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| Index | 13 reviews in total |
19 out of 20 people found the following review useful:
Nostalgia, 14 May 2001
Author:
Malcolm Murray from London, England
I still hold firmly to the belief that the last episode of this landmark
show is the best 40 mins of British TV drama ever. Any number of storylines
coming sharply to a head, the terrific wedding reception with its toilet sex
and terrible dancing, darkest secrets coming horrifyingly to light and the
legendary punch. But how sad! If we'd known then that there would never be
another series we would have stormed the BBC ourselves. But think positive.
The show is endlessly rewatchable, and its influence has lived on in Queer
as Folk, Attachments, Teachers, Metropolis, Tinsel Town and most
contemporary drama since.
Just please, please publish the damn scripts!
17 out of 20 people found the following review useful:
Even better than the real thing, 9 January 1999
Author:
anonymous from Stockholm, Sweden
When the last episode of the second series of This life was over and done with I sat in front of the tv and really felt as if I lost not one, but several close relatives in an accident or something. This Life gave us several of the finest moments in tv-drama. Ever.
10 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Sparkling acting highlights juicy drama/comedy., 9 December 1999
Author:
ldeorio from Philadelphia
A near-perfect study of life's transitional period between careless partying and responsible adulthood, this addictive British series touches a nerve with anyone who's waged that cumbersome battle. The absorbing characters and first-rate acting draw the viewer in until you feel like you want to jump into the fray yourself. Don't miss this on BBC America.
12 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
best tv show around, 20 December 1998
Author:
Catherine from kent
This must be, by far, the best television show ever to have been made...it's 'hand held camera' approach makes it more realistic, and the storylines are very believeable. The writers are not afraid of trying anything, from homosexuality, to bulemia, to alcoholics. Everybody has a favourite character, mine being Warren and you feel like you know the cast. I was devastated when I heard that they were not going to make a third series, but in a way, I am glad that they finished where they did. Other shows run out of ideas, but keep on going, creating ridiculous storylines, and that is what they are remembered for, but This Life stopped while it was ahead. It will be remembered for its genuine plots, and not for going downhill taking its reputation with it. I would recommend everybody to watch This Life as it's brilliant!
9 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Better second time around, 16 August 2000
Author:
Britlaw from London UK
This has just finished a repeat of the whole series in the UK, being shown
late every week night during the summer. It is amazing it was first shown
nearly five years ago and has been finished over three years now. This has
brilliant and believable scripts, tight storylines told with economy, all
played with great panache.
Nearly every actor has gone on to better things, if there could be anything
better than this, Jack Davenport to Hollywood films, Daniela Nardini into
several very good homegrown dramas and Andrew Lincoln does the voiceovers
for about 50% of British ads.
The final episode has to be the most satisfying piece of television ever and
the final scene of that episode made it into the top 100 TV moments of the
Millennium as voted by the UK's Channel 4 viewers.
As a piece of British life in the mid-Nineties it will probably become an
icon of the period. As a lawyer myself, the legal scenes were spot on, as
befits the author's origins. They left this at the top, and rightly so as
anywhere from that final scene would have been down hill.
11 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
Mixed feelings about this important British drama series..., 21 May 2002
Author:
Tom May (joycean_chap@hotmail.com) from United Kingdom
Ah, now here's a series I am in a few minds about, and that I have changed
my mind over over time. I feel that the seemingly universal tide of praise
this show gets needs a little tempering.
It was generally well written, but rarely brilliant. The acting likewise was
mostly good in a naturalistic way, with Andrew Lincoln good as Egg, veering
between genuinely likeable and a little irritating, Jason Hughes as Warren
proving the making of the show in many ways; a well-written gay character
impressively acted. Definitely pointed the way to "Queer as Folk" to some
degree. Daniella Nardini was of course, a delicious, refreshing presence,
though I do feel the character became a bit of a self-parody in some of the
later episodes of the long Series Two. Likewise to some extent, Miles
becomes less interesting as the overlong Series Two goes on, though overall
Jack Davenport does a good job in portraying an infuriating, smug cad.
Natasha Little I do like, but then that's my own peculiar penchant for her
strangely alluring ice maiden, the subtle "bitch" they just call "Rachel"...
;-)
On the whole it was good ensemble acting, certainly a lot better than in the
shows imitating "This Life".
