6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- Great British Drama!!, 10 mars 2008
Author:
just-claire de United Kingdom
If there is one thing us brits can do, it's make a drama!!! Very good
with a great cast, lots from Kidulthood, which can't be bad. What
annoys me though is that while we're always making way for all the new
American shows, which are about as lifelike as The Kraken, the British
Dramas have a nasty habit of showing us a pilot episode that turns into
zilch!!! Beginning to think that we're being taken over by Americans,
but no one has thought to tell us. They did the same with Hex, gave us
2 series, and then ended it way before the story was over!! Anyway
enough moaning......its great to see that we obviously have a lot of
talent in our little Isle. Time and time again we produce fantastic
drama that is both believable and gritty. It might not always be very
pretty, but its very true to life, and deals with a lot of day to day
issues that in todays world we have to deal with. There are drugs,
vandalism, violence etc in all our lives now, even if its just from
reading the daily papers. I would definitely like to see more of what
Noel is capable of, as he has already shown what a versatile actor he
is, by appearing in completely opposite ends of the spectrum, namely
Kidulthood and Doctor Who, i mean how different can you get. More
British shows, bring it on!!!!!
2 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Superficial and screaming "youf" from every pore, 5 mai 2008
Author:
bob the moo de Birmingham, UK
After their last flat was destroyed by arson, Elisha, her mother and
her sister move into the W10 area of London. Within minutes Elisha has
had a box of personal effects stolen out of the car and sets out to
find it with whoever's help she can get. Meanwhile local rude boy Orin
finds himself in possession of drugs belonging to local gangsters and
trying to sell them on without getting hospitalised by the original
owners.
This one-off (probably) drama was part of the ongoing rebranding of
BBC3. Gone are the "magic number" blobs that so many students and
twenty-thirty somethings found cool and in comes loud "youf"
programming innit. W10 LDN got some faint praise in some of the papers
the weekend before it was shown so I decided to watch it but found
myself particularly underwhelmed by the whole thing and there seemed to
be little to it that wasn't on the surface. I'm sure in some regards
the dialogue, characters and setting are all very convincing but only
on the level of packaging. Take away the heavy style of the delivery
and let's look at the script for a while.
This doesn't take long because there is not much here. The characters
do not stand out as people and even less as people within this
environment. Yes they talk the words but there is nothing behind these
words to convince that they are not just reading them (which of course
they are). I hate to compare it to HBO's The Wire but I'm afraid once
you have seen that series it is hard not to use it as a frame for many
things; looking at the convincing scream of the underclass that The
Wire delivers effortlessly, you can see where this all falls down. The
film then quickly becomes about the two threads the search for the
box and the sale of the drugs. Neither thread is interesting or
engaging and just comes over as a way of dragging in as many
undesirable types into the story as possible.
I'll give Clarke credit for doing something with his fame but it would
have been better for him to done something smaller instead because this
seems to have gotten away from him. Walters and Hassan turn up for no
reason at all other than blind support. Madekwe is stunning no doubt
but her performance is too "feisty" and little "reality". Likewise
Henry, who is a cliché in every way that similar characters in The Wire
are not. The rest of the cast follow suit all very good at spitting
the dialogue but nobody able to go beyond that in any way.
Overall then this is a superficial and uninspiring British inner-city
drama that screams "youf" from every pore. Happy to just paint with
basic colours, Clark's script is clumsy and unsatisfying through,
giving nothing more than events for the cast to work with.
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6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

Great British Drama!!, 10 mars 2008
Author: just-claire de United Kingdom
If there is one thing us brits can do, it's make a drama!!! Very good with a great cast, lots from Kidulthood, which can't be bad. What annoys me though is that while we're always making way for all the new American shows, which are about as lifelike as The Kraken, the British Dramas have a nasty habit of showing us a pilot episode that turns into zilch!!! Beginning to think that we're being taken over by Americans, but no one has thought to tell us. They did the same with Hex, gave us 2 series, and then ended it way before the story was over!! Anyway enough moaning......its great to see that we obviously have a lot of talent in our little Isle. Time and time again we produce fantastic drama that is both believable and gritty. It might not always be very pretty, but its very true to life, and deals with a lot of day to day issues that in todays world we have to deal with. There are drugs, vandalism, violence etc in all our lives now, even if its just from reading the daily papers. I would definitely like to see more of what Noel is capable of, as he has already shown what a versatile actor he is, by appearing in completely opposite ends of the spectrum, namely Kidulthood and Doctor Who, i mean how different can you get. More British shows, bring it on!!!!!
2 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-
Superficial and screaming "youf" from every pore, 5 mai 2008
Author: bob the moo de Birmingham, UK
After their last flat was destroyed by arson, Elisha, her mother and her sister move into the W10 area of London. Within minutes Elisha has had a box of personal effects stolen out of the car and sets out to find it with whoever's help she can get. Meanwhile local rude boy Orin finds himself in possession of drugs belonging to local gangsters and trying to sell them on without getting hospitalised by the original owners.
This one-off (probably) drama was part of the ongoing rebranding of BBC3. Gone are the "magic number" blobs that so many students and twenty-thirty somethings found cool and in comes loud "youf" programming innit. W10 LDN got some faint praise in some of the papers the weekend before it was shown so I decided to watch it but found myself particularly underwhelmed by the whole thing and there seemed to be little to it that wasn't on the surface. I'm sure in some regards the dialogue, characters and setting are all very convincing but only on the level of packaging. Take away the heavy style of the delivery and let's look at the script for a while.
This doesn't take long because there is not much here. The characters do not stand out as people and even less as people within this environment. Yes they talk the words but there is nothing behind these words to convince that they are not just reading them (which of course they are). I hate to compare it to HBO's The Wire but I'm afraid once you have seen that series it is hard not to use it as a frame for many things; looking at the convincing scream of the underclass that The Wire delivers effortlessly, you can see where this all falls down. The film then quickly becomes about the two threads the search for the box and the sale of the drugs. Neither thread is interesting or engaging and just comes over as a way of dragging in as many undesirable types into the story as possible.
I'll give Clarke credit for doing something with his fame but it would have been better for him to done something smaller instead because this seems to have gotten away from him. Walters and Hassan turn up for no reason at all other than blind support. Madekwe is stunning no doubt but her performance is too "feisty" and little "reality". Likewise Henry, who is a cliché in every way that similar characters in The Wire are not. The rest of the cast follow suit all very good at spitting the dialogue but nobody able to go beyond that in any way.
Overall then this is a superficial and uninspiring British inner-city drama that screams "youf" from every pore. Happy to just paint with basic colours, Clark's script is clumsy and unsatisfying through, giving nothing more than events for the cast to work with.
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