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| Edge Of Darkness VHS Groundbreaking environmental-espionage shocker Edge of Darkness (1985) Begins routinely Enough But Then The suspense ratchets to Levels That Would Have Turned Hitchcock himself "Green With Envy. Emma Craven (Joanne Whalley In Her first staring role) Is A Young Environmental Activist Killed in Mysterious Circumstances. Emma's father Ron Craven (Bob Peck in a star-making performance) and Will Not Be Silenced, as a police detective, IS Uniquely Positioned to Pursue His Own unofficial investigation. He moves from complaint to a determination to find the Truth, All the while Advised and / or comforted by Emma, But Is she a ghost or a manifestation of history haunted psyche? Craven digs deeper, uncovering labyrinthine conspiracy in The Nuclear Industry and, As The Body Count Rises, The garrulous CIA agent encounters Darius Jedburgh (a superb Joe Don Baker) With A mysterious agenda of His Own. Accompanied by a haunting musical score by Michael Kamen and Eric Clapton, Edge of Darkness builds On The legacy of Tinker Tailor, Soldier, Spy and Smiley's People to Become Quite simply the best television thriller ever. - Gary S. DalkinCommentsNicki Forister says... I have lost count of the number of times I have watched Edge of Darkness, and still seen something new and haunting in its ramifications for our current age. In this deeply disturbing film series the devil is most defintely in its Cold War detail, and Troy Kennedy Martin's script uncovers many of those very real demons that lurk in the international trade of nuclear technology and weapons grade plutonium, the most dangerous material in the world, and which is still clouded in mystery. It is also a mythic story of hope for the future, as Bob Peck's character finds his allies in the strangest of places, even as his enemies are everywhere.The fact that this series has still not come out on DVD is truly amazing, and if I believed in conspiracy theories i might even be suspicious! Who knows! Roll on E of D 2!! We need to be told, now more than ever... Posted on March 27, 2011 Gilberto Emme says... I have watched this movie (series) on more than a few occasions and found it fantastic. It's not the sort of thing you can walk in to your local high street shop and buy but should be. Watch it and tell me I'm wrong... It'spowerful although arms race sort of stuff! Posted on March 27, 2011 Oretha Bowles says... I love this series. One of the greats of all time. I even have the original VHS. I can't believe that the BBC couldn't find a better print or clean up what they have considering it was one of the highest rated series & won top awards. Watchable but grainy & a couple of picture "streaks' from the video tape master that was used. Edge of Darkness fans in America have been waiting many years for this DVD. Like I said great series but disappointing mastering. I would give it a 5 star rating for the production but I am deducting 2 stars for the mastering & film print. Posted on March 27, 2011 Arianne Deborde says... The edge of Darkness is a taught riveting thrillercenetring on the British nueclear industry during the Thatcher years. A middle level policeman, widowed for some years and still grieving,watches as his daughter is shotgunned next to him on the walkway to thier home.From there, the investigation takes him to the highest levels of the British government, the CIA{a brilliant turn by Joe Don Baker},MI5,and American venture capitalists.More twists than in most of this genre,here is one where I could not see the ending until it was upon me. It is that good. the acting is superb. The late Bob Peck, as the police inspector is wonderful.The scene of him clutching his daughters teddy bear lying in her bed with a gun in his hands after her shooting is haunting, as are the images of the trains carrying plutonium to the strains of a mournful eric clapton guitar.So well written,excellently acted,superb soundtrack that it should be considered a landmark for television,though I was only able to view it here on a now defunct PBS channel. Brilliantly filmed, this is television as it could be, at its best. Posted on March 31, 2011 Ronni Pruter says... Edge of Darkness is one of the best programs ever on television.It isthe quality of the best feature films, with amazingly sharp, astutewriting, brilliant performances by the entire cast, and a story that takesyou places you just weren't expecting to go.When this first aired inBritain in the fall of 1986, the public response was so great, it had tore-air only 6 weeks later!The insights into goverment, the nuclearindustry, the intelligence community, and "just people" arechillingly accurate.It will change the way you view your world, forever. Posted