Christmas telly

fogfog
edited January 2014 in Chit chat
well it's almost over... used to be a big event back in the day.... how many re-runs of raiders of lost ark / star wars did we see as a kid ? that and the only time of the year tv times sold shed loads

so what did you think of this years offerings?

me..

dr who... same as usual , bit lazy and I wasn't overly bothered
eastenders.. think it'll never match the den & angie xmas thing.
still open all hours ..so so, nothing amazing.. it really did miss Ronnie being there
sherlock... hopefully will be good..
mrs brown.. I think is a real marmite type show... from an irish background, and I find some of my relatives more funny.
Post edited by fog on
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Comments

  • edited January 2014
    'rare exports - a christmas tale' on film four

    dvds and downloads ruin the big movies at chrimbo, so nice to find a great film ive not seen before.
  • edited January 2014
    mostly trash as per for me but then I'm not a big telly person...just found Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade which is pretty cool
  • edited January 2014
    Mostly rubbish.

    Unfortunately you can't compare christmas tv today with tv 20 years ago because the big films are now available on dvd, streaming serices and sky etc years before they are available on the telly.

    There are also too many tv channels and schedulers cant fill time with original programs cos theres so much time to fill - hence all the repeats of two day old programs.

    Finaly.there are no really big tv programs anymore, beyond so called reality tv. Which is why morecambe and wise are still on the telly - cos frankly theres nothing to equal them :)
  • edited January 2014
    Not watched any... when does the darts start on the BBC?
  • edited January 2014
    Mostly rubbish, like most years, but this year stood out for me as being particularly lacking.

    We didn't really watch anything as it was broadcast, then caught up on Call the Midwife and Downton Abbey which the missus enjoys watching, and I could take or leave. We also watched Still Open All Hours, which indeed was just so-so.

    Nothing else springs to mind.
  • edited January 2014
    We recorded a few things. Maybe 4 or 5 hours. Not watched any of it though.

    Best thing we've actually sat down and watched was Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz.
    Oh, no. Every time you turn up something monumental and terrible happens.
    I don’t think I have the stomach for it.
    --Raziel (Legend of Kain: Soul Reaver 2)

    https://www.youtube.com/user/VincentTSFP
  • edited January 2014
    Loads of football. Yay. And more tonight. Double yay.

    Not really watched much else. Police Academy 6 on itv4 later is tempting though :-)

    VincentAC wrote: »
    Best thing we've actually sat down and watched was Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz.

    great films. Noticed they seem to get repeated on freeview about once a week for some reason.
  • edited January 2014
    Most people I've spoken to over the festive period have, without prompting, starting the 'Christmas telly' conversation off by saying how bad it had been.
  • Don't watch much telly cos it's mostly crap. From what I can see Christmas telly is no better or worse than the rest of the year.
  • edited January 2014
    I liked a couple of the ghost stories/thrillers the BBC's had on - the Tractate Middoth and the Thirteenth Tale.

    Apart from that we've just been watching films really - the usual animated stuff like Kung Fu Panda 2, but we're also educating our kids with old 80s stuff - Who Framed Roger Rabbit this morning, Short Circuit yesterday, and I'm just grabbing Flight of the Navigator now :)

    Oh and I managed to stay up last night, not to see in the New Year, but to watch The Plank :D

    Looking forward to Sherlock in a few minutes.
    The comp.sys.sinclair crap games competition 2015
    "Let's not be childish. Let's play Spectrum games."
  • edited January 2014
    Not watched any... when does the darts start on the BBC?

    It's on, but not for long, van Gerwen is pasting Wright, lol
    So far, so meh :)
  • edited January 2014
    Only watched Doctor Who, which was rather fabby, and Still Open All Hours, which was pretty much the same as ever. Otherwise it's catching up on Boxsets n films.

    We watched...

    All of Series 8 of Supernatural. Excellent stuff.
    All of Series 1 of Buffy. MUCH Better than I remember it.

    The Green Lantern. Very Good.
    Terminator Salvation. Best film of the series by far, and one that's certainly staying on the shelf for a while.
    GI Joe: Rise of Cobra. Sort of okay but annoying.

    Oh and some dodgy alien invasion film that looked as though it'd been filmed on a fuji fine-pix. Ummm, yeah okay.
  • zx1zx1
    edited January 2014
    Most of it was rubbish but there was a few good films on such as Shaun of the dead and Superman:grin:
    And why every christmas do the BBC insist on showing Morecome and Wise, they are simply not funny anymore.
    The trouble with tribbles is.......
  • edited January 2014
    Was happy to see some M R James stuff on...but have still to watch it!

    Dr.Who was alright but a bit rushed...could have done with being a couple of hours long that one..

    Still Open All Hours was a bit meh, but then it always was...definitely missed Ronnie Barker though!

    Spent most of the rest of the time forced to watch Quest or Pick TV on the digi-box, as my dad took control of the TV this year...so I mostly went out or played Xbox...
  • edited January 2014
    VincentAC wrote: »
    We recorded a few things. Maybe 4 or 5 hours. Not watched any of it though.

