Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueBased on the Neil Brand's critically acclaimed radio play of the same name, the drama follows Stan Laurel's last visit to his dying friend and comedy partner Oliver 'Babe' Hardy and Stan's s... Tout lireBased on the Neil Brand's critically acclaimed radio play of the same name, the drama follows Stan Laurel's last visit to his dying friend and comedy partner Oliver 'Babe' Hardy and Stan's subsequent coming to terms with the ghosts of his past.Based on the Neil Brand's critically acclaimed radio play of the same name, the drama follows Stan Laurel's last visit to his dying friend and comedy partner Oliver 'Babe' Hardy and Stan's subsequent coming to terms with the ghosts of his past.
Avis en vedette
Oliver Hardy (the fat one, for those who get the two mixed up) lies ill in bed, hanging on to life after a major stroke. Stan Laurel (not the fat one) is a man suffering under the weight of his own demons. Reluctantly, he comes to visit his ailing best friend - knowing it to be the last time he will ever do so. Together they broach the highs and lows of their shared history and reveal the fascinating story of their friendship and career together.
Jim Norton, playing the older Stan, was a revelation - why is an actor of this quality not doing more leads in more films????? There was also a seamless movement between the two time periods that was not only visually effective but emotionally effective. Neil Brand fills the film with superb detail but it is his handle on the emotional journey that proves the most successful aspect of his writing. By the final scene, this isn't Laurel and Hardy saying farewell, this is simply two best friends saying goodbye. As their final moment together arrives, I even had a tear in my eye - and that's a rare thing for me and TV drama.
True - I could have done with more exteriors and it is odd that Hardy lives in the same house all his life - but I suspect this was a budget thing (I could be wrong, who knows but I'll give them the benefit of the doubt) - and their device of keeping all the memories 'in a studio' and was a brilliant way of making a silk purse out of a sow's ear.
BBC4 have recently come up trumps with this kind of drama - the Kenneth William's biopic was the last thing I saw on this channel which was also good - and long may they continue to do so. Just why aren't the people who make this kind of film not making more for the terrestrial wing of the BBC whose dramas often lack the inventiveness and originality of this kind of work?
I have been a fan for more years than I care to remember and the whole thing rang very true, even the last scene with someone ringing him up and being invited over. How many great stars kept their entry in the phone book.
I heard some of it on Radio 4 last year and was delighted to see that it would be redone for TV and I was not disappointed.
Please don't let Hollywood anywhere near this, just show this little Gem
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesOriginally a radio play first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in the UK in March 2004, starring Sir Tom Courtenay as Stan Laurel
- GaffesBefore he suffered his debilitating stroke, Oliver Hardy had lost 150 pounds, and was (for him) quite svelte at the time he had the stroke.
- Citations
Babe: But essentially they're after the same thing, which they're unlikely to get, because the guy who thinks he's smart...
Young Stan Laurel: Is just as dumb as the other guy.
[both chuckle]
Young Stan Laurel: Well, nobody likes a smart Alec.
Babe: But, everybody loves a couple of guys they can feel superior to.
Young Stan Laurel: Well I always hated team games...
Babe: [speaking simultaneously] Hated team games, right? So, you wouldn't know the difference between one team and another. Well, they'res playing for a team and playing for a team that wins. That is the best feeling in the world, Stan. The chemistry flowing, always someone there to share the load with--and the glory. And you and I've got it, mister. We had it on day one, and we've got it now. You've just got to see it is all.
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Détails
- Durée59 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.78 : 1