THIS 4TH PINT OF STELLA WAS SO MUCH BETTER THAN THE THIRD! ‘STELLA'(SKY 1) : A Series Review.

Last Friday saw the end of the fourth series of Stella on SKY 1 and I for one thought it was an absolute triumph.  I felt the show had perhaps run its course after not really laughing or being gripped by the third series last year.  I’m delighted to proclaim however that it was back on form in series four. Every episode in this latest series made me laugh out loud at some point.  It got to the point where I started to really look forward to watching it in the week ahead, I just knew it was guaranteed to make me smile.  I will definitely be consuming a FIFTH PINT OF STELLA  when the next series appears on our screens…….Oh and have one for yourself sweetheart!

Series three was a bit of a struggle because the show had to more or less  reinvent itself after many storyline threads had reached their natural conclusion by the end of series two. This meant as a consequence a few of the established characters were missing and I think the show felt it somewhat.  Sean(Kenny Doughty) and Rob Morgan(Mark Lewis Jones) were nowhere to be seen(Stella’s two hunky love interests) and both these actors had great screen presence. Stella’s son-in-law Sunil was not in it either due to an adulterous affair with a University classmate in series two.  I have to be honest though and say that I was never fully convinced about the actor who played this part(Rory Girvan).  The omission of Stella’s brother Dai Kosh(Own Teale) and her sister-in-law Paula(Elizabeth Berrington), were the characters I missed the most however.  They brought great comedy to the show what with their highly amusing randy role play games. This usually involved them dressing up combined with hilarious dialogue.

Series three therefore saw the introduction of a set of new storylines and characters with varying results.  I loved Big Alan’s(Steve Speirs) new lady friend Celia(Emma Rydal) and all her emotional backstory of being a grieving Mother. I found such scenes really moving and thought Emma and Steve acted them superbly together. Big Alan’s reticence of a sexual relationship with her due to his low self esteem issues was a really worthwhile storyline too.  Here we saw this big brute of a man who was as strong as an ox, yet that did not mean he could not have fears and insecurities as well.  I think actor Steve Speirs was the best thing in series three by a country mile.  He was brilliant at the comedy stuff as always, but he also showed he is great doing emotionally powerful stuff as well.

On the negative side, I’m afraid to say series three in general did not make me laugh that much.  I also found some of the new storylines bland and unoriginal. For example,  I had big issues with the storyline concerning Stella’s daughter Emma(Catrin Stewart) and her boss at work Marcus(James Thornton).  Emma got a job at his hair saloon and soon after was seen having an affair with him.  I like Catrin Stewart as an actress but this unoriginal ‘having a affair with her married boss’ storyline just bored me.  I did not really believe it either. I did not believe that this supposedly famous hairdresser in the form Marcus Jensen, with a seemingly great life and two young doting kids, would then potentially jeopardize all that by having an affair a with young girl who was half his age.

I struggled to find new character Vivienne(Eiry Hughes) funny and became increasingly irritated with Stella’s new boss at work, namely Sister(nurse) Cheryl Spragg(Clare Hingott).  In the case of the latter, I found her Sargent Major style mannerisms and delivery highly amusing at first but then she got on my nerves as the series progressed. I just found both characters verging on the silly rather than funny.  I also thought Michael’s(Peter Baladi)l snobby ex wife Jan(Tilly Blackwood) verged on being a caricature.  I suppose some of these criticisms are down to me being a bit too picky, it’s just that I thought series one and two were excellent and thus the third one a bit of letdown…..albeit still a reasonably enjoyable letdown.

I therefore tuned into the start of series four not knowing if I was going to enjoy it that much or not.  Straight away it had me really laughing however with their new Dai Davies(Anthony O’Donnell) storyline.  Dai’s new appearance was down to him coming into a load of money and he looked half JR Ewing and half American Evangelical Preacher ha ha. Just the sight of him in a stetson, covered in fake tan and with white gleaming teeth, it made me smirk every time he came on screen.  This character who was brilliantly acted by Anthony O’Donnell had me chuckling throughout the entire series. An example of this was in the episode ten when after Michael delivered his very moving best man’s speech, Dai amusingly then bemoaned how rubbish it was.  I hope to see lots more of funny Dai Davies in series five.

The star however of series four and who is without doubt my favourite character in the entire show, is Big Alan played by the brilliant Steve Speirs. In every episode he had me laughing.  For example, he had me laughing hard when due to being scared witless by a mouse, he half dismantled his house via throwing things at it.  I loved it when he went to pick Stella and Celia up from a gay nightclub.  He went into the club to get them and various men started getting amorous with him, his startled reactions to this sort of behaviour were very funny.  The bit that made cry with laughter though was when he put on a pair of underpants that were too tight in the quest of looking thinner.  It was all due to him feeling insecure due to Celia’s ex fella recently arriving on the scene.  It was TV comedy gold when he nearly collapsed in the restaurant due to not being able to breathe properly because of these tight underpants.  As much as the ever presence of Stella(Ruth Jones) is integral to the success of the show then this also applies to Big Alan in my book too.

I think the storylines were much better in this series and some characters that irked me in series three no longer seem to now.  Whereas in the last series Aunty Brenda, Yantob and Cheryl irritated me somewhat, now I found them amusing to watch.  I thought Cheryl’s open nudism in Aunty Brenda’s house was very funny when she first moved in.  I also thought Cheryl spraying a lovesick Yantob in the eye with a pepper spray was another highly amusing moment.

Series four was a bit like the series of the comebacks. Karl(Stella’s ex husband played by Julian Lewis Jones) was in the entire series after being missing completely in series three, and we saw well known characters Paula and Rob Morgan make a reappearance or two towards the end of it. The show in my view was all the more stronger for us seeing these characters once again  .  They brought an old familiarity to the proceedings which thus aided my enjoyment of the programme.  Paula and Karl are two big comic characters so their inclusion helped make this series more comical than the last.

Like I have said, the storylines this series kept me a lot more interested than in the last.  They kept me wanting to tune in week after week whereas last year I had a feeling of indifference towards the show.  There was the money struggles and the gambling addiction issues concerning Stella’s eldest son Luke(Craig Gallivan).  I thought Celia had a much bigger role this series with her also training to be a nurse like Stella. I really like her as a character and Emma Rydal as an actress. I loved her scenes with Steve Speirs(Big Alan) and the old softy in me enjoyed seeing them get married.  I thought the council election stuff made for amusing viewing and like I have said, the transformation of Dai Davies into this sort of JR Ewing type figure was hilarious.

