Bookish written by & starring Mark Gatiss
Discussion
I thought this new TV show may appeal to some on here - apparently, it's already been renewed for a second series.
Starts on Wednesday 16 July 2025 at 20:00 on U&Alibi.
Starts on Wednesday 16 July 2025 at 20:00 on U&Alibi.
I'll just say...
Morris Minor highlight and 'alternator' both of which irked me enormously.
It felt to me to be trying to be Sherlock without the style or wit. (Yes, I know Gatiss wrote/created the TV show 'Sherlock) but it was enjoyable and I shall carry on watching, just to give it a fair chance.
Morris Minor highlight and 'alternator' both of which irked me enormously.
It felt to me to be trying to be Sherlock without the style or wit. (Yes, I know Gatiss wrote/created the TV show 'Sherlock) but it was enjoyable and I shall carry on watching, just to give it a fair chance.
gareth_r said:
And why would an ARP Warden have been operating a searchlight?
Also "nominative determinism".

The jeep with searchlight was odd - an ARP warden would not have been provided with one, and it was in US Navy colours. I'm sure the cleaner said she had made coffee and walnut cake, neither of which ingredients would have been available in 1946. Plus the police inspector drives a Talbot Baby which I find most improbable.Also "nominative determinism".

I love this type of programme - it highlights my curmudgeonly pedantry........
loquacious said:
I'll just say...
Morris Minor highlight and 'alternator' both of which irked me enormously.
It felt to me to be trying to be Sherlock without the style or wit. (Yes, I know Gatiss wrote/created the TV show 'Sherlock) but it was enjoyable and I shall carry on watching, just to give it a fair chance.
Yep the "alternator" was lazy writing. A quick Google would have shown it should have been a generator.Morris Minor highlight and 'alternator' both of which irked me enormously.
It felt to me to be trying to be Sherlock without the style or wit. (Yes, I know Gatiss wrote/created the TV show 'Sherlock) but it was enjoyable and I shall carry on watching, just to give it a fair chance.
nicanary said:
gareth_r said:
And why would an ARP Warden have been operating a searchlight?
Also "nominative determinism".

The jeep with searchlight was odd - an ARP warden would not have been provided with one, and it was in US Navy colours. I'm sure the cleaner said she had made coffee and walnut cake, neither of which ingredients would have been available in 1946. Plus the police inspector drives a Talbot Baby which I find most improbable.Also "nominative determinism".

I love this type of programme - it highlights my curmudgeonly pedantry........

eccles said:
nicanary said:
gareth_r said:
And why would an ARP Warden have been operating a searchlight?
Also "nominative determinism".

The jeep with searchlight was odd - an ARP warden would not have been provided with one, and it was in US Navy colours. I'm sure the cleaner said she had made coffee and walnut cake, neither of which ingredients would have been available in 1946. Plus the police inspector drives a Talbot Baby which I find most improbable.Also "nominative determinism".

I love this type of programme - it highlights my curmudgeonly pedantry........

That's what I thought to start with, then I thought no, the radiator is too flat, then I did some googling and you're right - the giveaway is the badge in the middle of the shell. My pedantry failed. Still an odd car for the police inspector to drive - couldn't props have found him a Humber Snipe or Wolseley 14hp ?
nicanary said:
eccles said:
nicanary said:
gareth_r said:
And why would an ARP Warden have been operating a searchlight?
Also "nominative determinism".

The jeep with searchlight was odd - an ARP warden would not have been provided with one, and it was in US Navy colours. I'm sure the cleaner said she had made coffee and walnut cake, neither of which ingredients would have been available in 1946. Plus the police inspector drives a Talbot Baby which I find most improbable.Also "nominative determinism".

I love this type of programme - it highlights my curmudgeonly pedantry........

That's what I thought to start with, then I thought no, the radiator is too flat, then I did some googling and you're right - the giveaway is the badge in the middle of the shell. My pedantry failed. Still an odd car for the police inspector to drive - couldn't props have found him a Humber Snipe or Wolseley 14hp ?
My late father used to have a 1928 Hotchkiss AM2 and the British side of the owners club never had a huge amount of members.
Truckosaurus said:
Filmed in Belgium it appears, hence some of the buildings and motorcars being slightly 'off'.
Now it starts to make sense. The props department had to find what they could. Hence in episode 3 we saw a Renault truck and a Peugeot truck, neither of which would have been common in the UK in 1946.Gassing Station | TV, Film, Streaming & Radio | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff