altariel: (Default)
altariel ([personal profile] altariel) wrote2008-03-02 12:07 pm

Enemy at the Door

Because we are W.O.T. (With Out Television), we're catching up on the pile of unwatched DVDs. Right now we're mainlining Enemy at the Door, an LWT series which ran for two seasons between 1978-1980 about the Nazi occupation of the Channel Islands, and about which I had heard nothing until [livejournal.com profile] mraltariel rolled up with the DVDs of the first season last week.

We watched the first four episodes last night, and they were outstanding: exactly the kind of small cast, limited setting, tightly written episodic drama that telly used to do so well and doesn't often seem to have the confidence (or capability?) to do much of any more. [Insert standard grump.] It has some of the usual representational problems of the time; for example, when two young men try to make a night-time escape in a rowing boat, you know it's the posh one that's going to become the regular and the working-class one with the MASSIVE BULLSEYE painted on him. But this is a minor gripe; as [livejournal.com profile] mraltariel said, it's so good, you'd think the BBC had made it. (Incidentally, the scenes between those two young men as they made their plans for their escape were so slashy that not even I could miss it.)

Look at the cast list: it's outstanding. For your particular delight, however, I shall draw your attention to a devastatingly young Anthony Stewart Head (top left photo; he must be about twenty-four), playing a Royal Navy lieutenant who is the son of the local doctor. His character has just secretly arrived back on Guernsey and, given we're getting both story-of-the-week and story arc, there's surely lots of high peril and associated anxiety to come. (John Nettles is in it too: surely crossing Enemy at the Door with Bergerac would create the world's smallest and most geographically specific fandom ever?)

Unpretentious, gripping, consummately written: big thumbs-up.
julesjones: (Default)

[personal profile] julesjones 2008-03-02 12:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Damn you, woman, I already have a DVD wishlist a mile long and am currently without hardware to play it on...

[identity profile] pseudnik.livejournal.com 2008-03-02 01:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Pam St. Clement as Fat Molly? I'm not sure if I should be laughing at that or not.

[identity profile] jhall1.livejournal.com 2008-03-02 02:01 pm (UTC)(link)
That sounds vaguely familiar. I've seen either that or some other TV series set on the occupied Channel Islands, but more than that I can't remember.

[identity profile] mistraltoes.livejournal.com 2008-03-02 02:09 pm (UTC)(link)
::sigh:: I don't watch much stuff with military personnel, but ASH *and* David Calder? Tempting.

[identity profile] toft-froggy.livejournal.com 2008-03-02 04:12 pm (UTC)(link)
That sounds good. I do like a bit of peril. Ooh, a lot of familiar faces on that cast list - two, in fact, from an episode of the Professionals I watched the other night. Hope your WOT state is not of long standing.

[identity profile] mrkinch.livejournal.com 2008-03-02 04:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Sounds lovely. Sixth row down, second from right. Can you put a name to that face? My brain is running circles and catching nothing. I can hear the man but I can't even name the production.

[identity profile] muuranker.livejournal.com 2008-03-02 05:46 pm (UTC)(link)
I'd like to recommend The model occupation : the Channel Islands under German rule, 1940-1945 by Madeleine Bunting. Hammersmith, London: HarperCollinsPublishers, 1995. xxii, 354 p., [16] p. of plates : ill., maps, ports. ; 24 cm.

It is a very well paced and engaging read.

I particularly remember the chapter about the heroic resistance efforts of the Guernsey Communist Party. All three of them.

[identity profile] vilakins.livejournal.com 2008-03-02 07:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, I vaguely remember that! I think my mother watched it. I remember something wartime on an island anyway. It does sound good.

[identity profile] temeres.livejournal.com 2008-03-02 07:48 pm (UTC)(link)
I think I remember EatD. There was, IIRC, an episode where a German soldier ended up on a rape charge. That was the only one I saw. Don't know if it was 1st or 2nd season.
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ext_50187: (bird with letter in beak)

[identity profile] jomacmouse.livejournal.com 2008-03-03 03:56 am (UTC)(link)
There are some very familiar faces in there, though he who used to play DS Roach in The Bill is not as recognisable sans moustache. It's a curly-haired Alun Armstrong that's floored me...

[identity profile] katlinel.livejournal.com 2008-03-04 09:24 pm (UTC)(link)
(Edited due to messing up italic tags.)

Hurrah for DVDs of late seventies/early eighties telly of delight! I know not of Enemy at the Door, but may well have to partake of it.

My crossover brain instantly thought of crossing it with The Chalet School in Exile, and I would larf like a drane if there were a coded telegram that went 'Triplets at Les Rosiers. All shes' in EatD, but that's only happening in my imagination, which has a bit of complication, Kylie notwithstanding. It would also be a teeny-tiny fandom, I betcha. Perhaps we could just add it to the Bergerac crossover?

I have been watching Tenko again, over the weekend, and will be watching it even more now my box set has arrived. I ordered it on Sunday after discovering I did not, in fact, own it all on video, but only season 1, and had been blithely reassuring [livejournal.com profile] iainjcoleman that I could lend him the Reunion Special should that not be broadcast, and then I discovered that I couldn't, so it would have been a lie, but now I can again so I really haven't told a lie after all.
Edited 2008-03-04 21:25 (UTC)