2009-04-08

altariel: (Default)
2009-04-08 01:09 pm

(no subject)

A friend of mine is having his first photography exhibition as part of the Brighton Fringe Festival on 24th May 2009, so if you're in the Brighton area around then, do go and have a look. The venue is the Acupuncture Clinic, 143 Portland Road in Hove, and the event is in aid of the Brighton and Hove Samaritans. He writes:

"For more details visit www.davidlavelle.co.uk and click the exhibitions page. And don't forget your cheque book!"
altariel: (Default)
2009-04-08 02:40 pm
Entry tags:

Lewis

I really do like Lewis, which is as enjoyable and attractively made as Inspector Morse, but doesn’t have that miserable misogynist snob spoiling my fun. I like it even though they cruelly bumped off Lewis’ missus at the start of the first episode, just so that he could pretend he was mourning her and not Morse, which I probably shouldn’t like for all sorts of reasons.

I also like how the Lewis-Hathaway relationship replicates the Morse-Lewis one, only this time the over-educated misanthrope is the junior partner. It makes you believe that this dynamic stretches back and back, even unto the Middle Ages, where the medieval equivalent of a grumpy grammar school boy and a put-upon working class boy are forever together in the green wood, fighting crime.

Last week’s episode, “The Point of Vanishing” made much use of The Hunt in the Forest by Paolo Uccello. It made me think of Pauline Baynes’ illustrations for the Narnia books, particularly the end of The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe, when the young kings and queens of Narnia go on a hunt in a forest and vanish from the world. Lewis did an episode about the Inklings at the start of the season: I’m surprised that’s not turned up in the Morse-verse before.