Penny Dreadful?

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Gob
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Penny Dreadful?

Post by Gob »

Before Hercule Poirot, Miss Marple and even Sherlock Holmes, there was Charles Dickens' Inspector Bucket. He may be less well-known and not possess the deductive brilliance of his successors, but in his plodding, dogged, methodical, clean-shirted way Mr Bucket is one of the all-time great detectives.

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In Bleak House, while others soak themselves in gin and criminality, the Inspector has his breakfast of tea, toast and marmalade before a day's work quietly, politely dredging up the truth from London's darkest depths.

Inspector Bucket is a central character in the BBC's ambitious new 20-episode series Dickensian, which starts tonight.



It's something of a cliche, but almost certainly true, that if Dickens were alive today then — ever the populist and an innovator — he would be penning scripts for TV soap operas such as EastEnders or Coronation Street.

That's where EastEnders scriptwriter Tony Jordan got this idea. What if, he wondered, 30 of Dickens' most memorable characters — out of the 989 named people across 16 novels and many short stories — were put into one fictional story, living in one street, jostling elbow-to-elbow? There would be all Dickens's favourite characters in a Victorian version of Albert Square.

So we have Ebenezer Scrooge from A Christmas Carol hoarding his ha'pennys, while next-door Fagin, the handkerchief thief from Oliver Twist, fries his evening sausages.

A few doors down, Mrs Gamp, the midwife from Martin Chuzzlewit, pickled in gin, bustles past the pub where the reprehensible Silas Wegg from Our Mutual Friend is balancing against the bar on his wooden leg.

The series doesn't just take liberties by removing the characters from their original novels, it also throws their timelines into chaos.

For example, Miss Havisham isn't the pale middle-aged jilted bride we know from Great Expectations, but a girl with a bloom in her cheeks, yet to fall in love. Lady Dedlock, from Bleak House, goes by her maiden name and is carefree in a decollete pink dress — quite unrecognisable from the buttoned-up, grieving recluse she will become.

What would Dickens himself have made of this ambitious mash-up? It's certainly ingeniously done and an admiring tribute — but he might cavil against another writer jumping on his bandwagon, as he did at the many pirates who borrowed his characters for their own books, plays and music hall turns in his lifetime.

Here's your indispensable guide to who's who, what to watch out for and how to be a Dickens know-it-all...
WHAT'S THE STORY?

The first of the 20 episodes, which each cost £500,000 to make, begins with an intriguing premise. What if the first three words of A Christmas Carol weren't 'Marley was dead', but 'Marley was murdered'?

Nothing like a murder at Christmas to hook audiences and no man better-placed to solve the crime than Bleak House's Mr Bucket.

There's no lack of possible culprits. Jacob Marley, remember, with his partner Scrooge, was a money-lender, and a man liable to make enemies.

'Your problem, Inspector,' says Scrooge to Inspector Bucket, 'will not be in discovering someone who hated Jacob Marley enough to kill him, but rather finding someone who didn't.'

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Bicycle Bill
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Re: Penny Dreadful?

Post by Bicycle Bill »

In America, we'd call it either 'fan-fiction', a 'reboot', or an 'alternate universe'; someone would have eventually presented the idea to Hollywood; and they would have thrown literally tons of money at it to make it into a major blockbuster movie featuring all-star actors and actresses and being helmed by some big-name director.  After first making sure that Bob Cratchit was going to be played as gay; Oliver Twist was a little orphan girl with lesbian (or at least bi-sexual) tendencies; and that at least 25% of the other characters had been converted to persons of color, of course.

And Dickens would have been counting his money, smiling smugly all the way to the bank.
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Yes, I suppose I could agree with you ... but then we'd both be wrong, wouldn't we?

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TPFKA@W
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Re: Penny Dreadful?

Post by TPFKA@W »

:funee:

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Lord Jim
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Re: Penny Dreadful?

Post by Lord Jim »

Inspector Bucket.
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Crackpot
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Re: Penny Dreadful?

Post by Crackpot »

leave it to a Brit to ignore C. Auguste Dupin. But then again he was before Inspector Bucket.
Okay... There's all kinds of things wrong with what you just said.

Fafhrd
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Re: Penny Dreadful?

Post by Fafhrd »

Lord Jim wrote:
Inspector Bucket.
That's "Boo-kay!"

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Lord Jim
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Re: Penny Dreadful?

Post by Lord Jim »

Fafhrd wrote:
Lord Jim wrote:
Inspector Bucket.
That's "Boo-kay!"

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