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MemberItem Review/Comment
RadoxTheGreen
10th Jul 2015
TV
Flower Pot Men (1952 - 1957)
This was repeated for around 20 years after it was made.

RadoxTheGreen
10th Jul 2015
TV
Andy Pandy (1950 - 1952)
Well, I thought the same actually, but imdb and Wiki both say not. I thought I was maybe confusing it with the 1970 show but I would have been too old to watch that out of choice. Maybe I was off sick from school and just watching whatever was on, although I can remember regularly watching all of those shows you mentioned too.

RadoxTheGreen
10th Jul 2015
TV
Battle Stations (2000 - 2006)
Although the series concentrated on the 20th Century, one episode looked at HMS Victory, which was bombed in World War II.

RadoxTheGreen
10th Jul 2015
TV
The Royle Family (1998 - 2012)
I almost loaded this last night but put up Becker instead.

RadoxTheGreen
9th Jul 2015
TV
Becker (1998 - 2004)
I loved this series. Shawnee Smith's portrayal of disaster prone Linda cracked me up. Every week there would be something she had wrecked or messed up, and every explanation started with the same catchphrase "OK, here's the thing..."

RadoxTheGreen
9th Jul 2015
TV
The Forsyte Saga (1967)
What can I say, I'm a country lad ;)

Susan Hampshire and Deborah Watling were the first girls I fancied.

RadoxTheGreen
9th Jul 2015
TV
The Forsyte Saga (1967)
I can remember seeing this when I was 4 years old and having a huge crush on Susan Hampshire.

RadoxTheGreen
9th Jul 2015
TV
Lucky Star (2007)
Review
Each show was split into sections, the first being the main show. The next section was a magazine show parody titled "Lucky Channel" and featured the anime character Akira Kogami and her assistant anchor man Minoru Shiraishi (the real actor portryed in anime form). Each episode ended with a song. Initially, the songs were done as Karaoke by the cast of the main show. The anime background showed a door, with only the voices being heard, suposedly from behind it. From episode 13, the ending song was done by Minoru Shiraishi as a live action filming rather than anime. He would sing all the remaining endings apart from episode16, which was sung by Hiromi Konno.

2 people found this review helpful.   ✔︎ Helpful Review?

RadoxTheGreen
6th Jul 2015
TV
Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood (2009 - 2010)
Review
Brothers Edward and Alphonse try to resurrect their dead mother using alchemy, but use of a taboo magic has a price. Edward's loses a leg, but his brother takes the brunt of the price, losing his entire body, existing as a disembodied soul. To save his brother, Edward attaches the soul to a suit of armour, an act which costs him an arm. A friend fits new “automail” limbs to Edward, who then vows to find the Philosopher's Stone as a means to undo the damage they have done to their bodies. He and Alphonse set out on their quest, which takes them into several conflicts.


Fullmetal Alchemist was first released as an anime in 2003. The first version was a huge hit and gained a large fan following, so you might be forgiven for wondering why anyone would put all that at risk by redoing the entire series less than a decade later. Brotherhood can best be thought of as a fan-service anime. It addresses the criticisms of fans who were not happy that the original series deviated away from the manga on which it was based. To be fair, that had to happen as the first anime was made while the manga was still being produced, forcing the anime producers to come up with their own plots and conclusions. Brotherhood was made when the manga was drawing to a close, and so was able to keep its plot line throughout.

The new version faithfully follows the manga story and retells it in animated form. The artwork is near faithful to the manga too, capturing the both the look and feel of Hiromu Arakawa's illustrations. If anything, it's almost too faithful, playing out some scenes for an unnecessarily long time. While a manga may need to dwell on every nuance of a scene to convey its meaning, doing so in an anime can make it seem self indulgent, and a viewer who has never seen the original may be left wondering what all the fuss was about. Be warned, the early episodes in this series are quite poorly done. It's almost “ anime light” in feel, as if they didn't have much budget for those episodes. In fact the first Fullmetal Alchemist anime went into more plot detail than this version, which is odd as the budget for Brotherhood was a lot higher than the original had to work with. You'll need to stick with it before the story finds its pace, which it does with gusto. Once its up to speed, the series bowls along.

The animation quality is much higher than the first anime with character movements more fluid, which is understandable given the higher budget. The show has a warmer feel, the light seems to have an orange palette to it. Unfortunately, since the 2003 offering, Japan has succumbed to the Murray Gold school of background music. While the original Alchemist had the atmosphere of a quiet brotherly quest, Fullmetal Alchemist Brotherhood throws a music sting into every space it can find. Perhaps soundtrack albums make so much revenue they're aiming for maximum profit.

