Flickers (1982)
Facts
| Directed by | Cyril Coke |
| Cast | Bob Hoskins, Frances de la Tour, Joanna Foster, Fraser Cains, Dickie Arnold, Sheila Reid and Frances De La Tour |
| Theatrical Release | May 23, 1982 |
| DVD Release | April 25, 2006 |
| Running Time | 307 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 054961867998 |
| Buy this item | $34.49 at Amazon.com As of Aug 7 12:42 EDT (details) 3 DVD, Acorn Media, Usually ships in 24 hours, Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 23 new from $31.04, 9 used from $29.99 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Flickers (DVD) |
| Flickers DVD |
| A welcome, entertaining, and certain to be popular addition to any personal or community library DVD collection |
June 8, 2006
| A Thoroughly Delighful Comedy-Drama! |
The series stars Bob Hoskins (Mrs. Henderson Presents, Thick as Thieves) as Arnie Cole, an outspoken Cockney with little dress sense and even less manners; yet despite his faults, he is shrewd, determined and hard-working. Arnie is in the business of showing films, but what he really wants to do is make them. He's a man with a dream--a vision, even; what he lacks, however, is money. The need for a loan or a backer poses a huge obstacle in a time when the more conservative, traditional lenders and investors were very leary of putting money into what was viewed by many as likely being a here-today-gone-tomorrow industry.
Frances de la Tour (Rising Damp) stars as Maud, the well-spoken, well-bred, but very uppity, not to mention plain-looking, daughter of a well-off family. It is Maud's brother, Clive, who himself has a tidy nest-egg, that Arnie hopes to smooth-talk into investing in his dream. Maud, however, sees right through Arnie, and turns him down flat.
As it happens, circumstances conspire to bring Arnie and Maud together. Theirs is an uncomfortable, not to mention unlikely, alliance--at least initially; and it is an uphill battle all the way, with shoe-string finances being only the tip of the problem. From a Shirley-Temple-like little girl who's becoming noticeably not so little anymore to a depressive comic and a grand, self-obsessed theatrical diva, there are a number of temperamental, highly-strung thespians, whose egos must be placated. Then there is Max Legendre, the agent of the big-name comic star whom Arnie hopes to snag. The problem is that Max, who has no people skills whatsoever and is no more than a temperamental bully, has aspirations in the directorial direction; that he gets his way only adds to Arnie and Maud's problems. Circumstances are not assisted by the reappearance of Letty, Arnie's tarty (but certainly not plain) former flame, who kindles a spark of jealousy in Maud.
With 50-minute episodes, romantic tension, a delightful blend of comedy and drama, and an unusual period setting, this series is quite a departure for Roy Clarke (who also displayed a flair for comedy-drama in the feature-length film Hawks). Viewers ought not, therefore, to expect something akin to the above-mentioned character comedies for which Clarke is so well known. Though characters abound, this is not character comedy. It really is in a class all its own--I can think of nothing to which to compare it! Having said that, it is a well-written, superbly-acted series with an engaging storyline, and it is a series our family really enjoyed.
June 7, 2006
| even better than I remembered |
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