    I find I do that. And then a month or so later when the drive gets filled up I delete most of it without watching it. It saves me a lot of time. If only I could speed up the deleting process I could save even more :)

    Also, when a new TV series comes out that I think might be of interest I record it for the first month or so and if none of my friends have mentioned it by then I know I've avoided wasting a few hours on it, and if they all say it's great I've not missed out :). This will continue to be a viable strategy as long as they don't all do the same thing.
  • edited January 2014
    Saboteur wrote: »
    Mostly rubbish.

    Unfortunately you can't compare christmas tv today with tv 20 years ago because the big films are now available on dvd, streaming serices and sky etc years before they are available on the telly.

    There are also too many tv channels and schedulers cant fill time with original programs cos theres so much time to fill - hence all the repeats of two day old programs.

    Finaly.there are no really big tv programs anymore, beyond so called reality tv. Which is why morecambe and wise are still on the telly - cos frankly theres nothing to equal them :)

    Xmas TV is always going to be crap compared to when we were kids (the 80's) for the exact reasons you have mentioned here. Well summed up. I have had this conversation with various work colleagues over the last decade or so, and my answer is pretty much identical to yours. We just have to accept that things have changed.

    However, as I now have two young kids, I hardly go to the cinema any more, so some of the "big Christmas films" were new to me! Some stuff was OK. It just has to be spotted among all the repeats and crap.
    '79:PrinztronicMicro5500> '83:Spec(48K)> '84:Spec+(kit)> '86:Spec128> '88:ST> '90:A500> '93:A1200> '93:SNES> '95:PS1> '99:PC> '02:PS2> '05:Xbox> '12:Xbox360> '14:PS4 XboxLive:messy73, PSN:mrmessy73, YouTube:mrmessyschannel
  • edited January 2014
    I can honestly say we didn't watch anything at all over Christmas.

    Caught up on a few programs that had been recorded like Jungle Gold & American Pickers on Discovery and History.

    Got a free movie rental off Sky so on Boxing Day evening we watched Elysium which me and my wife really enjoyed.

    Sky finally shown the last episode of Moaning of Life so watched that and then received the Bluray for Christmas!

    We have recorded Moonfleet off Sky1 but have still yet to watch it, may stick that on tonight.

    Other than that we have watched a few Christmas movies like Fred Claus, Muppets Christmas Carol, Nightmare Before Christmas & Scrooged on either Netflix or DVD, think watching those were more sentimental and only our eldest daughter who is 16 watched them with us.

    Missed Still Open All Hours (completely forgot about it) when it was on, watched it on iPlayer though the following day. Must admit a lot of it was such and such is still alive and Nurse Gladys still has that white Morris Minor! We did really enjoy it though, still has the charm it did all those years ago, granted it was missing something with Ronnie not being in it but it stayed true to its roots.

    Was there a Bond film on after the Queens speech this year or has that now stopped as I read somewhere that Sky has the rights to the Bond movies currently?

    Completely agree with Saboteur and his comment with regards to Christmas TV now and when we were younger in the 80's, its just not the same as it used to be. You had to wait ages before a movie got to TV so a movie was a Christmas highlight, now you are looking at available to buy usually within a few weeks of it finishing at the cinema. Things have changed so much over the past 25 - 30 year, its just not the same anymore :(
  • edited January 2014
    Completely agree with Saboteur and his comment with regards to Christmas TV now and when we were younger in the 80's, its just not the same as it used to be. You had to wait ages before a movie got to TV so a movie was a Christmas highlight, now you are looking at available to buy usually within a few weeks of it finishing at the cinema. Things have changed so much over the past 25 - 30 year, its just not the same anymore :(



    ;)
    The comp.sys.sinclair crap games competition 2015
    "Let's not be childish. Let's play Spectrum games."
  • edited January 2014
    Thew only thing I have actually sat down and watched in the last fornight was the IT Crowd "special". Nothing new but I enjoy it anyway and a couple of my favourite episodes so it was worthwhile.
  • edited January 2014
    mostly utter ****e

    but, don't care, got given a media server, and a flash drive with loads of tv shows I've not seen before, Game of Thrones, Homeland, and Damages :D

    oh yeah, and a blu ray player and discs

    there were one or two shows I watched on telly, but on the whole a big fat Meh.
  • edited January 2014
    Sherlock was fantastic! I think it (the Sherlock series overall) is the best TV series for years.

    Regarding yesterday's episode (The Empty Hearse), I do have three minor complaints;

    [spoilers, so if you've not watched it, don't read these, just watch the program as it's *fantastic*]


    Spoiler:


    Oh, other stuff I watched was Doctor Who (fantastic - plot holes galore (you always get these with Stephen Moffat, but his stories so very enjoyable that you don't care, it's a billion times better than a water-tight story that's not entertaining) and I'm not sure about Peter Capaldi, but I loved it, and so did my DW watching mates), and the IT Crowd (a funny episode, it's not (to me) a great program, but Matt Berry and the bloke who plays Mos are both fantastic at their parts, and really make it watchable).