The storyline that underpinned the series throughout however was the relationship up and downs between Stella(Ruth Jones) and Michael(Patrick Baladi). I really warmed to them as a couple this series, I quickly stopped longing for hunky Sean to come knocking on her door to sweep her of her feet.  I was a bit surprised by how amusing I found Michael at times and so Patrick Baladi’s acting has to be applauded for this. I am thinking of say his funny dialogue and delivery when asking Mr Honey(Ramon Tikram) for a fight. If I am honest I did find all the ‘will they or won’t they get back together’ stuff in episode ten a tad corny and over-the-top, but in the main I enjoyed them as characters.

Stella succeeds in my opinion because yes it is funny, but more than that, it is because it is rooted deeply in the family and the sense of a close knit community. There is a honesty and decency about these characters whose lives we have come to care about.  They make us laugh and occasionally move us to tears. In series four Stella was back on form………..COCKING LOVELY!

 

 

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SHOCKING, THOUGHT PROVOKING AND COMPULSIVE VIEWING! ‘STRANGEWAYS : BRITAIN’S TOUGHEST PRISON RIOT’ – A REVIEW

As a young teenager from Manchester in the year 1990, I can just about remember the famous Strangeways Prison riot happening.  By this I mean I have vague recollections of it appearing on the news.  I can remember for example the scene of the inmates on top of the rooftops.  It only dawned on me until recently watching this brilliant documentary about the event, that I never actually knew what it was all about.  I guess I just assumed it was bored prisoners just rebelling and wanting a bit of fun.  This BBC documentary superbly written by David Belton to mark the 25th anniversary of the Strangeways Prison riots, put such an uprising into context.  The riot held deep significance and meaning for the inmates. It was the result of them continually being kept in an Victorian archaic institution which had deplorable conditions.  This was the prisoners way of fighting back!

The documentary was a well balanced piece of work because for the first time ever all sides of the story were heard.  Significant first hand accounts from the ringleaders were given, in the form of Paul Taylor and Allan Lord.  This was counterbalanced alongside the evidence from the Prison Officers who experienced the ordeal.  The governor at the time Brendan O’Friel also gave his interesting version of the events.  The accounts from all these people really made for compelling viewing.  There was one account from a prison officer that was particularly powerful.  He was there in the chapel when the riot broke out and we see him almost break down as he recalled what happened.

Scum is a 1979 film written by Roy Clarke and stars a young brilliant Ray Winstone in the lead role.  It portrays the brutality of life inside a British borstal. Violence, intimidation, racism and bullying all feature strongly throughout.  The borstal warders are active participants in such behaviour too, warder Mr Sands(played by John Judd) in particular being a brutal enforcer.  Roy Clarke’s critique of the borstal system is intentionally a tough watch in places. He is critical of the brutality we witness but also that no rehabilitation is offered in such an institution.

I refer to the film Scum because it immediately came to my mind when this documentary was over.  There are so many similarities between the two.  As in the film for example, prison officers back then at Strangeways were alleged to have been implicit in racism, violence and intimidation towards the inmates. The film I’ve just remembered has a riotous scene in it too.  I was truly amazed how barbarically the criminal justice system treated prison inmates back then. No great efforts or programmes for rehabilitation were offered inmates back in 1990.  The riot in Strangeways evidently got out of hand and you can not justify some of violence that took place, but at the same time I can understand it in a way. I now fully get why the riot too place.  Eleven years after the film called Scum, inmates it was detailed were still being treated like such in this real life adult prison.

What I liked most about this documentary is that is humanised the demonised from the riot.   I am not condoning the crimes they committed for one second, however in a civilized society such as ours the living conditions that they had to endure inside this prison were clearly not acceptable.   In the aftermath, The Strangeways Prison riots resulted in some good being done.  The Woolf Report concluded that conditions in the prison had been intolerable and it recommended major reform of the entire prison system.  The Guardian newspaper praised the report as the blueprint for the restoration of “decency and justice into jails where conditions had become intolerable”.  Then a statistic was flashed upon the screen at the end of the documentary which stated that still seventy-one of our UK jails  remain over populated. I could not help but be angered at this fact. England and Wales has the highest prison population in Europe yet there is not sufficient enough room for inmates. Something is therefore going wrong somewhere is it not?

A fascinating documentary that had a immensely powerful effect on me, definitely worth a watch!

 

 

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INFORMATIVE, INSIGHTFUL AND INVOLVING…LOUIS THEROUX AT HIS BEST! ‘Louis Theroux : Transgender Kids’. A Review.

When documentary film maker Louis Theroux educates, entertains and also emotively covers a certain subject, then I think you will pretty hard pressed to find a better documentary.  This is what he indeed did last Sunday on BBC2 when he covered the somewhat controversial subject of ‘transgender kids’.  The programme dealt with children in the Sans Francisco region of America who had experienced gender dysphoria and some were receiving medical treatment to enable them to become the gender they wanted to be.  I am a massive Louis Theroux fan and I would go as far to say that I think this is one of the best documentaries he has ever made. It was extremely informative  and moving in a way that I had not expected it to be prior to watching.

In the documentary Louis introduced us to a variety of families who had children in them that were going through this process. There were two children and families in particular that really touched and moved me.  The first was a five year old child who was christened Sebastian as a boy, but now insisted on being seen as a girl and being called Camille.  It really opened up the debate has to how old a person should be upon changing their gender identity? For instance, can a child as young as this really know they are the wrong gender? Furthermore, how did Camille’s parents know for sure that this was not just some kind of game or phase that their child will grow out of in time? I guess the answer having watched the documentary, is that they can not be one hundred per cent sure of anything. For example, they openly said to Louis that they would have no problem if one day Camille came up to them and said she would rather be seen as Sebastian once again. What moved me here was how loving and supportive Camille’s parents were.  They simply loved their child no matter what and to see them support their child this way was a lovely thing to see. I also loved Louis’ interaction with Camille. He was at his gentle probing best with this little bundle of joy and Camille seemed to love him.

The second family had a teenager in it called Nikki, who was once a male and called Nick.  We saw in the documentary how Nikki had already started medical interventions in her quest to become a female. eg estrogen hormone injections.  She also indicated a desire to pursue having sex-change surgery in the not too distant future. Again I was bowled over by how supportive her parents were.  Her Father said that he was supporting her gender change so early on in life because he worried if left until adulthood, then this would make the transition a lot harder for her.  It was incredibly moving to see their support for Nikki, as well as it also be very moving to hear what a traumatic experience it had also been for them as parents. Whilst Nikki was out of the room her supportive Mother broke down in tears and said how they had sort of been on a grieving process concerning the son they once had. She worried about Nikki’s future due to the prejudices in society. I was deeply moved by the final trip we saw Nikki take to her hospital clinic.  She was anxious, frustrated and cut a somewhat forlorn figure to her doctors. I am ashamed to say this but up to that point I had never really contemplated the amount of anguish and mental struggles that a transgender person goes through.  I felt sad for Nikki in a way. Sad at all the upcoming medical and societal battles that would come her way in life. She was a shy beautiful human being, yet the road ahead for her did not seem an envious one. Again with Nikki and her family, Louis excelled at playing both the interviewer and the ‘supportive friend’ type figure.

