DVD
The Singing Detective

Starring: Michael Gambon, Patrick Malahide and Joanne Whalley-Kilmer
BBC Worldwide Publishing

RRP: £19.99

BBCDVD1222
Certificate: 15
Available now


Wracked by a terrible skin disease, the once prolific author Phillip Marlow looks cynically back on life from his bed in a busy National Health hospital, fantasising himself into one of his own pulp thrillers as a crooning '40's detective enmeshed in a baffling murder case. But memories of his wartime childhood keep intruding. Unwillingly, Marlow agrees to talk to a psychotherapist - and, slowly, the clues begin to add up. But to what?...

From one of the great experimentalists of TV drama comes a compellingly original tour-de-force that mingles fantasy and reality with haunting popular songs of the 1940's. The award-winning The Singing Detective, critically acclaimed as Dennis Potter's masterpiece, is a dazzlingly entertaining and multi-layered mystery thriller with a distinguished cast.

I must be the only person alive over 30 who hasn't seen this before. This, rather odd, confession has been met by disbelief whenever I tell anyone. It's almost as if I'd said that I'd never seen Star Wars, or been to a football match in my life.

There are hints of racism in the early episodes and sexism, but then the views of Marlow are not supposed to be agreed with by the audience. He is a rude and arrogant man in the early episodes and this nasty side is designed to stop him letting people into his world.

As the clues mount up the viewer is drawn into Marlow's world. We live his paranoid fantasies and his childhood nightmares, until eventually we can separate fact from fiction.

There are plenty of familiar faces too, including Alison Steadman and two actors that later went on to play parts in James Bond movies. Patrick Malahide played the banker, Lachaise, in The World is Not Enough, and Thomas Wheatley played Bond's colleague, Saunders, in The Living Daylights.

Extras include audio commentary with director Jon Amiel and producer Kenneth Trodd; Close Up: Dennis Potter; Arena: Dennis Potter; Filmographies; Photo gallery; and Points of View.

These extras are well worth watching - especially the Arena and Close Up: Dennis Potter features. These go into all the sordid details of Potter's obsession with his female cast, as well as examining how his films often portrayed his sexual fantasies. The Points of View clips are worth watching for a tongue-in-cheek reminder of how funny the late Barry Took (who helped create classic radio comedy Round the Horne) really was.

A classic. Am I right? Or am I right?

Nick Smithson

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