    I watched some of Still Open All Hours, but gave up. It wasn't very funny, but far worse I just didn't like what they'd done to Granville. David Jason did a great job in the role, but I don't like to think of Granville as growing up to be the same miser/misanthropist as his uncle. It would have had to have been really funny to make me watch it, but at best it was tepid. It was surprising seeing how so many of the 1970s regulars from the program had aged so well though! Aside from Ronnie Barker, most of the actors seem to still be alive, even the Black Widow.

    I still have the Christmas episodes of Vicious and Mrs Brown's Boys to watch, I like both of programs so I'm hoping the Christmas episodes are up to par.
  • edited January 2014
    will watch Sherlock on iplayer soon.
  • edited January 2014
    Not watched any... when does the darts start on the BBC?

    BBC2 Saturday at 2:30. Can't wait.
  • edited January 2014
    Best thing about Sherlock was Louise Brealey... yum yum

    Yes, I am shallow
    The comp.sys.sinclair crap games competition 2015
    "Let's not be childish. Let's play Spectrum games."
  • zx1zx1
    edited January 2014
    BBC1 showed a Not Going Out christmas special that was quite good. I like Lee Mack but miss Tim in the show.
    When i watched the Open All Hours special i was surprised to find out Mrs Featherstone was still alive, she must be 90 by now!
    *runs off to check imdb*
    The trouble with tribbles is.......
  • edited January 2014
    zx1 wrote: »
    BBC1 showed a Not Going Out christmas special that was quite good. I like Lee Mack but miss Tim in the show.
    When i watched the Open All Hours special i was surprised to find out Mrs Featherstone was still alive, she must be 90 by now!
    *runs off to check imdb*

    That's the Black Widow. As Granville said in the original series "What I don't understand is, why when she died, did they bury her husband!"

    You reminded me, I watched the Christmas Not Going Out, and it wasn't much good. It's a strange program anyway - most sitcoms are somewhere between surreal (The Young Ones, Bottom, etc) and almost (four-fifths, say) real life (Only Fools and Horses, One Foot in the Grave, etc). But Not Going Out has very surreal moments that actually feel like they clash with the badly done 'realistic' side of the program. It does feel like the script is written by someone who wants the program to be realistic, and then bits are altered or added by someone who's motto is "**** reality, just make it funny". Except the surreal bits are often far from funny. And the stories themselves sometimes start are surreal and then suffer from a lack of imagination or advancement. And it has so many aspects (or faults, whatever you call them) that make it feel poorly directed, such as the way people walk into the flat leaving the front door open, day or night (and in London!), or when someone says a genuinely funny line and the next person straightaway says their line, without pausing to appreciate (or at least notice) the humour, as they would in real life.

    It is very funny at times, there are some very funny jokes and wordplay, which is why I still watch it, but it's flaws are massive. Lee's character is all but tediously unsympathetic, as he's cowardly, selfish, and self absorbed. Since he's the main character surely we're supposed to empathise with him, but it's so difficult since he's so unlikeable. Lucy is supposed to be a high-flying career woman, but there's no conviction there, not because of the actress (who performs her part well, they all do, to be fair) but the script gives no sign of her being competent at anything, let alone being a success in the recruitment sector. We see her as someone who can't even summon up the strength to evict her self-centred, frequently non-rent paying lodger, even though he frequently causes her serious problems in her work and private life. Tim was funny (script depending, though Tim Vine is great anyway, and the show did really lose something when he quit), and you could sort of rationalise why he put up with Lee (their friendship is more convincing than Lee and Lucy's), but the problem with Not Going Out was never the actors, but the scripts.

    I could go on, but basically Not Going Out is a lightweight comedy with some funny parts but not much else. Gimme Gimme Gimme is a good example of a similar program (surrealish, unlikeable main character, not trying to tell a story just a a series of funny scenes joined by a very flimsy plot, etc) but done much better - if you've not seen Gimme Gimme Gimme then you really should.
  • edited January 2014
    Did what me and missus* normally does: buys Radio Times. Sift through it and mark off what's worth watching. Set up Sky box to record them and watch them a few days later.

    Still Open All Hours was utterly disappointing imo. I couldn't find anything remotely funny and best left to the archives.

    Mrs Browns Boys - had me in stitches as usual and never disappoints me.

    Not Going Out Christmas special - Although the script was rather bizarre - but then again, it was a Christmas special so no surprises there, the usual innuendos and witty gags still had me laughing.

    Recorded Birds of a Feather which I'm going to watch later. Fingers crossed it still has the old magic of the original. :)


    *T'wife likes her soaps so they were all recorded too.
  • edited January 2014
    You're going full Morkin there although Morkin probably counts the number of letters in all of the programme names and categorises them into disjoint subsets ;)
  • edited January 2014
    Granville is the same age as nurse Gladys, surely?
  • edited January 2014
    Have you got any marital aids?

    I used to love it when star wars,superman and indiana jones were on telleh!
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