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Commentary by director Jon Amiel and producer Kenith Trodd; "Dennis Potter: Under the Skin": An exclusive documentary on the life and career of Dennis Potter; A rarely seen interview featuring Dennis Potter's personal recollections of The Singing Detective; Four-page booklet featuring an exclusive essay by esteemed critic David Bianculli; Photo gallery; "Points of View" articles; Cast bios; And more
Full Product DetailsSide #1 -- Disc 1
1. Skin [10:46]
2. Under My Skin [10:26]
3. Grease [14:51]
4. Bones [9:14]
5. Toots [21:29]
6. Credits [1:38]
1. Heat [11:32]
2. Nut House [10:52]
3. Purple Passage [9:13]
4. Might as Well Be Spring [9:39]
5. The Detective [10:59]
6. Credits [15:11]
1. Lovely Days [9:39]
2. The Black Land [11:39]
3. Vamp Till Ready [15:41]
4. Things That Creeps and Crawls [15:50]
5. Thinking Boring [8:30]
6. Credits [1:38]
Side #2 -- Disc 2
1. Clues
2. Visiting Time
3. All About the Plot
4. In the Script
5. The Finger of Suspicion
6. End Credits
1. Pitter Patter
2. Visiting Time
3. Word Games
4. You Always Hurt the One You Love
5. Night
6. Credits
1. Who Done It [13:56]
2. Standing on Your Own to Feet [10:07]
3. Songs on the Stairs [12:48]
4. Blood [16:24]
5. Loose Ends [21:30]
6. Credits [1:37]
To call the late Dennis Potter a brilliant scriptwriter understates his amazing accomplishments: He completely redefined television, opening up imaginative possibilities beyond anyone's wildest dreams. Potter's sometimes hallucinatory and always multileveled stories fluidly meshed fantasy and reality, and The Singing Detective is the richest and most profound of them all. This visually stylish six-part series focuses on the memories, writings, and feverish deliriums of noir novelist Philip Marlowe, played by the astonishing Michael Gambon. Suffering from the debilitating skin disease psoriasis (which plagued Potter himself) and stuck in a joyless hospital ward with a cast of strange characters, he loses himself in remembrances of his troubled boyhood and caustic marriage, as well as in an elaborate, highly cinematic detective tale starring himself as a singing P.I. As usual in Potter's work, characters lip-synch to popular songs from the '30s and '40s that comment ironically on the action. In addition to Gambon, Alison Steadman, Janet Suzman, Patrick Malahide, Bill Patterson, Joanne Whalley-Kilmer, and Imelda Staunton deliver fine performances in this absorbing, disturbing, and beautiful television drama. Karen Backstein, Barnes & Noble
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