As I sat down to watch this programme I was not fully sure of what to expect if I completely am honest.  I like to think of myself as a broad minded person however I did wonder to myself if I might find it a bit too uncomfortable to watch in places. In reality it was the exact opposite to being uncomfortable to watch, I found it life affirming in a way.  The subject of transgender children is one that needs more public discussion in my view.  The kids at school bullied Nikki with homophobic names because they are uneducated to know any better.  Only with documentaries such as this that seek to both educate and inform us on the subject, will such attitudes thus change.  How young you allow your child to change his or her gender is an interesting debate to have.  Louis Theroux needs congratulating for highlighting such an topic in my view, documentaries do not come much better than this!

 

 

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“DARKNESS CANNOT DRIVE OUT DARKNESS ; ONLY LIGHT CAN DO THAT!” ‘Louis Theroux – By Reason Of Insanity’ : Part One. A Review.

Last night on BBC2 we saw the very welcome return to our screens of documentary filmmaker Louis Theroux.  Filmed in Ohio in The United States, this was the first part of two programmes he has done on the subject of mental health illness.  His focus last night was on patients who had committed violent crimes but rather than being sent to prison, they had been found not guilty by the courts and instead been ordered to serve time in secure psychiatric facilities.  The documentary dealt with the treatment of such people and their potential reintegration back into society.

I loved this documentary and Louis Theroux proved yet again just what a master he is at this art form.  The programme was educational, informative and I found myself being extremely moved by it.  The thing I love about about Louis is the style of his films.  They are never overtly political or come with an obvious big agenda that he wants to get across. Instead,  he just beautifully documents a subject for us in a relatively non-judgmental way.  In this respect he is the exact opposite to famous American documentary filmmaker Michael Moore and I for one prefer this more subtle approach by Louis.

The thing I love about Louis is how he befriends his subjects.  He becomes their friend in a very sincere genuine way, and this puts both them and us at ease.  The dialogue therefore has a naturalness to it.  I am sure his subjects open up him much more to him due to this caring style of his.  He does not seek to exploit them, he just wants to document their story to us and I really like this.  We saw this charming rapport that he develops between his subjects and himself a lot last night .

The patient that had the most emotional impact on me was a guy called Jonathan. He was a guy in his late thirties who seven years previously had killed his Father due to believing he had sexually abused him when he was younger.  His well respected Father who was a History teacher at the time had not done this to him but Jonathan had experienced delusions at the time making him think that he had.  It was a heartbreaking story to hear about and one that I found myself being both really sadden and moved by.  It was obvious that Jonathan was not a bad guy and that his actions were the result of a severe mental health condition that he was rapidly improving with.  When he said his Mum had been moved to tears at the prospect of them having dinner together somewhere unsupervised, I too was then duly moved to tears.  I loved how polite and caring Louis was with him.  In the presence of Jonathan,  there was a bit towards the end where Louis mentioned to one of his doctors about Jonathan having a good heart.  You could tell this meant the world to this patient and was further evidence of this great caring style that Louis has.  Do not get me wrong though, Louis did not molly coddle them or anything. He did ask them tough questions at times but they were always handled in a very caring sensitive way.

In my opinion, right now Louis Theroux is the best documentary filmmaker to come from the United Kingdom.  He has produced some outstanding pieces of work in the past and this first part about mental health illnesses deserves very high praise too. It worked because most importantly he cares about his subjects. There is never any DARKNESS when I watch Louis Theroux, ONLY EVER RAYS OF LIGHT!

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‘ORDINARY LIES’ BUT NO ORDINARY DRAMA! ‘ORDINARY LIES’ EPISODE 1 REVIEW.

Last night saw the start of a new six-part drama on BBC1 called Ordinary Lies. It is written by Danny Brocklehurst and centres around the goings on in a Car Showroom somewhere in the North-West of England.  I am not sure what I expected before it started but I was pleasantly surprised by how much I had enjoyed it by the time the credits were rolling at the end.  The star of this first episode was without stand-up comedian Jason Manford who played a car salesman called Marty, take a well deserved bow my son.

I’ll be honest and say that up to this point I have never been a massive fan of Jason Manford’s.  I can still remember being horrified one Christmas Day when as a family we all sat around the telly to watch one of his stand-up shows on DVD. All was fine and dandy until about half way through when he did this joke about male masturbation.  Rather than being funny it was really corny and unfunny.  I did not know where to look as my sixty-odd year old Mum watched it too, we duly ended up just switching it off.

Here though in his first main TV acting role, I thought Jason Manford played a blinder. The role of Marty, a hapless car salesmen who was having a severe mid-life crisis, it suited him down to the ground. He delivered all the car salesman bravado stuff with apparent ease and I genuinely found myself chuckling at his performance throughout it.  Granted an actor is only as good the lines given to him by the writer, but I thought Manford brought a lot to the part himself too.  I was also impressed how well he handled the emotional scenes towards the end.  Importantly, I believed him as a character.  For much of the time I largely forgot I was watching a stand-up comic trying his hand at a bit acting. Whoever cast him in this role need commending upon it in my opinion.

Although we also saw another story emerge that involved actress Jo Joyner playing deputy manager Beth(her husband has gone missing), like I say last night’s focused largely on the chaotic life of Car Salesman Marty. We see Marty going through some sort of mid-life crisis. His sales targets are repeatedly down and he keeps turning up late for work courtesy of going down the pub and having a skinful the night before. After getting a Final Warning at work for his repeated lateness we saw him get there late again the day after. Knowing he is done for if he goes in again late, Marty rings up work to offer up some excuse as to why he won’t be going in that day. Disastrously, the best he can come up with is that his wife has just died…oops ha ha. Events then quickly spiral out control and we see Marty trying to cover up his tracks so not to have the lie uncovered.  I thought his stealth like move to capture the postman before he delivered a load of ‘sympathy cards’ through their front door was very funny.  The girls from work knocking on his front door to see if he needed any help at this supposed very tragic time, involved him claiming his still alive wife was in fact his sister-in-law.  It was clever funny stuff albeit maybe a tad implausible.

