to get his way. So we see him schmooze Masdon, bribe Purlock with the promise of unlimited funding and personal gain for her and her team, use his influence with the head of police and even torture one of Purlock's team to procure an "inside man", all in the name of TV ratings.

    It becomes clear that Feeld's memories reveal a deeply disturbed childhood involving a lurid episode of child abuse. We then get glimpses of happier episodes in the growing Feeld's life including a romantic episode with a pretty young Welsh girl while at college, but most of the memories take us back to key moments in the "Karaoke" series which serve to both signpost and inform this later narrative. This is all played out to a background of (sorry, couldn't help using the word) a dystopian world where a protest group called Reality or Nothing is using guerrilla tactics to try to roll back the creep of computerisation overtaking humanity.

    Potter perhaps uses a big hammer at times to chip away at his chosen targets like medical ethics, the dehumanisation of daily life and of course exploitation TV but the central story of the battle for Daniel Feeld's soul drives the work and makes for a compelling sci-fi thriller. Considering the obvious budget restrictions of British TV, I think the future-age production is well realised. I liked the way that Feeld's memories are shown as being almost dream-like and there were nice predictors of the future too in terms of communication, food-production and transport devices, where it looks to me like Potter anticipated satellite navigation for one thing.

    I did perhaps feel that the characterisation of such obvious monsters as Masdon and Siltz fell too often into caricaturisation but came away from my combined eight-hours of viewing the life and afterlife of Daniel Feeld over these two well-directed and well-acted series with a still higher appreciation of the talent of Dennis Potter and a kind of satisfaction that unlike say, Dickens or F Scott Fitzgerald, he managed to complete his final work before his death.
    10sonofhades

    An excellent Sci-fi story of a future to come

    This story is a very good story in itself and if you've seen the story (behind Lazarus) you will get even more out of the serie. I enjoyed this "realistic" sci-fi stuff more than most of the hollywood style bang-boom-big explosion kind of action sci-fi.

    But I must warn you, if you hate each and every drama movie, go watch something else. All other people should watch this one.
    McGonigle

    No biography!

    This miniseries is a fitting capstone to a brilliant and unique career. In Karaoke, Dennis Potter gave us a heartbreakingly personal look at the end of Daniel Feeld's life; A writer of surreal musical miniseries for TV feels like he is losing control over his written work, both literally (as his words break free and get spoken by real people surrounding him) and metaphorically, as the director of his latest screenplay tries to refashion it in his own image.

    In Cold Lazarus, the situation is somewhat reversed. The setting and basic storyline are, by comparison to Karaoke, quite impersonal. The sci-fi "dystopia" is well done and entertainingly campy, with some real strokes of brilliance (the "Reality or Nothing" terrorists who fight the media's dominance), but it's hardly as personal or unique as a typical Potter drama's set-up.

    But ironically, the struggle that Daniel Feeld (now only a head, frozen for four hundred years) faces in Cold Lazarus is far more personal, as he literally loses control of his own life and is forced to re-live his own painful memories, without the ability to edit them or filter them through his own creative processes.

    The metaphor is set up for us by Feeld's dying words, which we hear in the first segment: "No biography". While Dennis Potter always drew from his own life to a large degree in his writing, he apparently did not relish the idea of other writers attempting to pick through his real life.

    Fortunately for us, though, he was (as always) not nearly as reticent about interpreting or re-casting his own life for us. As a contrast to the sci-fi sequences, he presents us with our final glimpse of childhood in his beloved Forest of Dean, in a series of flashbacks that may even as personal as any of the similar scenes in The Singing Detective.

    The first time I saw Cold Lazarus, it didn't really grab me, but since seeing it a second time, its story and ideas have stuck in my brain to a huge degree. As I say, it is truly a fitting "final opus" for one of the most distinctive and creative writers of the 20th century; hopefully one day soon, this work (and many more of Potter's creations) will be available on DVD.

    More like this

    Karaoke
    7.9
    Karaoke
    The Singing Detective
    8.5
    The Singing Detective
    Blackeyes
    6.9
    Blackeyes
    Lipstick on Your Collar
    8.1
    Lipstick on Your Collar
    Pennies from Heaven
    8.3
    Pennies from Heaven
    Follow the Yellow Brick Road
    7.8
    Follow the Yellow Brick Road
    Brimstone and Treacle
    7.5
    Brimstone and Treacle
    Nostromo
    6.6
    Nostromo
    Christabel
    6.3
    Christabel
    Abandoned
    7.7
    Abandoned
    The Green Man
    7.0
    The Green Man
    The Last Train
    7.1
    The Last Train

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the interview "Seeing the Blossom", Dennis Potter comments that he wrote "Cold Lazarus" and its prequel "Karaoke" based on the simple writer's premise: "If you wanted to make the world a better place, who would you kill?"
    • Goofs
      When Dr. Glazunov destroys Daniel Feeld's frozen head at the end, the wall screen still displays his voyage through the tunnel of light to heaven, despite not being plugged into anything any more.
    • Quotes

      David Siltz: Harry, do you have to be so fucking vulgar all the time?

    • Connections
      Edited from Karaoke (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      PENNIES FROM HEAVEN
      Written by Johnny Burke and Arthur Johnston

      Sung by Bing Crosby

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 26, 1996 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Холодный Лазарь
    • Filming locations
      • Gloucestershire, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • Channel 4 Television Corporation
      • Whistling Gypsy Production
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      5 hours
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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