on March 31, 2011 Chantal Rigby says... Craven, brilliantly acted by the late Bob Peck, is a highly decorated English police officer, well known for his discretion in politically sensitive cases. He is widowed with a grown daughter. One evening a man previously arrested by Craven shows up on their doorstep with a shotgun. The dauhgter throws herself before her father and gets shot. It looks like a revenge killing gone wrong, but then questions stars appearing: if the murderer was after Craven, why did he fire both barrels into his daughter, how did he escape in the first case, why does he and all other suspects die "resisting arrest", and finally: why is the lock of hair Craven cuts form his dead daughter radioactive? His need for answers takes him to a nightmarish world of governement paranoia, interdeprtemental intrigue, and secrets hidden from the public "for their own good". Bob Peck plays the tormented Craven with enormous depth and sensitiviy, creating a truly memorable character that the viewer just will not forget. Posted on April 1, 2011 Anya Highberger says... Probably the finest television drama series ever, 'Edge of Darkness' was 1985 made flesh - nuclear paranoia in a world gone mad. Apart from the faces, not much has dated, and even if the threat of nuclear annihilation seems less newsworthy, it's still an excellent, taut thriller. Bleak and brilliant, it starts with a seemingly random murder, and ends with the world on the brink of apocalpyse. Everything works, and works well - the clever, non-linear direction is never annoying, the writing is intelligent, everything progresses with brutal, cold logic, and it all seems so much more serious, more 'real' than other television dramas of the time (with the possible exception of the early 'Taggart'). The acting is superb - Joe Don Baker's character may be a stereotype, but he makes it work, and the late Bob Peck is almost disturbingly intense. It's a shame that, for most people, he will be remembered as the unfortunate trapper from 'Jurassic Park' (or the narrator of countless nature documentaries). It remains with you when its over, the music is excellent, and key images (nuclear trains at the dead of night, driving rain on the motorway, a room full of telephones, a field of umbrellas, and little black flowers) haunt you forever. Posted on April 3, 2011 Fay Roda says... Firstly let me point out that there is a DVD version of EOD, several actually. The best version is the latest released this year which is a wonderful transfer and includes a documentary on the film, Magnox and has clips of interviews and award ceremonies and discussions on the series. It is on region 2 DVD and is available from amazon uk. I too remember watching this masterpiece unfold when it was originally screened here in the uk. I was only 14 at the time and British television was still producing some wonderful stuff. Even so I knew this was something extra special. It must have planted a seed in my subconscious. Incredibly in 2003 it has lost none of its power and seems just as prescient now as ever. The callous disregard for the individual by corporations, the 'great game' played out between competing security agencies, the conspiracy of silence in the media. The ecology movement. The collusion of government with the malign constituents in our society. Ostensibly though this is still the 'little man's story' and what a central performance from the late great Bob Peck. His personal disintegration is harrowing to behold as he tries to unravel the mystery. Joe don Baker, what can you say about his performance. He is utterly compelling as the old school agency man fighting to keep his head above water. His verbal sparing matches with 'arts council' funded MI5's Ian McNeice and Charles Kay (also superb) are very very funny. Oh the script, what a script. Troy Kennedy Martin the writer provided the most consistently brilliant screenplay for television ever written. Martin Campbell the director sculpts it all into an entity that supplants the TV media. The DVD I saw previously to EOD was Leone's masterwork Once upon a time in America and I can honestly say EOD which bares many similarities is right up there alongside it. I don't think I could give this production a better accolade. Posted on April 5, 2011 Minda Mccoggle says... Edge of Darkness, directed by Martin Campbell and written by Troy Kennedy-Martin, has the texture of a novel - the way a novel plays out in your mind as you read it.This VHS presentation enhances that feeling, as the commercial breaks and credits of each episode are trimmed away, and the whole thing unreels in nearly six continuous hours.Don't let the considerable investment in time frighten you.This is some exquisite work.To begin