Flickers (TV Mini Series 1980) Poster

(1980)

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8/10
Fun series -- and out on DVD now, by the way
TJW-33 September 2007
I rented the first two episodes from Netflix and was delighted to see them again after 25 years. As others have said, the chemistry between Bob Hoskins (Arnie Cole) and Frances de la Tour (Maud) really powers the show -- some of the subplots are a tad tedious. This was the first thing I ever saw Hoskins in and I've been a fan ever since. De la Tour hasn't been all that visible over the years, though she was also great in the comedy series Rising Damp (another one worth seeing again) and she had a small role in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (where she played the giant visiting French teacher).

Also memorable are Fraser Cains as Llewelyn, Arnie's long-suffering Welsh film projectionist, and Peggy Ann Wood as Maud's feisty Nanny.
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7/10
Good, but not a comedy
hitchcockkelly28 January 2023
It's good, but it's hardly what you'd call a comedy. The plot description I read made it sound like the Keystone Cops would show up. There is a little of that on the first disc, but most of the series is high drama, shouting, and pathos. Bob Hoskins plays Arnie Cole, an ambitious film distributor who's trying to become a producer. He enters a marriage of convenience with a rich socialite who has a kid "on the wrong side of the blanket" as he puts it. Their relationship has some charm, but the rest of characters are a nightmare. The comic, Corky Brown, is an aging, paranoid alcoholic who's barely holding his career and his marriage together. The Brewers, an acting family, are right out of "A Long Day's Journey Into Night". The leading lady of their first big film is an aging, coke addicted, diva right out of "Sunset Blvd." The director is a pompous pretender. Hoskin's girlfriend is shrill tramp. Not to mention that everything that can go wrong does go wrong. I thought I was going to get an ulcer just watching Arnie Cole. There is a LOT of unpleasant shouting. Like I said, it's good, but mostly at conveying why film making can be such a high stress dog-eat-dog industry.
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8/10
Flickers part of the Golden Age of television
gingerninjasz26 August 2023
It's amazing what you stumble across in the archives of television, and this 1980's TV series is a gem of a find. Set in the 1920's during the age of the Silent Movie, it is wonderfully evocative of it's era - not so much the sets or fashion of the era, but of the hard graft it took for ordinary people to make it in the movies and just to get things running. What makes it more appealing is that although the Roaring Twenties glamour of the Bright Young Things showed off the style and fashions of the time from the upper class point of view, here you get ordinary working class people and their all too real lives - something you don't always see in a production about the 1920's.

The series involves fleapit owner Arnie Cole (Bob Hoskins), who makes his living showing films to the picture going masses with his small group of workers; girlfriend Letty (Sherrie Hewson), heavy drinking but amiable driver Llewellyn (Fraser Cains) and the organist Violet (Sheri Shepstone). Realizing that cinema is going to be big, he decides that making movies is where the money is and decides to set up his own film company. Only trouble is, he has no money and the only one who has capital is Lady Maud (Frances De La Tour) and her brother Clive (De La Tour's real life brother Andrew), with Maud none too taken with Arnie, who she regards as a conman. However, despite having a smart head on her, Maud is still susceptible to flattery, but in this case it's the silver tongued charm of a chancer who leaves her pregnant. Stuck with a impossible situation she makes Arnie an intriguing offer - she will back his new idea, but in return he has to marry her. That he does sets this story in motion, but there are other storylines that add to the interest.

For a start, Arnie needs some stars and a director for the film, as well as a studio to make it in. Deciding that comedy is a sure thing to draw in the masses, they hire Corky Brown, a fading comic married to the beautiful Clara but with also the insecurities of being married to one, with him constantly suspicious of whoever she hangs around with and turning to alcohol to deaden the pain and the growing knowledge that his fame is beginning to fade. His agent is Max Legendre, who has ambitions to be a film director and proves shrewd enough in the contract negotiations, much to Arnie's chagrin as the film gets underway. Also involved are the Brewer family, who tag on the success of their young daughter Dotty in their bid for stardom themselves, despite the fact that Dotty is anything but Shirley Temple sweetness and is also now 16 years old! They also have a older daughter in Clara, who is tired of being overlooked by her family and has ambitions of her own to make it big. If this means having to pose nude for photographs to get noticed by the director and using the infatuated cameraman Percy Bowden to do so then she will, just so she can break away from her family in her bid for stardom. Meanwhile Percy is an understudy learning his trade who is given his chance to be cameraman for Arnie's studio is a surprising act of kindness from Corky. All of these need the studio and films to succeed, otherwise their one chance of stardom is likely to die with it.

