Archive | Television RSS feed for this section

Keeping it Realist: Shane Meadows’ This is England ’86 is the Best Kind of Gritty

23 Sep

My last couple of posts (on Ping and The American) were rather harsh, so this time instead I am going to write about something that I have fallen in love with – Shane Meadow’s 4-part drama This is England ’86 broadcast on Channel 4 in the UK. This series, which follows a group of friends making the difficult transition from adolescence to adulthood in Thatcherite Britain, is a continuation of the characters first introduced in Meadow’s breakthrough 2006 film This is England. Using the same actors playing the same characters, the series picks up 3 years after the film ended. Whereas in the film the gang of friends were proud skinheads, they have grown up a bit and are less fully devoted to the subculture that defined their youth. Despite these superficial changes, they maintain their fun-loving, strength through adversity attitudes. Furthermore, while the film tended to focus on racial issues (specifically the division between the original style skinheads and racist skinheads), the series really branches out and looks into a range social issues of the mid-1980s.

Only three-quarters of the way through the series Meadows has already explored issues as varied as marriage, love, death, poverty, loss, rape, unemployment, infidelity, domestic violence and child molestation. Yet, the fact that characters deal with these issues simultaneously is believable – not only possible, but fully plausible. The lives of the characters in This is England/This is England ’86 are not full of sunshine and tulips – they are anything but. Their prospects are bleak, their pasts are dark and like the generations that came before them they are searching for ways to cope. Sometimes they do the wrong thing, but surprisingly frequently they try to do the right one. Refreshingly, unlike so much of so-called realist television and film this coping (at least at this point) hasn’t involved drug addiction (because not every single person with a difficult life becomes a drug addict). Most of the time they are able to find solace in each other – in football games, impromptu parties, watching television at the pub – and when they can’t they have the good sense to realize they need to find it in themselves.

This is not pretty television. It isn’t Degrassi or Coronation Street. The problems that these characters face will not be wrapped up by the end of the series. They may never be wrapped up. This is a snapshot more than a narrative – like all things there is a beginning, but there isn’t a clear-cut middle or end. This is real life – loose ends, abrupt changes, driftings apart and coalescences. These characters don’t ask for your sympathy not because they are afraid of vulnerability but because they don’t want it. They are not victims of their circumstances but humans with agency and autonomy. They do not define themselves by the craziness that surrounds them but by their response to it.

What I particularly love about This is England ’86 is that it has been able to really explore the whole core gang of friends, rather than follow a single character, as the film did with Shaun. In fact, as we find out at the beginning of the first installment, Shaun hasn’t been part of the group since the end of the film and it is only as the series develops does he rejoin the fold. But, just as in real life, the fit is never quite as it had been before. Where the film constructs Shaun as a character worthy of sympathy above and beyond the others, the series knocks Shaun right off that pedestal by revealing that his life is really no worse, nor any better, than those of the rest of the gang. Everyone is in the same leaky boat, and they all need to work equally hard to keep it afloat.

I know that Meadows has been attacked by some film critics and individuals who see themselves as cultural connoisseurs for following up his critically acclaimed film on television screens. They imply that he is lowering himself (because in their world television is film’s cheap and broken younger sibling) and polluting the form among other things, though their thinly veiled core complaint is that he is making excellent film material which is accessible to the masses. There is a certain irony in their criticism, and this is part of the reason why I am so supportive of Meadows decision to follow up with Channel 4.

This is England is a film about the populous, the working class. It is a film about those people for whom going to the cinema (even without getting popcorn) is a treat not a routine. It is about the type of people who in the 1980s would have been watching the excellent films being made by and aired on Channel 4 – films like My Beautiful Laundrette (Stephen Frears, 1985) and Distant Voices Still Lives (Terence Davies, 1988) which have gone on to become cult classics the world over. In a way, the only logical next step for Meadows was to bring This is England to television, to where its characters would have lived and to where those who identify with them still do. Though I like a good piece of cinema as much as the next former film student, I like a good story more and this is what Meadows is working with here – a story too good not to be told to everyone. I only hope that more filmmakers will follow his footsteps and reinvigorate the substance of filmmaking over coming years, even if it might mean a few minor sacrifices in form.

That I highly recommend watching this series is likely quite obvious by now, but I would also recommend that you watch the film before the series as it really does give you the overview of who everyone is and how they relate to one another (it is also a fantastic film in its own right). Great job Shane Meadows, cast, crew and Channel 4. I can’t wait to see what you have in store for the finale next week.

