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The Grimleys (1999–2001)
A hidden gem
18 February 2006
The Grimleys was a nostalgic comedy-drama set on a council estate in Dudley, West Midlands, England in the mid-1970s. It was first broadcast by Granada TV for ITV in 1999, following a pilot in 1997, and concluded in 2001 after three series.

It followed the ups and downs of the dysfunctional Grimley family and their struggle with everyday life. Gordon Grimley played by James Bradshaw is an intellectual but feeble schoolboy who has a crush on his teacher, Miss Geraldine Titley, played by Amanda Holden (Samantha Janus in the pilot). His younger brother Darren, Ryan Cartwright, who also narrates the storyline, although fond of Gordon and sympathetic to his unrequited love for Miss Titley, is frustrated by his brother's fey personality and nickname of 'The School Spanner'. Father Baz Grimley, played by former Young One Nigel Planer is a bone idle British Leyland car worker, who injured his back on his first day at the Longbridge plant, and went on strike on the second. He had not moved from his armchair since and spends his entire life watching television (ITV only). He is particularly infuriated by son Gordon's artistic leanings and was determined that he should do 'a man's job' rather than go to university. Hard working mum Janet Grimley was played by impressionist Jan Ravens.

Other domestic characters were older sister Lisa Grimley played by Corrieann Fletcher and Nan played by Barbara Keogh, who seemed to be obsessed with 'The Grimley Curse'. Next door neighbours were the Titley family headed by father Reg Titley played by Paul Angelis, who is a plumber, the aforementioned daughter Geraldine who worked as an English teacher at Gordon's school, and the object of his lust, and son Shane - Bay City Roller look-a-like, and self styled ladies man complete with a clapped out Vauxhall Viva car, played by Simon Lowe.

To complicate issues further, Shane was dating Lisa Grimley, and Janet Grimley and Reg Titley obviously carried a torch for one another. Reg's sensitivity and surprisingly poetic tongue gave rise to the question of Gordon Grimley's parentage, as does Shane Titley's oafish behaviour and idolisation of armchair bound slob Baz Grimley.

Many of the scenes were set in the Grimley brothers' school where we met their sadistic P.E teacher Doug "Dynamo" Digby played by comedian Brian Conley (Jack Dee in the pilot), who lives in a corner of the school gymnasium. Doug always took both pride and pleasure in bullying his pupils and in one episode we are given a clue to the development of this behaviour when his thuggish father (played by Lewis Collins from hit 1970s crime drama 'The Professionals') visits him. He is dating Geraldine Titley much to Gordon Grimley's chagrin, this leading to increasing tensions between them. Naturally Gordon was always going to come off worst and this rivalry lead to ever more vindictive (and bizarre) punishments meted out by Digby. An amazonian gym mistress called Miss Thing was played by Ruby Snape.

The show also starred former Slade singer, Noddy Holder who played music teacher, Neville Holder (Noddy's birth name), and a number of inspired cameos including 1970s glam-rock singer Alvin Stardust as a pub landlord. This lead to a series of amusing 'in jokes' such as Noddy Holder and Alvin Stardust be-moaning the lost opportunities of their youth over a pint of beer, and the character played by the one time glam-rocker lead singer of Slade being described as "not exactly Mr. Rock 'n' Roll".

Series one and two featured the regular cast and ran in a continuous time frame, whereas series three was set later in the 1970s and after the death of Brian Conley's character Doug Digby in a gymnasium accident. He was replaced in Geraldine Titley's affections by scheming, manipulative woodwork teacher Dave Trebilcock played by Craig Kelly, and, of course, as Gordon Grimley's nemesis. Gordon was by now working as a trainee teacher at the school where he was bullied and insulted by the pupils, many of whom were dressed as punks reflecting the change in the times. The third series suffered by comparison to the first two, and the show was cancelled afterwards.

Although not widely remembered, The Grimleys has a deftness of touch not often found in sitcoms in recent years, and though it often lampooned the styles on the 1970's, it was never a caricature. It's key strengths were the strongly developed characters and the genuinely funny scripts, combined with a great seventies soundtrack featuring such acts as T.Rex, Suzi Quattro, 10CC and Pilot.

The theme music of the first season was 'Bye Bye Baby' by the Bay City Rollers over the title credits and 'Cum On Feel the Noize' by Slade over the end credits. Noddy Holder performed a 'live' acoustic version of 'Cum On Feel the Noize' over the end credits of series one, episode three.
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ITV Playhouse: Last Summer (1977)
Season 9, Episode 9
8/10
A great 'feelgood' summer movie.
27 November 2005
I remember seeing this uplifting television play in summer 1976 - to my knowledge it's only airing. It was the story of one summer spent by two London teenagers who choose very different career paths on leaving school; one becomes a car thief and the other tries a more conventional job (a plumber as I remember). The late Richard Beckinsale (father of Kate Beckinsale) played a London gangster who becomes the car thief's mentor - a very different role than that of the naive Lenny Godber that Beckinsale played in Ronnie Barker's prison sitcom 'Porridge'. The play also featured great music, I remember 'Lazer Love' by T.Rex being used as part of the soundtrack. Unfortunately, it is unlikely that we will see this joyous rites of passage movie again, since it's makers Thames Television had a nasty habit in the seventies of disposing of much of their original material to save library space.
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Last Day of Summer (1984 TV Movie)
10/10
An evocatively nostalgic look back to an English summer in the late 1960s.
27 November 2005
This rarely seen television film was one of the first dramas to be shown on Channel 4 in Britain. Brothers Tom and Pete live in their late parents' sprawling home deep in the English countryside on the banks of the River Thames. Pete, being old enough to inherit the house, decides to open it as a commune, in keeping with his hippie leanings, and reflecting the era in which the film is set, and when a vacancy occurs he decides to take the first person who applies. Jenny, played by Annette Badland, then joins the commune completing the diverse range of characters. Initially her plain looks and shy personality are the subject of some ridicule from the others, but soon her warmth and kindness wins everybody over, and she and young Tom, who is still a boy grieving for his parents and obviously lonely amongst a houseful of adults, form a strong bond. Jenny become a big sister for Tom, and Tom shows suburbanite Jenny the wonders of the countryside in the full bloom of high summer. They spend time picnicking and boating on the river in Tom's boat, and the summer passes lazily by until the last day of the school holidays when the drama begins. Just about everything in this film is pretty near perfect. The acting is sensitive and credible, the haunting piano score is spot on and the attention to detail is breathtaking - the posters on the wall of Tom's bedroom are obviously genuine 1960s articles. But it is the cinematography that really shines. Rarely has the Berkshire countryside looked more lush, and the interiors are moodily lit, with shafts of sunlight peeking through both the permanently closed heavy curtains and the marijuana smoke.
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