For a time the lie of his wife dying works for Marty and comically we see his old confident self coming back in spades.  We see him triumphantly return home one day to tell his STILL VERY MUCH ALIVE WIFE, how his car sales figures were going through the roof.  His lies and mid-life crisis reached a zenith when saw him have a fling with a woman from work called Grace. I thought actress Rebecca Callard was marvelous in portraying this lonely accountant. I can’t quite put my finger on it but I think it was her idiosyncratic mannerisms and her unique delivery style that made her such an amusing character for me.

Eventually as we all knew it would do, his lies eventually caught up with Marty.  The discoverer of his big lie was secretary Kathy, played by the always fab Sally Lindsay. I must admit as an emotional Marty turned his car to face his garage, I did worry this drama was suddenly going to have a very dark ending. ie suicide.  To my relief we saw his wife meet him on the driveway just in time. Next we see Marty and his wife walking into his work to unveil his lie to everybody.

It wasn’t a spellbinding piece of television or anything, but at the same it was a very enjoyable watch.  I was chuckling throughout and somewhat surprisingly found myself being rather moved by it at the end.  My perception of Jason Manford has changed for the better due to his fine performance here.  I therefore look forward to watching episode two next week and seeing another entertaining ORDINARY LIE told! 3.5/5.

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MY MUM IS THE GREATEST MUM OF ALL – HAPPY MOTHER’S DAY MUMMY LLOYD!

There is ONLY ONE PERSON in this world that I truly love and that person is MY MUM!

There is ONLY ONE PERSON in this world that has stuck by me through thick and thin and that person is MY MUM!

There is ONLY ONE PERSON in this world that I would die for………and again that person is my MUM!

The rest of the world know her as Margaret Lloyd but to me she is my INCREDIBLE MUM. I do not tell her enough though how much I love her and how thankful I am for the things she has done for me over the years. I am now putting this right by doing this loving blog about her.  On this Mothering Sunday Mum, THANK YOU FOR BEING MY MUM!

After having a trouble free birth with my big sister, my Mum contrastingly had a right do having me.   Firstly, there was the incident of her fainting on top of my sister in the school playground whilst heavily pregnant with me(oops, my poor sister ha ha ha ha).  Mum then started having high blood pressure and so was in hospital a total of SIX WEEKS having me.  Mum was bored off her head and my late Dad was loving this…..NOT, because it meant having the Mother-in-law live with him all throughout this time ha(to help him look after my sister).  You see, even before I’d been born I was making trouble for them ha ha ha.

Mum ended up having to have Cesarean Section with me what with her high blood pressure and the fact I was a breech birth. This was thirty odd years ago remember when having a C-Section was a major surgery.  I was born three weeks premature because of all this and so was rushed off and put in an incubator straight away, as my poor Mum lay there recovering from the op.  In the hospital they had the baby unit a million miles from where my Mum’s ward was. She could barely walk due to the pains from the stitches, yet had to walk there and back all the time to go and feed me…it was madness!

I loved my late old man dearly but I have always been an unashamed Mummy’s Boy. Dad of course did his bit but due to him working a lot,  it was always more Mum who brought my big sister and me up.  She was the one who knew more about how I was doing at school say.  Mum taught me fantastic manners and morals from a very early age and I want to say thank you for this Mum. It was primarily down to her parenting skills that made me win ‘The Courtesy Badge’ about twenty times in the juniors ha ha.

Some kids do not tell their parents anything, whereas I thankfully have always had a very open relationship with my Mother  If I ever had any worries or things bothering me then Mum wanted to know about them so she could help, she is that kind of a selfless wonderful person.  This still apples today and she will never know how truly grateful I am for her always being there for me, she is without doubt my rock!

I never thought I was clever enough to go to University but to my somewhat shock, I indeed was.  The idea of Graduating seemed like this magical dream to me that was right there for the taking…..then life became very cruel all of a sudden. Living away at University was always going to be a bit of a challenge, what with being a type one diabetic since seventeen and suffering with OCD since fifteen.  With the enormous support from my parents and especially my Mum, I just about managed to get by in that first year. Then disaster struck early into my second year. First, my Dad died suddenly and then I ended up contracting an awful illness called Chronic Bacterial Prostatitis!

I dropped out of University the year my Dad died and then must have dropped out a further three years due to this nasty prostate condition.  I would get rid of the prostate infection and then as soon as I started Uni again it would bloody come back.  Having to drop out of my course all of the time due to ill health really devastated me.  I just wanted to fulfill my dream of getting a degree but things beyond my control were preventing me.  During this time I had to have it checked out twice that I did not have prostate cancer.  I did not thank God but it was such an ordeal to go through.  I can still remember now coming home and emotionally embracing my Mum in doorway as I told her(crying) that they’d said I did not have cancer.  Throughout all this time the one person who supported me twenty-four seven was yes you’ve guessed it, my dear Mum.

I was determined my ill health was not going to stop me from graduating.  I was not going to let all the blood, sweat and tears all be for nothing.  I’m glad to report that eventually I finally did achieve my dream of getting my degree.  I could not have done it without the help of my dear Mum though.  She was soooooo supportive both emotionally and financially, that I will never be able to thank her enough for helping me achieve my dream.  She was always there on the end of the phone whenever I needed her.  Having OCD and living away from home was tough but having Mum available talk to me on the phone whenever I wanted to, always meant I coped with any contamination disasters that arose.  She got in debt helping me financially get through Uni.  I would not have got my degree without her and I thank her from the bottom of my heart.

Since leaving Uni the last few years have been extremely tough for me.  I was diagnosed with a slipped vertebrate with nerve compression in my lower back.  I also have a chronic pelvic pain condition which is an after effect of all the prostate infections I used to get. This is accompanied with a terrible sore shoulder and ribs.  My mental health has got much worse too.  Not being able to pursue my career goals at present really gets to me. I was hit for six last summer when I got diagnosed with having a condition called lymphoedema in my lower legs.  Over the Christmas just gone I was in a very dark place.  I just could not cope having another health issue to contend with, this lymphoedema business was the final straw.  I am not going to lie, I did at times not want to live anymore. I was fed up of getting kicked in the teeth all the time.  ONE PERSON HELPED ME GET THROUGH THIS TOUGH PERIOD AND GUESS WHO THAT ONE PERSON WAS……..YEP YOU GUESSED IT, AGAIN IT WAS MY DEAR MUM!

When I was feeling really depressed during this time my Mum was always there to talk too, always there to help me see things were not as bad as they seemed.  Thank you for always being there for me Mum.   I recently had a boost the other week when I got told the lymphoedema was a misdiagnosis and that I did not have this lifelong condition after all.  There are still big battles ahead for me on the health front but at least now there seems to be light at the end of the tunnel.  Soon I will start physio for all my aches and pains and so am starting to feel more positive about things.  I’m a worrier by nature and I take it for granted just what amazing support I get from my Mum.

