| Index | 9 reviews in total |
18 out of 18 people found the following review useful:
No biography!, 1 July 2003
Author:
McGonigle from bean world, massachusetts
This miniseries is a fitting capstone to a brilliant and unique career.
In
Karaoke, Dennis Potter gave us a heartbreakingly personal look at the end
of
Daniel Feeld's life; A writer of surreal musical miniseries for TV feels
like he is losing control over his written work, both literally (as his
words break free and get spoken by real people surrounding him) and
metaphorically, as the director of his latest screenplay tries to
refashion
it in his own image.
In Cold Lazarus, the situation is somewhat reversed. The setting and
basic
storyline are, by comparison to Karaoke, quite impersonal. The sci-fi
"dystopia" is well done and entertainingly campy, with some real strokes
of
brilliance (the "Reality or Nothing" terrorists who fight the media's
dominance), but it's hardly as personal or unique as a typical Potter
drama's set-up.
But ironically, the struggle that Daniel Feeld (now only a head, frozen
for
four hundred years) faces in Cold Lazarus is far more personal, as he
literally loses control of his own life and is forced to re-live his own
painful memories, without the ability to edit them or filter them through
his own creative processes.
The metaphor is set up for us by Feeld's dying words, which we hear in
the
first segment: "No biography". While Dennis Potter always drew from his
own
life to a large degree in his writing, he apparently did not relish the
idea
of other writers attempting to pick through his real life.
Fortunately for us, though, he was (as always) not nearly as reticent
about
interpreting or re-casting his own life for us. As a contrast to the
sci-fi
sequences, he presents us with our final glimpse of childhood in his
beloved
Forest of Dean, in a series of flashbacks that may even as personal as
any
of the similar scenes in The Singing Detective.
The first time I saw Cold Lazarus, it didn't really grab me, but since
seeing it a second time, its story and ideas have stuck in my brain to a
huge degree. As I say, it is truly a fitting "final opus" for one of the
most distinctive and creative writers of the 20th century; hopefully one
day
soon, this work (and many more of Potter's creations) will be available
on
DVD.
11 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
An amazing accomplishment by Dennis Potter., 7 May 2000
Author:
(jim@bassworks.com) from Thousand Oaks, CA, USA
I consider Dennis Potter's "The Singing Detective" the best thing ever to
appear on TV. "Karaoke-Cold Lazarus" are contenders for second place. It is
vital to see Karaoke first because Dennis Potter wrote them as a part of a
whole.
Potter racing against the clock to finish Lazarus before he died. They are
funny, weird, mysterious and profound -- a rare combination for any medium.
It helps to know a bit of Potter's bio to fully appreciate the depth of
this
accomplishment.
My favorite moment came when slimy TV producer Siltz exults in the
opportunity to own a writer's mind (literally) in order to exploit it. I
can
imagine the smile on Potter's face when he first conceived that scene,
seeing it as a metaphor for his showbiz struggles with the Siltzes of the
world.
Anyone who appreciates great writing will love this. Dennis Potter wrote a
brilliant script about his own death. I doubt anyone will top his feat for
a
long time.
11 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Stendahl's comment:, 20 January 2000
![]()
Author:
ryokan-2 from US of Amnesia
Stendahl's idea that fiction holds more truth than any written "history" is, or will be, aptly applied to Dennis Potter's _magnum opus_, "Cold Lazarus." Even recent merger news makes the "Total Universal Entertainment Corporation" seem more a reality, as does the recent "State of the World" report. We've much to learn from our artists, the fewer there are, day by day. All those who love literature should be grateful that such a one as Dennis Potter left us these gems for television, among the few there have ever been, or will be.... Look upon "Cold Lazarus" with a somber and reflective mind, for the future is by no means, "out there...."
11 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
An excellent Sci-fi story of a future to come, 23 July 2001
![]()
Author:
sonofhades (sonofhades@hotmail.com) from Earth, 3rd planet of system Sol
This story is a very good story in itself and if you've seen the story
(behind Lazarus) you will get even more out of the serie. I enjoyed this
"realistic" sci-fi stuff more than most of the hollywood style
bang-boom-big
explosion kind of action sci-fi.
But I must warn you, if you hate each and every drama movie, go watch
something else. All other people should watch this one.
11 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
Video release info., 1 December 2004
Author:
r3d373 from UK
I remember seeing both Karaoke and Cold Lazarus a few years ago and
recently wished to watch them again.