While you may feel it a mite unfair, I would bring up the show's influence
on British TV since it finished in 1997, with endless shows hung up over
largely Southern middle-class repellants. Largely, these shows have duller
characters and more annoying dialogue than "This Life", and I am talking
"Teachers" and that neurotic, depressing, incredibly po-faced, glorified
soap "Attachments". Only "Queer as Folk" can stand as a good programme, but
then that was in many ways a far more groundbreaking series than "This
Life", even if it too did suffer some diminishing returns with its follow-up
special. Suffice it to say that the writers and actors of "This Life" have
been involved in quite a few things since, but well, not too many TV
programmes I can put names to. Amy Jenkins, the show's creator, but not
actually the script writer of too many episodes, has claimed a large amount
of the credit for it, and went on to do some badly received work in the film
and novel fields.
It certainly is a question; how groundbreaking was "This Life"? I doubt you
could say it alone "led the way" in breaking more taboos as regarding
language, sexuality and sex itself, though perhaps it became in a sense "the
programme of a generation", attracting a youth audience that perhaps hadn't
been so targeted by drama series before. Oh, and of course, it "pioneers" in
jerky, neurotic camerawork. Pioneering perhaps in the context of British TV
drama, but then what about Woody Allen's 1992 film, "Husbands and
Wives"?
Mention of that film indeed prompts me to reflect that "This Life" lacked a
sustained wit... yes, at times Anna and Warren are witty characters in a
waspish vein, but... well, I suppose this goes with the territory of drama
that is primarily going for realism, trying to capture the behaviour of
mid-twenties professionals. I do get the impression that "This Life" will to
some extent date, and will not have quite the same impact as it did on a
first viewing, back in 1996-97.
I was a massive fan of it then, but can now see its faults a little more
objectively. Series One I believe still stands up very well, with the show
still fresh and unlike Series Two, actually focusing a bit on their actual
work as lawyers, rather than just their personal lives. When Warren leaves
in Series Two it goes downhill, with perhaps the endless agonizing of Milly
over Rachel and some newer characters not quite interesting so much. I feel
it became too much of a superior middle class soap, too predictable and set
in its ways.
Yes, the last episode is a corker in many respects. It actually does tie it
up in a satisfying manner - where *would* it have gone from there?! Though
that's not quite so compelling a question as with "Twin Peaks"' ending. It's
a fine, revitalizing episode to the series, but by no means one of the few
best episodes of UK TV television - heck, has no one seen "The Singing
Detective", "Edge of Darkness", "The Prisoner", "Shooting the Past", "GBH"
or "Brass Eye"?
Anyway, while I would certainly accept that "This Life" defined a particular
era in a way, it was a limited drama series, certainly no work of genius or
great invention. Good television, but perhaps not so lasting
television.
Rating:- *** 1/2/*****
6 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
"This Life" is real life without the boring bits!, 28 October 1998
Author:
rossif from Brisbane Australia
This is one of the most addictive, amusing and involving TV
series I have yet seen. It has a kind of cultish appeal, and I
know a lot of people who follow it closely and discuss each
weekly installment as if it was real life. That's the key I
think. This series is based in reality. A group of very
different personalities share a house in South London and the 2
year story shows their growing relationships and their
interraction with various friends and colleagues mainly in the
legal profession. It's fairly graphic stuff with sex in
various forms, nudity, bad language and drug use presented in a
very matter of fact way. The characters are believable and
appealing despite the warts and all presentation, and the lines
are often bitingly clever. Daniela Nardini as Anna gets the
best lines by far, delivered in a wonderful Scottish brogue for
maximum effect. All good things must come to an end however and
the series concludes with the happy group disintegrating after a
massive row. But it was good while it lasted. What a
stunning, intelligent and
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Postscript: This Life +10, 3 January 2007
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Author:
Tom Clarke (tjcclarke@hotmail.com) from http://www.amateurscribe.webeden.co.uk
Part of what made This Life such a landmark television series was its
uncompromising trendiness its utter refusal to comply with standard
dramatic devices. The shaky camera, the rough cuts, the sex and the
swearing were genuinely ground-breaking, which is why Amy Jenkins'
decision to make a one-off comeback 10 years on has just a tinge of
sell-out about it. I suppose this is how die-hard Beatles fans felt
when Paul McCartney released the Frog Chorus.
