Gransnet forums

TV, radio, film, Arts

Foyle...a new mini-series starts tonite!

(54 Posts)
papaoscar Sun 04-Jan-15 07:09:11

Can't wait.

Gracesgran Mon 19-Jan-15 21:11:27

I thought he did too Mishap.

I thought it was a very good last episode although I am very sad it has ended.

Mishap Mon 19-Jan-15 10:12:51

Oh - did he die? I thought he was the man speaking at Miss Pearce's funeral. They all look the same in their grey suits.

Katek Mon 19-Jan-15 09:08:40

*of times

Katek Mon 19-Jan-15 09:08:17

I presumed he was....was it because we didn't see his funeral that you thought that? I found myself curiously affected by the story of Elise and woke up a couple if tunes thinking about what risks these operatives took. Did they record Morse transmissions in those days? Seems a bit advanced.

Jane10 Mon 19-Jan-15 08:47:29

I thought he did. What makes you think he didn't? Have I missed something?

Mishap Sun 18-Jan-15 22:27:44

SPOILER ALERT - for anyone who has not yet watched the last episode.

How come the man (name forgotten) who was sitting the other side of the desk from Miss Pearce did not get blown to bits as well?

POGS Wed 14-Jan-15 17:18:18

Enjoyed the one concerning the St David Hotel.

It's a bit depressing to think the story line is just as apt for today. sad

rosequartz Sun 11-Jan-15 23:09:39

We have recorded it so that we can zip through the adverts (only about 1.5 hours then!) wink

rosequartz Sun 11-Jan-15 23:07:56

I went to a school nursery and my DM worked, albeit part-time. That was in the late 1940s/1950.
My friend's DM was an infant teacher at our school.

However, most of the mistresses at High school were single.

Mishap Sun 11-Jan-15 22:19:18

I find it hard to follow because they all sound the same and wear the same clothes. It takes me about half and hour to work out who is who. OH is not help - he doesn't know either.

I am fascinated by all the things that remind me how my grandmother's home was - the brown lino - and the crossover aprons - my gran wore one nearly all the time.

Charleygirl Sun 11-Jan-15 22:03:04

I agree, 2 hours was too long.

Jane10 Sun 11-Jan-15 21:29:25

Didn't much like tonight's episode somehow. Depressing. Some things just haven't changed much!

Lilygran Tue 06-Jan-15 21:55:21

petallus. What about the suffragettes? And the Bluestockings?

Deedaa Tue 06-Jan-15 21:38:39

I started at the grammar school in 1958 and we were certainly talking about equality then.

Feminist men may have been thin on the ground but when my mother was in the ATS during the war she had one CO who was very keen for the women he commanded to have a say in how things were done and to back them when other officers thought they had been a bit too liberated.

whitewave Tue 06-Jan-15 19:29:22

My grandmother was a feminist she was born in the 1890's

petallus Tue 06-Jan-15 19:24:59

Gracesgran i'm sure there were discontented women around in those days but the concept of feminism at a social level did not seem all that prevalent in my social circles in the 40s.

Not only that but women who became feminists in the 1960s (wasn't it later than that, the 1970s?) were only children in the era of Foyle's War.

papaoscar Tue 06-Jan-15 18:23:31

Foyle and Midwives have reminded me (painfully) what a very poor state post-war much of Britain was in.

Lilygran Tue 06-Jan-15 10:10:43

My complaint is that although it regularly pops up in historical dramas, the position of women at the time is just set dressing in most of them, like men wearing hats or everyone smoking all the time. For example, I grew up in the 1950s and it drives me mad when I hear some woman on television confidently state that married women couldn't go out to work but had to stay at home during the postwar period (or even the 1970s!) Most of the women I knew did have jobs, starting with the women who taught me from nursery up to university. It's a complex subject and deserves more than being used to lend authenticity to an otherwise bald and unconvincing narrative!

Iam64 Tue 06-Jan-15 08:55:46

Well said Gracesgran. Emancipation of women and the desire to get the monstrous regiments back in the kitchen is a recurring theme isn't it. Damn those noisy women who expect equality grin

Gracesgran Mon 05-Jan-15 23:44:44

I too was irritated by the feminist slant which I don't think was actually around in those days.

If you don't think there were any feminists after the war petallus and Grannyknot where do you think they all sprang from in the 60s. I should think there were quite a few feeling discontented about how they were treated. Interesting to hear about the closing of the free nurseries which had enabled women to work during the war.

Much of the feminist thinking came from the very working class (as they would see themselves) and the universities the educated, intelligent women of that era and built up to spill out as it did in the 60s so I think the programme was very true to the time. It was more the middle class bourgeoisie who wanted what they saw as a return to the "norm" and painted the picture of women in the kitchen with beautifully neat hair and immaculate apron waiting for her husband to come home and say goodnight to his wonderfully behaved children.

I do love the programme but it had to move on and change - the war is over!

Deedaa Mon 05-Jan-15 22:36:15

I may have to miss out on Foyles War as DH finds it boring!!! Very annoying as Michael Kitchen has always been on my list of the Top 5 TV Actors. He's one of those people who rarely appear in anything second rate. I first remember him years ago playing Branwell Bronte, then later on he did that lovely play where he was trapped on a train with a weird old lady ( Peggy Ashcroft?)

granjura Mon 05-Jan-15 15:06:51

Same here- I was surprised.

Agreed he is a brilliant actor, and so understated as said before- it would be truly wrong to 'replace' him.

It just shows how long wars and lies have been going on in the name of petrol. The allegations made about the UK GVT protecting German business men and exports of goods, etc, to help the Luftwaffe and German army were truly shocking.

merlotgran Mon 05-Jan-15 10:45:12

I had to google the Persia/Iran thing because I thought they'd got it wrong but apparently Persia became Iran in 1935!!

Mishap Mon 05-Jan-15 10:39:59

But Kitchen is such an excellent actor, and he has really made that part his own - I don't mind that he is a bit long n the tooth - so am I!

I have recorded the programme and will watch it again in order to try and work it all out.

annodomini Mon 05-Jan-15 10:25:24

The old man (Martin Crane - Frazier's dad) sussed Sam but his arrogant son didn't listen to him. But yes, the plot was somewhat confused. Why is it that superannuated detectives like Foyle and Frost are kept on for series after series when they should be relaxing in their carpet slippers?