There we have it then, that was my tribute to my Mum on Mother’s Day.  I could have written tonnes more because there are not enough words in the entire English Language that can describe just what an amazing person my Mum is.  I do not deserve my Mum at times and she deserves better.  I will make you proud of me again though Mum, I promise…….just like when you make me feel proud WHENEVER I TELL PEOPLE WHO MY MUM IS!

HAPPY MOTHER’S DAY MUM, I LOVE YOU!

 

 

 

Posted in ANXIETY, COMEDY, COMPLIMENT, death, DEPRESSION, DIABETES, EMOTION, FAMILY, FRIENDSHIP, grief, HAROLD LLOYD, HEALTH, LYMPH GLANDS, LYMPHOEDEMA, mens health, MENTAL HEALTH, NHS, OCD, skin infection, TRIBUTE, TRUE STORIES, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

AN UNSATISFYING DRAMA! ‘THE CASUAL VACANCY’ -EPISODE THREE REVIEW.

After seeing the concluding part of this drama last night the verdict is now clear, I DEFINITELY PREFER THE BOOK OVER THE TV ADAPTATION!

This third episode in many ways was a bit all over the place.  Like episode two, it left me feeling significantly underwhelmed when it was over.  The book is very detailed regarding the characterization, therefore you gradually become to really know and care about the characters as the story progresses.  The TV version was the exact opposite to this.  Three episodes was not long enough for us to get to know such a vast array of people, let alone care about them.  Take Social Worker Kay Bawden, she is such a more well-rounded character in the book. In the book you learn about her day job and all that entails, but you also find out about her somewhat disheveled home life too. This includes being with a man called Gavin Hughes(not featured in the TV version) who does not love her and just puts up with her. The briefer TV version lacked such vital narrative detail in my view.

The third episode was largely about the crucial ‘The Casual Vacancy’  position being taken-up via an election.  Despite the best efforts from ‘The Ghost of Barry Fairbrother’, we saw wet Miles Morrison win by just one vote.  This thus prompted joyous celebrations from his overbearing parents, namely Howard and Shirley Mollison(Michael Gambon and Julia McKenzie). Their fun was short lived however when near the end an adulterous Howard was outed by The Ghost.

The rest of the episode largely focused on characters Terri and Krystal Weedon(Abigail Lawries and Keeley Forsyth).  Terri finally looked to be well on the road to recovery from her drug addiction and all seemed fine, that was until her drug dealing mate got out of prison and led her astray once again.  Cornered by threats from this dealer and worried her young brother would now get taken into care, Krystal fled with Robbie.  This had disastrous consequences however.  After leaving Robbie unattended for a moment we saw him fall into a river and upon trying to find him, Krystal ended up drowning. This was then juxtaposed with a rather uplifting ending which focused on Gaia Bawden(Simona Brown) sitting next to Andrew “Arf “Price(Joe Hurst) on a bus, heavily hinting on a future romantic involvement between the two.

When comparing the book with the TV version once more, then the major difference is  how they both end. In the book towards the end we see the character Krystal Weedon becoming very isolated.  Ultimately she feels abandoned in life what with having a drug addict for a Mother and the ending of her relationship with Stuart”Fats” Wall(Brian Vernel) .  She also feels abandoned by the death of her Guardian Angel, namely Barry Fairbrother. Events then go very dark which consist of Krystal being raped and then committing suicide. The suicide is triggered after Robbie is found dead in the river after being left unattended by her. Whereas in the TV version Robbie is rescued by Vikram Jawanda(Silas Carson) and instead of committing suicide, Krystal dies by drowning. Krystal was not raped in the TV adaptation either.

Ever since reading the book I have moaned about it’s very dark ending.  There was no happy uplifting conclusion that I desperately craved for and so in some ways I felt cheated by this.  I found the ending of the book really depressing if I am honest.  After watching the less gloomy ending on television last night, I can’t believe I am saying this but I now think the darker ending in the book is better.  I now get the point that J.K Rowling is making in the book, it’s all about the depressing nature of some people’s lives. The final events in the book seemed to fit the tone of the story better. It fitted that there was no optimistic happy ending because it would have seemed out of place with the rest of the tale.  Although generally not as dark as the book, I still nevertheless found the uplifting ending of the television piece somewhat out of place.  It went from Krystal’s death to “Arf” and Gaia flirting on a bus.  This scene was also accompanied by uplifting background music.  It smacked of confusion to me on behalf of writer Sarah Phelps .

Other things that got on my nerves with the television version were again due to it jumping all over the place.  By this, I mean there were little stories going on but again not done in enough detail.  In the book psycho Simon Price(Richard Glover) gets the sack via stealing from work and as a family they then move out of the town. Here in episode three we saw him get the dreaded call to go and see his boss, but instead of getting fired he got promoted.  I wanted to see this chat with his boss but we never did. Furthermore, I was never fully sure what he did for a job either. It was something to do with electrical goods and him working in a warehouse but it was never fully made clear.

Other characters I had issue with were Miles and Samantha Mollison(played Rufus Jones and Keeley Hawes). Firstly, I got that Miles was supposed to feel overpowered and emasculated by his very overbearing parents, but I think it was overplayed to the point of being rather corny.  I think in episode two he hardly said any actual dialogue, rather just grimacing lots and comfort eating in reaction to the nasty comments posted by The Ghost of Barry Fairbrother.  In last night’s episode he found a pair at long last and finally stood up to his Mother, but I did struggle to imagine him being a solicitor due to his previous wimpy behaviour.

In last night’s episode and throughout the first two also, the marriage struggles of Miles and Samantha were hinted at and featured. I say featured but that is stretching it a tad because the scenes about it were far too few and not in enough depth in my opinion. I wanted more back story regarding her past issues with drink. We never actually saw Samantha tell him or explain to him why she had left him.  Instead all we got was a note from her saying to him, “I have left you”.  I also found the Samantha Mollison character much funnier in the book too. A really funny storyline in the novel was her having sexual fantasies about a boyband member called Jake, a boy band one of her daughters was into.  She was more rebellious in the book, a more fun type character.  I think Sarah Phelps missed a trick portraying her the way she did.