As it was co-produced by the BBC and Channel 4 they arranged to screen
them con-currently across both channels.
I have searched but can not find any information on a video release of
them. So I contacted both television companies regarding a possible
release but they both replied with the same answer. There are no plans
for a commercial release of either and probably will never will be. I
can only hope that sometime it the future they'll decide to share such
a masterpiece.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Very interesting..., 16 January 2007
![]()
Author:
johannes-kemppanen from Finland
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This mini-series was shown on Finnish TV on last Christmas. What
brought me to watch it was a picture on a TV guide magazine and the
premise: "scientists are trying to recover memories from a frozen
head." OK... As a fan of sci-fi in general I did some searching on the
Web and was impressed enough to decide that I would spend some 4 hours
of my precious Christmas holiday watching this one. I wasn't
disappointed.
Cold Lazarus tells the story of a group of scientists in the future who
are trying to recover memories from a hundreds-of-years old frozen
severed head of a screenwriter Daniel Feeld, a character who was
introduced in the earlier mini-series "Karaoke". (Which was also shown
on the day before "Cold Lazarus") The man died to cancer in "Karaoke",
but apparently he decided to get his head frozen.
The future world is a truly strange place where giant media empire
controls the people. It seems truly unethical to make entertainment
from a dead man's most painful memories. (Including very disturbing
images of sexual abuse as a child.) Then there was also this group
called RON (Reality Or Nothing) who fought with weapons against the
media. Interesting analogy to today.
Technical quality was overall very good. The special effects were fine,
although some set pieces and especially props had a "cheap" look on
them. That didn't bother me too much.
"Cold Lazarus" is always worth watching.
3 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Parts OK - parts unwatchable, 11 March 2008
![]()
Author:
Spydy (mickp@iinet.net.au) from Australia
I'm a big fan of British TV and this series sounded as though it was
going to be right up my alley.
While the parts with the scientists were fine enough, too much time was
spent with "Martina" the American financier - her bits were absolutely
unwatchable, contained zero entertainment or interest value and
effectively torpedoed what would have otherwise escaped as a passable
sci-fi yarn.
Perhaps this could be remade with more focus on what makes the story
interesting.
3 out of 10
0 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Rot, 24 May 2007
![]()
Author:
(neongen@webtv.net) from USA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
First I'll write that Karoake is great, this follow-up is crap. The dialogue, characters, casting sets and plot all stink. Worse it makes a muddle of Karoake , which seemed to be an outstanding story on the nature of reality....how was Feeld affecting "real world" events ? Cold Lazarus never answers this and dwells on societal control of substitutes for things such as cigarettes and coffee ( tho never touching on why this should be important to the "ruling powers") ..crap. CL never explains how Feeld affected reality in Karoake, but throws in his twin brother's history in some meaningless way that does not settle the questions raised by Karoake at all.Cheap claptrap. What did Feeld say at the end ?
1 out of 18 people found the following review useful:
Feeble, 22 June 2006
![]()
Author:
artwk from Australia
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
I am not a fan of Dennis Potter, although I believe that he could have
produced good work if the producers of his TV series had been less
indulgent, and had forced him to cut his scripts in the interest of
wit, point, and (above all) brevity.
I once sat through "The Singing Detective", which was not bad apart
from the umpteen pieces of repeat footage. I even endured the Bob
Hoskins version of "Pennies From Heaven", which I thought would never
end, and which was padded out with surely every third-rate song from
the 1920's. At least half of it should have been left on the
cutting-room floor. The shortened film version starring Steve Martin
and Bernadette Peters was a perfect validation of the adage "Less is
more".
In another piece Potter used grownups in the roles of children. This
was a good basic idea, but he did nothing inventive with it. I found it
as watchable as a one-joke comedy.
Some of Dennis Potter's other pieces were so dull and slow-moving that
I gave up after ten minutes. But none was a feeble as "Cold Lazarus",
in which it was proposed that all records of past history had been
inexplicably lost (HOW?), and in which one character came up with a
BRILLIANT (?) idea for a new TV series, which clearly was nothing more
than a rehash of those old mystery/horror TV series produced by Rod
Serling and others.
Maybe Dennis Potter had never watched TV back in those days. A pity,
because he could have learned a lot.
| Plot summary | Ratings | Awards |
| External reviews | Plot keywords | Main details |
| Your user reviews | Your vote history |