Film Trailer:

This is England ’86 Promo:

Why Brits do it better… (comedy that is)

23 Jul

I’ve noticed that my last few blog entries have tended to err on the heavy side. I promised my readers diversity and I fully intend to fulfill that promise. So now I present to you:

Why Brits do it (television comedy) better!

Having grown up along ‘the border’ I’ve had the opportunity to sample the televisual delights from countries as diverse as the United States, Canada, Ireland and the United Kingdom. Now I reckon I know what you’re muttering under your breath – all 4 of those countries are English-speaking highly developed nations who share a hyper-commercialized culture. You’re right, but here I’m talking about comic diversity.

This comic diversity is most visible in stand-up comedy. But these same types of humour are what greatly influence the production of television comedy programs.

The Irish are the kings of self-deprecation. From the accent to the way Irish men dance in clubs, Irish comedians love to take the mickey out of themselves and their country men. Some comedians, such as Patrick Kielty even go as far as to use the IRA as a point of humour. They also share with the Scots a penchant for dark humour where death can easily be as funny, if not funnier, than life.

The Brits (English/Welsh/Scottish) are a bit of a mixed bag. The English have their famous dry wit and a unique way of making the dirtiest jokes sound clean. The Scottish have an amazing combination of subtlety, black humour and the ability to mock their neighbours to the south and get away with it. The Welsh tend to absorb all the comedy types around them and fuse it into something unique, if often undecipherable.

Canadians also like to think they are good at self-deprecation, but they tend to be better at this when the individual comic lives multiple identities (ie. Deborah DiGiovanni being a woman, Italian and Canadian or Russel Peters being brown and Canadian). Canadian comedy tends to be fairly physical and enjoys occupying a middle ground between British and American humour. All in all it’s quite funny, even if you wonder whether the humour is intentional or a by-product of the “We’re different! We aren’t American! Pay attention to us!” complex Canadian comedy, tv and film has tended to suffer from over the past 30 years.

American comedy tends to be slapstick or rude and sometimes both. Self-deprecation is common, but that doesn’t mean it is done well, such as the ‘red neck’ comedy phenomenon. Can anyone really laugh comfortably at one of these kinds of jokes, let alone heckle, knowing that the comic might be carrying a concealed hunting rifle? Years and years of American television, movies and stand-up comics and by-and-large I still don’t find Americans funny.

Of all of these types of comedy, one stands head and shoulders above the rest in terms of television adaptability. British television comedy, often infused with a sizable helping of Irish, is simply the funniest. Is this statement biased? Yes. Is it just personal opinion? Absolutely. Do I have any ‘proof’ to back this claim up? No and I bet you don’t want to invest $100,000 dollars in government spending so that a group of social sciences academics can come up with some.

British comedies or britcoms as they are lovingly known have proven themselves to be rather timeless. I can still watch Monty Python’s Flying Circus and laugh at all the jokes, Fawlty Towers will never get boring, Keeping Up Appearances still keeps up spirits and Are You Being Served? continues to service comedy audiences around the globe 25 years after its last broadcast. And these shows can’t even be considered the peak of British television comedy.

I stand by the fact that The Vicar of Dibley is the funniest television show that has ever been produced anywhere. Spaced is a wonderfully scripted comment on what happens when 30 becomes the new 20. Kris Marshall’s performance in My Family is a never-ending source of giggles. As much as I love Steve Carrell and John Krasinski, the Brits even have the better (and the original) version of The Office. I think a good chunk of this difference in quality is attributable to the difference in the way ‘seasons’ or ‘series’ are organized.

The Brits tend to churn out between 6 and 10 episodes per ‘series’ (equivalent to the American season) while Americans are expected to produce between 20 and 24 episodes, at least double and possibly quadruple that amount. British writers are able to focus on writing 6 amazing episodes as opposed to 24 mediocre ones. It just makes sense for good comedy.

Now that you’re excited about British comedy, if you haven’t watched it before you might be wondering where to start. I’ve got 2 lists to help you with that.

My Top 5 British Comedy Programs Still On Air

  1. Outnumbered
  2. My Family
  3. The IT Crowd
  4. Inbetweeners
  5. Gavin and Stacey

My Top 10 British Comedy Programs of the Recent Past (1995-Present)

  1. The Vicar of Dibley
  2. Spaced
  3. Father Ted
  4. Coupling
  5. Cold Feet
  6. The Office
  7. My Hero
  8. Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps
  9. Beautiful People
  10. Massive (a one series wonder)

You can often watch a whole series in the same time it would take to watch a Peter Jackson film, so there’s really no excuse for not giving one a go if you’ve some time on your hands.

Happy Viewing!

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.