Jeremy Brett

  • Nestore Ungaro – Seagull Island AKA L’isola del gabbiano (1981)

    1981-1990AdventureItalyMysteryNestore Ungaro

    Barbara Carey flies to Italy to visit her blind sister Mary Ann, who is studying in a music academy. Once in Rome Barbara discovers her sister has disappeared and, according to the Italian police, she may have been murdered by a maniac who is obsessed with young sightless women. With the help of Martin Foster, from the British Embassy, Barbara starts trying to find out what happened to Mary Ann. She even pretends to be blind herself in an attempt to attract the killer, and finally the clues lead her to Seagull Island, privately owned by a mysterious British citizen named David Malcolm. Barbara must then find the answers to several questions: was Mary Ann really kidnapped? What happened to David’s wife and son in the island? And why is David’s relative Carol so unhappy to see a woman with him?Read More »

  • Rudolph Cartier – BBC Play of the Month: An Ideal Husband (1969)

    1961-1970BBCComedyRudolph CartierTVUnited Kingdom

    An Ideal Husband (BBC1, 1969, dir. Rudolph Cartier)

    Rudolph Cartier’s Play of the Month version of Oscar Wilde’s An Ideal Husband (1895) shares the same aesthetic of visual pleasure realised through detail as Cedric Messina’s Pygmalion (BBC1 16 December 1973), as well as many common features of setting and dressing; ballrooms, studies, morning rooms, elegant dresses and eveningwear. However, Cartier’s directorial technique demonstrates a greater awareness of the possibilities of studio technique to comment upon the action of a play, and is an exemplary production in its use of finely realised period detail to achieve dramatic effects, as an interpretation that works on deeper levels than surface aesthetic visual pleasure. Read More »

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