Overall, Brotherhood is the better anime of the two versions. However, its predecessor is more accessible to someone new to the Fullmetal franchise. That said, I would recommend this version if you can only spare the time to watch one. Just be aware that the opening episodes feel like a chore to watch.

3 people found this review helpful.   ✔︎ Helpful Review?

RadoxTheGreen
5th Jul 2015
TV
Thunderbirds Are Go [2015] (2015 - 2020)
I agree with 23skidoo on this. It's not anime. I have changed the category to animation and amended the notes to just state remake.

RadoxTheGreen
4th Jul 2015
TV
Dark Season (1991)
Yes, this is certainly the reason why he got Doctor Who, not Queer As Folk. RTD was only given 6 episodes to work with and splitting the show into 3 episodes per story (Doctor Who style) was a thinly disguised job application in case they were ever going to bring the show back again.

I heard a rumour that the beeb bosses at that time were less than impressed with RTD for turning what was intended to be a one off 6 episode sci fi for kids into an alternative to Doctor Who (and going over budget in the process). They eventually let him do another series, but after two years of beeb dithering, the actor who played Marcie was too old to play a schoolgirl, and the whole point of her character was that kids see and do things adults don't.

Recasting and script rewriting ensued and Dark Season 2 was abandoned and the equally excellent "Century Falls" created in its place. You don't have to look too hard at that show to see that it had its origins with Dark Season.

RadoxTheGreen
4th Jul 2015
TV
The Flashing Blade (1969)
[YouTube Video]

RadoxTheGreen
4th Jul 2015
TV
Treehouse Masters (2013 - Now)
[YouTube Video]

RadoxTheGreen
4th Jul 2015
TV
Dark Season (1991)
It's Doctor Who... with kids
[YouTube Video]

RadoxTheGreen
4th Jul 2015
TV
Wiseguy (1987 - 1990)
[YouTube Video]

RadoxTheGreen
4th Jul 2015
TV
Tokyo Eye (2008 - 2015)
[YouTube Video]

RadoxTheGreen
4th Jul 2015
TV
Cool Japan (2005 - Now)
[YouTube Video]

RadoxTheGreen
4th Jul 2015
TV
Macao (1996 - 1998)
[YouTube Video]

RadoxTheGreen
4th Jul 2015
TV
Cow And Chicken (1997 - 1999)
[YouTube Video]

RadoxTheGreen
3rd Jul 2015
TV
No Problem! (1983 - 1985)
Wiki is more accurate than imdb for this show - Wikipedia - No Problem!
From Janet Kay's YouTube Channel:
[YouTube Video]

RadoxTheGreen
30th Jun 2015
TV
Ben And Holly's Little Kingdom (2009 - Now)
Is this date right? Imdb and Wikipedia both have this as starting in 2009.

RadoxTheGreen
29th Jun 2015
TV
Wait Till Your Father Gets Home (1972 - 1974)
I remember it was racist. I could understand how anti Korean attitudes might fly in the US but couldn't understand why it was allowed on British TV. Then I saw Love Thy Neighbour and suddenly the attitudes in this seemed quite mild.

RadoxTheGreen
29th Jun 2015
TV
Help!... It's The Hair Bear Bunch! (1971 - 1972)
OK. I'm confused. I swear blind I once saw an interview with Jon Pertwee in which he claimed he was the voice of Bubi Bear.

RadoxTheGreen
29th Jun 2015
TV
Scooby Doo Where Are You! (1969 - 1978)
Best of the Scooby series.
Fact: Nicole Jaffe (Velma) was the hippy girl in the Disney movie "The Love Bug"

RadoxTheGreen
27th Jun 2015
TV
Murphy Brown (1988 - 1998)
10 series and not a duff episode in there. Unfortunately, all the topical gags have made it look very dated now.

RadoxTheGreen
27th Jun 2015
TV
The Strange World Of Gurney Slade (1960)
My parents thought this was going to be about the village of Gurney Slade, which is about 10-minutes up the road.

RadoxTheGreen
26th Jun 2015
TV
The Wanderer (1994)
Sorry about the poor title image. There's not much to choose from.

RadoxTheGreen
26th Jun 2015
TV
The Hitchhiker (1983 - 1991)
This was on late night in the UK on either Sky One or Bravo. It was The Hitchhiker, never heard of Deadly Nightmares.

RadoxTheGreen
25th Jun 2015
TV
You And Me (1974 - 1995)
Is it any wonder our education standards are falling? It's You and I, not You and me!

RadoxTheGreen
25th Jun 2015
TV
Cheers (1982 - 1993)
I could have sworn this was already on here.


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