We also saw rather strange snippets from the recently widowed and now seemingly slightly deranged, Mary Fairbrother.  Again, by the end of three episodes I felt I hardly knew this character and this really frustrated me.  In an irate conversation she had with Colin “Chubby” Wall(Simon McBurney) she told him how her and Barry would have probably split up anyway, he cared more about the Weedon’s she said.  She further told him that if he got elected on to the Parish Council it would kill him too. At the end of episode three and having not seen her much apart from spoiling a ballot paper, we then saw her being sarcastic to two people buying her house.  I did not find her character believable and these ranting snippets of her were more froth than substance. The same could be said about the nervy depiction of Colin too.  I wanted to know more him as a character but we did not get this unfortunately.

After really enjoying episode one I really had high hopes for this drama. I was pleasantly surprised at first how it appeared to be better than to book.  However, by the end of episode three these high hopes had severely crashed and burned.  I soooooo wanted it to be brilliant but I’m afraid it was very far from being that.  Trying to condense this five hundred page book into one hundred and eighty minutes of television just simply did not work.  The screenplay narrative did not flow very well, it all seemed a bit rushed to me and lacked coherency at times. You got narrative about lots of characters and individuals, without yet it being enough to fully satisfy you.  For example, I was stunned when the character Sukhvinder Jawande(Ria Choony) shouted something at the end of episode three because she had hardly said anything up to that point in the entire drama. I did not really care about any of the characters because the scenes were over that quick in a flash, before then jumping on to something else.  The only characters I truly believed and liked were Barry Fairbrother and Andrew “Arf Price(played by Roy Kinnear and Joe Hurst). I thought Joe Hurst was great in his debut TV role. The rest of the characters were verging on being caricatures sadly.

The book moved me in a way that the TV adaptation did not. Looking back now, I may have been unhappy with the bleak ending in the book but I guess a well written depressing ending, is far better than a poorly structured happy one(as in the TV drama).  If you want to feel satisfaction with The Casual Vacancy then ONLY read the book, IT WON’T LEAVE YOU FEELING UNSATISFIED LIKE THE TV VERSION DID WITH ME!

 

 

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THE VERDICT IS DUE IN ANY MINUTE…DOES ANDY LLOYD HAVE LYMPHOEDEMA OR NOT?

JUDGE : “Members of the jury do you find the defendant Mr Andrew Lloyd guilty or not guilty of having LYMPHOEDEMA…..FOR LIFE?”

Chief Juror :  “NOT GUILTY YOUR HONOUR!”

Reporter : “Screams from the gallery, Andy Lloyd looks stunned in disbelief at this verdict.”

Andy Lloyd : “But you told me I had it(he’s shouting across at the doctors that treated him), I’ve been carrying this depressing news around with me for the last SIX MONTHS….how could you do that to me???”

JUDGE : “SILENCE IN COURT….thank you members of jury, you may now leave!”

Reporter : “Incredibly emotional scenes here in court this morning. Andrew Lloyd still has the look of bewilderment on his face has he begins to make his way out of the courtroom.  He does not have to suffer with the medical condition LYPHOEDEMA for life now…….quite simply because HE HAS NOT GOT IT AFTER ALL!!  Quite incredible stuff this, I’ll now hand you back to Pepsi and Shirley back in the studio!”

 (END OF MY COMICAL TAKE ON MY RECENT TRIP TO THE HOSPITAL, WHERE I GOT TOLD MY LYMPHOEDEMA SCAN RESULTS!)

  Last summer I was really poorly….more than usual I mean.  It was one hot sticky summer’s evening and I remember scratching my itchy left foot, like you do.  The day after I was slightly alarmed to now see a bit of a red rash now on my foot.  I didn’t think I had scratched my foot that hard to cause such a reaction but just assumed I must have done.  Fast-forward forty-eight hours and this little rash had now ballooned in size massively.  It was all over my left foot now and was going up my shin and calf.  I also noticed I was getting it on my right lower limb too.  Apart from looking a mess it burned the skin terribly, my feet and legs literally felt ON FIRE!

  A few more days went by and I was now in absolute agony with this red burning rash.   I remember tweeting about it and somebody suggested to me that it sounded like a condition called cellulitis. Twenty-four hours later I was up at my local doctors and a nasty case of cellulitis was confirmed.  I was given a strong course of antibiotics(Clindamycin) and told it should settle down soon.

  The cellulitis definitely improved with the initial doses of Clindamycin but it failed to shift it completely.  Courtesy of my GP, I then ended up at my local hospital’s Acute Medical Unit ward to try and fully sort it out .  I saw the senior doctor on the unit and was told I needed to massively up the dose of the Clindamycin. He was alarmed however at how swollen my feet and lower legs were. Upon me leaving the hospital late that night he told me that my legs were red also due to all to excess water in them.  The fluid in my legs is not draining away properly thus making them puffy he said, leading him to suspect I had a condition called LYMPHOEDEMA!

  I finally got over that nasty bout of cellulitis but what was causing me most distress now was being diagnosed with lymphoedema(or as I thought back then).  I had been back to the Acute Medical Unit the week afterwards and had a Doppler leg scan which showed nothing.  I spoke to a senior doctor and once more it was suggested that lymphoedema seemed the most likely cause of my swollen lower limbs.  I booked to see my GP straight away, the brief research I had done up to that point about this medical condition made for VERY GRIM reading indeed!

  The next few months were really tough. I went into severe depression largely due to thinking I had yet another health problem to put up with for life, namely this lymphodema. I was diagnosed type one diabetic aged seventeen.  OCD and all the stresses and strains that causes has been with me since I was fifteen.  I had recurrent prostate infections and prostate cancer scares from the age of twenty-one to twenty-eight. These prostate infections have given me chronic pelvic pain which I am currently trying to get better from.  I have a disc problems in my lumbar spine(spondylolisthesis) together with severe soreness to my ribs and upper back.  I was desperate to get a lot better from all of these as it was, I just could not cope having something else to contend with.

  I remember seeing one of the doctors at my local surgery and discussing how compression stockings can aid lymphoedema sufferers.  It was not questioned whether I had lymphoedema or not, it was now seemingly taken for granted that I sadly had it.  I then spoke to a Lymphoedema Nurse on the phone and questioned her about a thing called Manual Lymph Drainage.  This is a massage done by specially trained therapists that is said to help lymphoedema sufferers.  I got told by this nurse that before I have this therapy done though, I should first see a Vascular Consultant at the hospital.  I need to know all is fine with my legs beforehand she said.

  I had an appointment with a Vascular Consultant last November.  Frustratingly, due to the clinic running very behind, I ended up having to see the Consultant’s Senior House Officer rather than the main man himself.  This young lady was very pleasant however and after looking at my legs she suggested I have something called a lymphogram done(scan of my lymph glands).  Again, at this stage it was not even remotely suggested by her that I might NOT have lymphoedema after all.  This scan was to see how bad my lymphoedema was.  I was told to delay having the manual lymph drainage done until they had seen my scan results.