What follows is all the trials and tribulations that can and did befall many first time film makers, from the temperamental director who succeeds in alienating the cast, a star name casting that proves older than thought and with delusions of grandeur (and a drug habit), plus an alcoholic has been who they struggle to keep sober enough to shoot the film. One of the reviewers described this as not really a comedy, and in one sense it is true (though it is very funny). It's a richly layered story that combines both comedy and pathos, detailing real lives and fears, with all the worries, jealousies and insecurities that exist in the industry with all involved with dreams of their own. While Corky laments both his failing marriage and career, he at least has had success. For the Brewer family, they are yet to taste it, which is why they pin their hopes so much on the daughter Dotty. What's so intriguing is that as the series progresses, the initially more likable and neglected daughter Clara becomes more selfish in her bid for fame, while by the end you appreciate the reason Dotty is so narky towards her family is that she is fed up of being a kid and wants to be seen as the adult she has become. The constant sniping between her and her father Jack is great fun, and Philip Madoc is very amusing as Jack, who when he is not trying to suppress the urge to throttle his daughter is trying to maintain a happy ship for his anxious and overwrought wife Lily (Sheila Reid). Although he has tried a number of times to leave her, he knows that she cannot cope without him.

There are many that shine in this, including Granville Saxton as Max Legendre the pretentious director, and Peggy Ann Wood as Maud's formidable Nanny, who is horrifed to see who Maud has brought home as her husband. But it is Bob Hoskins and Frances de la Tour who are the main stars of this, and the beating heart of this comedy drama is the uneasy relationship between the two. Much of the interest is that neither really know about the other when they enter a marriage of convenience, and the fun is in them learning about the other. Both are fiesty characters and there are plenty of fights that are great fun to watch. Arnie is a selfish character at times, driven by his ambition to set up his own film studio no matter what and looking for any means to raise money for his project. At one point he plans to sell Maud's house from under her, only to discover that Maud is no pushover. Yet he is also surprisingly considerate, such as the fact that he is prepared to take on Maud pregnant with another man's child. When he sees her at the hospital after she has given birth and she tells him next time she'll provide him with his own son he tells her that as far as he is concerned he is his son. It's a lovely moment, as is the scene when he sees her in her blue dress ready for a party and is unable at first to express how nice she looks. Their practice tango dance is also great fun, and the rapport of Hoskins and de la Tour is superb.

A special mention also for Fraser Cains and Sherrie Hewson. Cains plays Llewellyn, Arnie's sweet natured partner in crime who finds his loyalties tested by Arnie's many money making schemes alongside that of his admiration and consideration for Arnie's wife Maud. When Arnie asks him to bring back Lily to the studio, he eventually refuses due to his affection for Maud until Arnie explains that he has no intention of cheating on Maud. As for Hewson as Arnie's former girlfriend Lily, she gives one of her best performances here. Cruelly abandoned early on when they are rumbled by police filming at a racecourse, she is naturally angry at first when she hears Arnie wants her back for his new film. But she cannot forget the deep love she had for him and returns despite her better instincts in the hope that he wants her back, despite him now married and with a child. The scene where Arnie finally disillusions her is both compelling for his speech as it is heartbreaking to see Lily's hopes crumble at that moment and it is a superb piece of acting by Hewson that proves she is more than a Carry On comedy star.

Although there are occasional drops in tempo in episodes, this is a superb and funny comedy drama that manages to combine the two perfectly to make a richly rewarding series. Despite Arnie's character being a selfish so and so occasionally, you just will for him and Maud and their band of performers to succeed - not least because you have seen how hard they have had to work just to get where they are. And it remains compelling because of the drive and energy of the two main stars Hoskins and de la Tour, whose rapport and chemistry with each other just shines through. It's astonishing to think this is so rarely repeated, but as a comedy and a human drama of the 1920's it is as televisually important as it is heart warmingly funny and one that leaves you warm inside for the endurability of the human spirit.
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A total delight!
gary-1091 March 2001
This delightful series starts slowly, but hang on--its worth the ride. When Arnie Cole first meets Maud, she seems a total snob, but then she is devastated to find herself pregnant and the father wanting nothing more to do with her. Arnie will marry her and, in exchange, she will sponsor him in his desire to enter the Flicker business, first as an exhibitor, then as a filmmaker. Other characters enter the story, but the emphasis is always on Arnie and Maud. Their relationship changes and we believe it all. We start to like Maud more and more as we watch the changes in her character. The writing is great and the performances by Bob Hoskins as Arnie and Frances de la Tour as Maude are nothing short of wonderful. I wish they'd rerun this series or release it on video. If you get a chance to see it, jump!
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10/10
Just about perfect
copoll31 August 2002
This six-part Masterpiece Theatre comedy (!) is just about perfect.

The actors are extremely well cast and the roles are written with more depth than you see in 98-percent of all feature films. With each episode, the laughs come easier, the situations intensify and the characters become more and more like family. The emotional high point comes on a throwaway line, and it is perfect. Hoskins and de la Tour should have worked together many, many more times; they make a wonderful comedy team. A crime that this series isn't available on video: come on, PBS! I'll even pledge a membership if you make a FLICKERS DVD or VHS the premium! Hurry up, before my 20-year-old EP copy disintegrates!
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10/10
A Fantastic Series That Should Not Be Forgotten
sts-2628 June 2008
I was quite surprised to find this series in IMDb - I thought it was all but forgotten. Hurrah for the internet!

