6. WHO DONE IT
Wednesday 29 December 2004 11pm-12.15am
Fiction and reality appear to be merging for Philip as Doctor Gibbon tries to get him to reveal his hidden traumas. Meanwhile, many of Philip's characters, who are unhappy with him, seek him out for retribution. Finding him in the hospital ward they precipitate a final crisis.
Reworking material from his first novel, "Hide and Seek" (1973), and folding this into a prismatic blend of autobiographical details, popular music and 1940s film noir, Dennis Potter delivered a drama now regarded as a 20th-century masterwork. Detective novelist Philip Marlow (Michael Gambon) suffers from the crippling disease of psoriatic arthropathy. Confined to a hospital bed, Marlow mentally rewrites his early Chandleresque thriller, "The Singing Detective," with himself in the title role, drifting into a surreal 1945 fantasy of spies and criminals, along with vivid memories of a childhood in the Forest of Dean. As past events and 1940s songs surface in his subconscious, Marlow's voyage of self-discovery provides a key to conquering his illness, while his noir-styled hallucinations evoke the Philip Marlowe of Chandler's "Murder, My Sweet" (1944), starring Dick Powell, who later became a "singing detective" on radio's "Richard Diamond, Private Detective" (1949), crooning to girlfriend Helen Asher at the end of each episode.
Grounbreaking, poignant, unforgettable television.......
chrissieravi 10 months ago