  The lymphogram scan date was early Jan 2015. Therefore, all over the festive period I felt extremely down and depressed due to thinking I had this new lymphoedema thing for life.   I couldn’t stop worrying about next getting it in my genitals.  All I could thing about was a woman running a mile if she saw my bits all swollen.  This together with a bad OCD flare-up made me go to a very dark place.  I got that distressed that I almost self-harmed again(but didn’t), I’m also sad to say that I started to think about suicide once again.  Somehow I got through it however. I got through it due to the wonderful support from both my Mum and my new GP.

  I had the scan and then waited anxiously for a clinic appointment date for the results.  By the time the day came I had now come to terms with having lymphoedema for life.  It is not life threatening I thought to myself and even though my lower legs are quite swollen at times, I could have it a lot worse.  I just wanted them to reassure me that there was no signs of it in my genitals. I also just wanted them to finally ‘OK’ me having this manual lymphatic drainage thing done.  Once I had a few sessions of that, then the plan was to finally restart the much needed physio I need for my sore back and pelvis.  Waiting for them to ‘OK’ this massaging has been holding everything else up.  Once my back and pelvis improves then I’ll be more up for fighting the OCD a lot more too.

  I got the results last Thursday and to be honest it felt a bit like one those weird outer body experiences that you hear people go on about.  The appointment was under a different Vascular Consultant after the last one having left at Christmas.  After an hour of waiting I eventually got seen……I BRACED AND PREPARED MYSELF FOR THE WORST! “I’ve looked at your scan results and YOUR LYMPH NODES ARE FINE, YOU DON’T HAVE LYMPHOEDEMA” said this Chinese doctor in a somewhat brisk, shouty manner. I was stunned, quite literally stunned.  I could not believe what I had just heard, I asked him to repeat it so I could truly believe what he said this time. “You don’t need manual lymph drainage because YOU DON’T HAVE LYMPHOEDEMA”, he replied.  I think had my mouth wide open staring at him in shock. He further said that he never would have said I needed a lymphogram before having a leg vein scan, had I been under his original care.  I am down to have a scan of the veins in my legs in the coming weeks then.  Perhaps this can explain then why my lower limbs are so red and puffy.  I told him I have lumbar spine disc and pelvic pain issues and he seemed to give the impression that either of these things could be a possible explanation for it.

  I personally think it could be my spondylolisthesis(slipped vertebrate) to my lumbar spine which is to blame for the leg swelling, however it is only a guess at this stage.  There is nerve compression from the discs which gives me bad sciatica down my left leg.  Could just be a coincidence but my left leg which is most effected by this spinal nerve compression, is the leg which also has the most swelling and redness to it. Time will tell I guess.

  I walked out of hospital that day feeling like a man who had just been given a pardon after being on death row for the last six months.  I’ve been through the mill and back thinking I had ruddy lymphoedema.  I can not believe at some stage one health care professional did not cast any doubt on me potentially having it.  It feels like after that doctor on the Acute Medical Unit suggested lymphoedema, then everybody else just went with it too as the probable diagnosis.  I am sooooooo angry at the mental torture they have put me through.  I can not tell you though what a relief it feels like NOT to have it.  It feels like a huge weight has been lifted off my very weary shoulders.  A few months back I thought life was no longer worth living because I couldn’t cope with having to suffer from yet another health problem.  The dark clouds are still there and there are still big battles ahead….BUT LEAST NOW I CAN SEE SOME CRACKS OF LIGHT POKING THROUGH THESE DARK CLOUDS AT LONG LAST. MAYBE LIFE IS WORTH STICKING WITH AFTER ALL….I’M NOT GUILTY OF SUFFERING FROM LYMPHOEDEMA, I AM NOT BLOODY GUILTY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Posted in ANXIETY, cellulitis, COMEDY, DEPRESSION, EMOTION, HEALTH, LYMPH GLANDS, LYMPHOEDEMA, mens health, MENTAL HEALTH, NHS, OCD, RANT, skin infection, TRUE STORIES, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

I NOW PREFER THE BOOK! ‘THE CASUAL VACANCY’ -EPISODE TWO REVIEW.

After watching the first episode of The Casual Vacancy last week I did a blog about how I preferred this TV version to the J.K Rowling book it is based upon.  I watched the second installment last night and have now completely changed my mind.  The second episode was a bit of letdown in my opinion.  They say a week is a long time in politics, add to this seemingly in screen writing too!

The problem I have I guess  is that having read the book, I was all the time consciously or  subconsciously comparing it to the screenplay version as I watched it.  Therefore, I come to it from a different angle compared to those folk who have not read the book.  Whereas I thought the alterations last week in episode one improved the story, last night I thought they weakened it.The story also seemed somewhat rushed in episode two compared to the one in book. I recognized the events that occurred but they seemed to come too close together in this TV version, and I for one found this rather unsettling to watch   The book is better paced in my view. It is more detailed and flows at a more leisurely pace which thus allows you to get to know the characters a lot more.

Episode two started with the funeral of Barry Fairbrother.  Comedy-wise I thought actor Richard Glover as Simon Price stole the show once again.  Firstly, to advance his chances of getting elected on to the Parish Council he got all of his family members to cheekily put his election campaign leaflets on the pews before the mourners arrived.  I did laugh at his campaign slogans, full of building/DIY puns given that was his trade.  He also wore sunglasses with his funeral outfit which looked very funny. Howard Mollison(Michael Gambon) amusingly remarked how he looked like Tom Cruise from the film Top Gun.  I also found the coffin bearers which included Simon Price, struggling to carry the coffin and thus going off course highly amusing.

The identity of  ‘The Ghost of Barry Fairbrother’ was revealed to us and it turned out to be Barry’s doting nephew, namely Andrew “Arf” Price.  The ghost therefore is a force for good and is on Barry’s side.  His witty put downs of the election candidates made for much hilarity and served to stir the pot a little amongst the rest of the characters. For example, wet Miles Mollison(Rufus Jones) was appalled that the ghost referred to him as having ‘man boobs’.  My only criticism here is that as viewers we only got to see these sarcastic comments from ghost very fleetingly on screen.  I wanted to be able read these messages more than we were allowed too.

In the book I just about tolerated the character Stuart “Fats” Wall, but here on TV this Pete Doherty wannabe just wound me up too much.  He is too full of himself, too cocksure to even remotely like, and I just wanted to lamp him one throughout the episode. I didn’t find him wanking in the library funny either as I think I was meant too, I just found it rather weak. I could be wrong but I am sure this ‘wanking gag’ does not feature in the book and so instead must be an inclusion solely from screenplay writer Sarah Phelps.  We saw him become the boyfriend of Krystal Weedon’s(Abigail Lawrie) and again the depiction of their relationship troubled me in the episode last night.