with, you will probably plan to watch it in "chunks".Don't.Just clear the decks, because once you start watching, you will not be able to stop until the whole thing is done. The convoluted story does not so much develop as evolve through a series of stages.To begin with, it is a murder mystery.Then it becomes a political thriller.Then a spy movie.Next, an action piece.Finally, it unwinds in an existential meditation on life and death.Its politics are bit leftward-leaning, and there is a whole anti-nuke, "environmental message" thing ultimately worked in at the end, but the writing is skillful enough to rise above mere rhetoric and take Edge of Darkness into the realm of art. The performances by Bob Peck, Joanne Whalley, and a host of familiar BBC faces are uniformly excellent.Even Joe Don Baker is good as the American CIA agent Darius Jedburgh (or "Jed-borough", as a Scottish character calls him). As an American, I am always amused by the stereotypes other cultures have of us.Viewed through British (or in director Martin Campbell's case, Australasian) eyes, Jedburgh becomes a roguish gunslinger in white, having apparently just stepped out of the same silver screen occupied by John Wayne and Randolph Scott. Baker is game, playing the "cowboy" angle to the hilt.(He would later perform similar duty in the Campbell-directed James Bond film Goldeneye).It is encouraging that he is ultimately a good guy, despite the "taint" of Reagan/Thatcher politics. The late Bob Peck is the real standout, though.I cannot imagine anyone else playing the role of detective Ron Craven, whose shattering personal journey gives Edge of Darkness its soul.His performance is completely authentic as he embodies a man who has lost everything, whose only reason for going on is to bring justice to those who murdered his daughter.We have seen this sort of thing before, of course, but rarely realized with such verisimilitude.We sense that if such things really happened as depicted in Edge of Darkness, they would happen pretty much they way they're shown. It's a shame that Peck was not better utilized in those big, slick, (though often hollow) films that we make in this country.Most Americans will remember him, if they think of him at all, as the Australian hunter in Jurassic Park.His big line, spoken just before becoming a velociraptor's lunch, was "Clever girl!"He managed to invest those two words with subtle shades of dread and admiration, as his character briefly contemplated the brutal speed with which his own mortality was upon him. Edge of Darkness will leave you feeling pretty much the same way. Posted on April 6, 2011 Karly Krystek says... If anybody is looking for an obituary of Bob Peck then this film surely sums up this man.With Joe Don Baker, Joanne Whalley and other distinguished actors, Peck doesn't just act, he gives this film a raredimension, he puts his body and soul into it as if the plot was actuallyhappening in his own personal life.Here's an actor at the top of hisprofession giving a vituoso performance.The characters in the film linksuperbly to him and where necessary he supports brilliantly.This filmisn't solely about Bob Peck, it's about what can happen when plutonium getsinto the wrong hands.It's about an organization showing that the laxityof security procedures can lead to fatal consequences.It's about a fatherinvestigating his daughter's death caused by the effects of nuclearradiation.I wouldn't say that this was one of the best films that I'veseen.This IS the best film I have seen.Thanks Bob for the pleasure youbrought to us all.Rest in peace Bob. Posted on April 10, 2011 Leave a Comment |
Groundbreaking environmental-espionage shocker Edge of Darkness (1985) Begins routinely Enough But Then The suspense ratchets to Levels That Would Have Turned Hitchcock himself "Green With Envy. Emma Craven (Joanne Whalley In Her first staring role) Is A Young Environmental Activist Killed in Mysterious Circumstances. Emma's father Ron Craven (Bob Peck in a star-making performance) and Will Not Be Silenced, as a police detective, IS Uniquely Positioned to Pursue His Own unofficial investigation. He moves from complaint to a determination to find the Truth, All the while Advised and / or comforted by Emma, But Is she a ghost or a manifestation of history haunted psyche? Craven digs deeper, uncovering labyrinthine conspiracy in The Nuclear Industry and, As The Body Count Rises, The garrulous CIA agent encounters Darius Jedburgh (a superb Joe Don Baker) With A mysterious agenda of His Own. Accompanied by a haunting musical score by Michael Kamen and Eric Clapton, Edge of Darkness builds On The legacy of Tinker Tailor, Soldier, Spy and Smiley's People to Become Quite simply the best television thriller ever. - Gary S. Dalkin