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clab

Joined Jun 2000
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clab's rating
Inspecteur Morse

Inspecteur Morse

8.2
  • Jul 10, 2004
  • Thaw brought greatness to a pretty good cop character

    This is one of the truly great British mystery series. Colin Dexter's novels for me are a bit like Shakespeare's plays - better to see them played out in a dramatic fashion than try to wade through all the details on the pages. Dexter obviously likes words, so naturally his famous detective will be a lover of crosswords and puzzles. A cultured, educated man who none the less loves fast cars (his trademark red Jaguar is as well-known an icon as Magnum's red Ferrari), whisky, women (although he doesn't seem very lucky with them), and of course, a good pint of REAL beer.

    While a bit too old to do something along the lines of Regan in "The Sweeney", Thaw still brought enormous energy and presence to the Morse role.

    His "sidekick", Sgt Lewis, is the perfect counterpart to Morse's sometimes-overly-intellectual approach to policing. In the books, Lewis comes off as rather thick, and at times a bit servile, and Morse seems to treat him accordingly; Kevin Whatley transformed Lewis into more of a sort of "everyman's genius", someone with whom Morse could actually collaborate. "Promised Land", in which the pair travel to Australia, is one of the better ones for seeing how the two relate to each other. The series sometimes amused the real-life police of the Thames Valley, for it raised Oxford's murder rate to ridiculously high levels. Some of the earlier shows moved at the pace of the books... a little sluggish, which when combined with odd camera angles - e.g. through distorting glass objects - sometimes made the viewer feel drowsy. Always a mistake to nod off, though. Morse is usually so overconfident in his suspicions that the real killer goes uncaught, and where Morse goes, murder almost certainly follows.

    My favorite episode? "Masonic Mysteries", a real spine-tingler where a man Morse put away years ago comes back to haunt him, and lands the detective in jail for murder. Ian McDiarmid (Star Wars' Emperor) is simply... spooky.

    A fantastic series. If you have doubts, watch that episode.
    Terreur dans le Shanghaï-Express

    Terreur dans le Shanghaï-Express

    6.5
  • Oct 21, 2001
  • Savalas steals the show in a thoroughly stupid film

    Horror Express is one of the most horrible movies ever made, but for some reason I am always glad to see it appear occasionally on late-night public television. After analyzing the film, which really takes all of about three seconds, I have discovered that that reason is Telly Savalas. While the other big-name actors -- Cushing in particular -- look completely ridiculous trying to play serious parts in a moronic movie, Savalas is the one element that seems to fit, just by doing his thing. Although an attempt on Savalas' part at SOUNDING like a Cossack would have been nice, he certainly does a good job of ACTING like one -- pushing everyone around, calling them peasants, etc. While he may come off as clownish to some viewers, I think his part in this film is a better one than Cushing's or Lee's.

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