Still, getting a glimpse of the whole "what happened next?" thing is
always intriguing. In This Life +10 the group of law graduates reunite
for gay biker Ferdy's funeral. The cause of his demise remains
unexplained (maybe Ramon Tikaram was busy that day) though we do learn
that he got it together with Welsh milksop Warren (Jason Hughes) in the
years following the end of the series.
It is swiftly apparent however that the five original housemates have
drifted apart: Anna (Daniella Nardini) is the only practising lawyer
and has quickly motored up the ranks of high-class defence attorneys;
Miles (Jack Davenport) has acquired a country mansion, a hotel business
and a Vietnamese bride; Egg (Andrew Lincoln) has written a best-selling
novel based on the gang's experiences and is still with Milly (Amita
Dhiri) who has popped a sprog; and Warren is dealing with Ferdy's death
admirably thanks to his burgeoning career as a life coach/self help
guru.
Egg's status as a celebrity author prompts a sexy young filmmaker to
organise a reunion between the flatmates at Miles's stately pile as
part of a fly-on-the-wall documentary, and this is where the faintly
absurd amateur psychology and pent-up tension begins to emerge.
But, hey, this is a study in recent social history after all and
Jenkins just about gets away with the clichéd set-up largely thanks to
the edginess of the group dynamic (which is still as well observed as
ever) and the chemistry between Lincoln and Davenport whose old buddy
routine provides just about the only realistic friendship of the whole
lot of them.
Frankly the whole project is little more than an excuse to drum up the
old neuroses and insecurities that plague those trying to come to terms
with lost youth: Career woman versus housewife? Playboy versus
responsible adult? Clapham Common cottager versus weird, over-analysing
sperm donor? They are the identity crises that face us all
Still there is much to enjoy. The soundtrack to Egg's ostentatious
cooking routines and the group's booze-fuelled slanging matches has
shifted from Massive Attack and Portishead to The Killers and Kaiser
Chiefs the use of contemporary music once again proving integral to
This Life's success - but, in a nice conceit, as the action comes to a
climax, the whole gang dance around like middle-aged loons to the Manic
Street Preachers. Clearly these are nineties children at heart.
Whether intentional or not, there is a spooky symmetry between the
fates of the characters and their real life alter egos. Miles's success
in industry and Egg's fame mirror the career paths of Davenport and
Lincoln who clearly didn't need this nostalgic trip down memory lane as
much as the others and it is a tribute to their evident respect for
Jenkins and the original series that they agreed to the reunion at all.
The biggest problem with the show has always been empathy. These people
are egotistical, hopelessly unstable and borderline unlikeable - but
they perfectly bring out the screwed-up wretch in all of us. One can
easily forgive Jenkins her indulgence, for This Life +10 is a triumph
of reminiscence and guilty pleasures.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Outstanding (contains spoilers), 27 July 2000
Author:
Dodger-9 from York
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Few dramas of the Nineties proved to be as memorable as Amy Jenkins'
creation.
Inspired by her own days as an aspiring lawyer, it centres on a band of
upwardly mobile mates all sharing a house in London.
Drink, drugs and bad language abound, along with a soundtrack to die for.
Tightly scripted and beautifully cast, it was the show which gave the world
sexy Scots icon Daniela Nardini (Anna) and The Talented Mr Ripley's Jack
Davenport (Miles).
The ever bickering old flames provided much of the show's electricity,
although there were a few sparks provided by Milly (Amita Dhiri) when she
had a fling with her ultra-cool boss O'Donnell (David Mallinson).
Most fans were heartbroken when the show's creators, Island World, decided
against a third run but executive producer Tony Garnett had learnt his
lesson after making seminal early Nineties series, Between the Lines.
The far from electrifying third run of that show ensured that he'd never
milk a drama if the material wasn't there. For that we should be grateful as
TL remains a short-lived gem which, like a fine bottle of wine, is good to
the last drop.
5 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Top Quality TV, 3 December 1999
Author:
steve.barry
There could have been no duller a subject to touch than young Solicitors
and
their shared house in Southwark. However, the reality was a unique
snapshot
of two years in the life of drug-taking, hyper-sexed twenty-somethings.
The only downside to the two series', was that they never made a
third.
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