This series was the first in a set of great Masterpiece Theatre presentations. This is the set in chronological order (as I remember them): Flickers, Brideshead Revisited, Love in A Cold Climate, To Serve Them All My Days.

Flickers has distinction, not just because it was the first of the set, but also because it depicted a period just outside of the decadent two decades that existed between the wars. (I am a big fan of the twenties and thirties, and also of authors such as Wodehouse, E.F. Benson and Waugh, but I will be the first to say that the whole Lovely Wonderful Tortured Decadent Lost Generation thing has been done to death.)

The world depicted in Flickers - the "movie" industry of the early 20th century - is gritty, wild, bold and fresh. The characters are not nobles leading charmed lives or la-de-da middle-class prototypes working on their intellectual integrity, but working people. All the more interesting is the fact that the characters work in the embryonic industry, before concepts such as "film", "artistes" and "auteur" had popped into anyones head.

The series exploits, and squeezes some amazing esoterica and unique humor from, the historical detail of the period. And the cast is fantastic - real characters using their craft to depict real characters, not blank and blandly-pretty Actors engaging in the Method to evoke the essence....well, you get the idea.

I first saw this series the same year I discovered the New Wave, and I think this was very fitting; in terms of spirit and style, Flickers had more in common with the punky, jagged and recklessly-original late-seventies that with the too-cool-for-school eighties.
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10/10
A hilarious, warm, insightful case study of entrepreneurship
Tarasicodissa13 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Flickers has a delightful plot, deeply engaging characters, hilarious wit shading to drama in the final episode. But when I first saw it, I was struck by Arnie and Maud's struggle with the problems of a startup business in a startup industry. There is no body of experience to turn to so everyone is making it up as they go along.

You can see the ones who will prosper because they can improvise. Initially likable Clara Brewer (the pretty daughter in a sappy musical hall family act) turns into a starlet on the make.

Corky, a music hall slapstick comic whose one reelers were the initial bread and butter of the firm, is pushed into the background as Cole and Lejeundre move upscale to making real movies with plots. He doesn't have the talent to grow into "The Gold Rush" as Chaplin did.

Arnie and Maud will prosper because they can listen to each other and work well together. The love comes in time from this. They can also respond quickly to market change. I loved the scene where Arnie is initially furious at Legendre for spending so much money on a new movie. Maud mediates their quarrel. When Legendre explains that the technology and the market have outgrown slapstick one reelers Maud agrees and Arnie listens. If they play it safe and stick to what they know they will pushed onto the scrap heap like Mack Sennett. Betting the survival of their studio on trying to break into the rich end of the market is an enormous risk but it is a risk you have to take if you want to play with the big boys.
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One of the best flicks I've seen on PBS
robotadd28 November 2003
A total delight and very very funny. All the characters (especially Arnie and Maud) are believable and lovable. I was first introduced to Bob Hoskins in this film and have been an ardent admirer of his extraordinary talent ever since.

But whatever happened to Frances de la Tour?

Please bring Flickers back by re-run or by any other means. Would love to have my personal video or DVD.
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Joyous Spoof of Silent Films
drednm11 August 2017
This 6-part series is a joyous spoof of the beginnings of the British film industry with low-born Arnie Cole (Bob Hoskins) and sidekick Llewellyn (Fraser Cains) desperate to become filmmakers. Arnie is so desperate, he even forms a loveless marriage with a well-to-do spinster Maud (Frances de la Tour) to get the money to start his film company.

Many film "types" are spoofed, including the little comedian who's quite nasty in real life, the adult woman posing as a child star, the foreign-born auteurs, the great star who deigns to be in films ... for a price, and the unsung technical genius behind the camera who makes it all work.

Plot also shows what a cutthroat business it really was in those early years with sabotage and theft as usual business practices.

Driven by catchy music by Ron Grainer and star-making performance by Hoskins and De la Tour, the six episodes whiz by, leaving the audience wishing for more.

The subplot of the loveless marriage and how it grows makes the characters human and lovable.

Besides Bob Hoskins, Frances de la Tour, and Fraser Cains, there are many familiar faces in the large cast. Sherrie Hewson plays the hapless Letty, Andy de la Tour plays Maud's brother, Dickie Arnold plays Corky Brown, Jim Hooper plays Percy, Sheila Reid plays Lily, Philip Madoc plays Jack, Granville Saxton plays Legendre, Sheri Shepstone plays Violet, Peggy Ann Wood play nanny, Teddy Turner plays Eddy Marco, Joanna Foster plays Clara, and Maxine Audley plays the imperious Gwendolyn Harper.

Great fun. Not to be missed.
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