In the book “Fats” is only interested in Krystal Weedon because she does not look that great,  and so he thinks this as well as her being a bit ‘rough’ will give him a good chance of getting regular sex with her. In the TV version Krystal is played by a pretty actress though and so I struggled with this and the version of Krystal I had in my head via the book. No disrespect to the actress Lisa Reilly but I thought of somebody like her as Krystal when reading it.  I wanted more explanation in the TV version as to why they hooked up together.  Krystal is more needy in the book and I think this accounts more for why she puts up with “Fats”.  They become regular teenage sex partners in the book whereas I think we only saw them at it once last night in the telly version.

The rest of the episode focused on Stuart Price frantically trying to get rid of stuff he had nicked from work(after being outed by the Ghost of Barry Fairbrother), and a disastrous dinner party held at the Mollisons. The former thing was amusing to watch.  In an attempt to cover his tracks it ended up with Stuart dropping an expensive television set off a bridge and into a lake, yet sadly for him it would not sink.  The dinner party brought together the rivaling factions of the Pagford Parish Council Committee.  It wasn’t long before a row broke about Sweetlove House which led to GP Sukhvinder Jawanda breaking patient confidentiality,  broadcasting to everybody how Howard had a belly rash due to being too fat!

A character who featured at the dinner party but who didn’t say much was Social Worker Kay Bawden(Michele Austin).  I am sat there watching it and suddenly thought to myself, I’m sure she has a boyfriend very early on in the book.  I was sure she was with a guy who just put up with her, he was a lawyer I thought.  I have since looked it up and I was right about her having a boyfriend in the book.  His name is Gavin Hughes and so I wonder why writer Sarah Phelps decided not to include him. The only thing I can think of is perhaps  TV time constraints being the reason for his exclusion. It is a shame in my opinion because via Kay’s relationship with him, we would then have seen a different side to her on screen.

I also did not really get the bit at the end where Howard gets into a state of paranoia after having a disturbing dream about Barry Fairbrother.  I thought it was a tad corny and did not add anything to the piece.

Despite some of my reservations and criticisms I still think episode two was an enjoyable watch though. It just wasn’t as good as the first episode. It ended a bit flat whereas the first episode ended on an exciting cliffhanger.  I also think some elements of the book were touched upon and dealt with too quickly at times.  At the moment I now prefer the book over the television version but all this could yet still change with one episode left to watch. I have read the ending in the drama is different to the ending in the book and I say hallelujah to that because the ending is weakest thing about the book.  I want to marvel about episode three like I like marvelled about episode one please, here’s hoping this time next week I shall be!

Posted in BBC, BBC DRAMA, BBC ORIGINAL DRAMA, BOOKS, death, DRAMA, EMOTION, grief, J.K.ROWLING, LITERATURE, POPULAR CULTURE, READING, screenplay, TELEVISION, THE ARTS, THE CASUAL VACANCY, TV, TV REVIEW, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

A CASUAL HIT! ‘The Casual Vacancy’ – episode one review.

Think The Vicar of Dibley with elements of Eastenders in it and you will pretty much have an idea of what the first episode of this new three part BBC1 drama was like.  The screenplay was written by Sarah Phelps and is based on the J.K Rowling adult novel The Casual Vacancy. I’ll start off by saying I loved it, in fact I will go one step further and say I absolutely loved it!

Having read the book a few years ago and having a mixed opinion of it, I was not completely sure what to expect as I sat down to watch the television version.  For example, I really enjoyed large parts of book but thought the ending was a big letdown.  My expectations were lukewarm you could say. I thought I am either going to really like this or really hate it.  To my delight and on the basis of just this first episode, I think Sarah Phelps has done a brilliant job with the writing of it.  I was caught a bit unawares at first because in the novel the Barry Fairbrother(Roy Kinnear) character dies more or less straight away, whereas here we did not see his demise until about half way through it.  In the book you only get to know this character after his death and so I think I preferred the television version.  His death had greater dramatic impact because we had witnessed just what a worthy altruistic person he was, he cared about disadvantaged people.

The action was set in a rural idyllic village called Pagford and this first episode centred largely on the rumblings of a local Parish Council meeting.  The legacy of Sweetlove House was at stake and was discussed with much consternation between members. There was the one camp led by snobs Howard and Shirley Mollison(played byMichael Gambon and Julia MacKenzie) who wanted it to stop serving people from the nearby council estate and become a new luxurious Spa, thus keeping such undesirables further away from their idylic Pagford.  The other camp was led by Barry Fairbrother who believed Sweetlove House played a vital role in helping serve those people in society who were most in need of help.eg drug clinics.  The vote ended in favour of Barry’s view and all seem fined, that was he until dropped dead and a casual vacancy subsequently arose.

I thought Michael Gambon stole the show as over bearing snob Howard Mollison.  I thought the scene where he more or less blackmailed his wimpy son Miles(Rufus Jones) to stand for election, was really funny.  Julia McKenzie was superb as his wife too, brilliantly irritating and snobby.  In fact I thought the whole cast in this first episode were brilliant.  I loved Barry’s psychopathic half brother Simon Price(Richard Glover).  He was unhinged, a bully to his kids and prone to violent outbursts, but he also had this comical edge to him.  I also thought the younger performers acted really well in too. Notably Simon’s son Andrew “Arf” Price(Joe Hurst) and his best mate Stuart “Fats” Wall(Brian Vernel).

It departed from idyllic The Vicar of Dibley terrority and went more gritty realism Eastenders, when we saw a drug addict storyline. We saw drug addict Mum Terri Weedon(Keely Forsyth) neglecting to look after her young child properly due to her habit.  Here J.K.Rowling’s leftist politics came to the fore as due to council budget cuts, social worker character Kay Bawden(Michele Austin) was prevented by her bosses from removing the child and putting him into care.  Writer Jan Moir in the Daily Mail criticised the book’s lefty politics by saying it was “500pages of the socialist manifesto”.  I think it was a silly over-the-top accusation then and it can not be applied to the TV version either.  Terri’s feisty daughter Krystal(Abigal Lawrie) also gave a strong performance I thought. She was like Whitney out of Eastenders but not half as irritating as that character or actress.

This first episode ended on a pulsating cliffhanger of sorts when we saw somebody pose as “The Ghost of Barry Fairbrother”.  We saw them leave a message on the Parish Council website underneath the section that documented Barry’s death.  It breathed new life into this already very watchable drama and I for one can not wait to see episode two this coming Sunday! A big CASUAL HIT for me!

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