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The Dragon
19 Jan 18 19:45
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Date Joined: 12 Mar 05
| Topic/replies: 58,846 | Blogger: The Dragon's blog
anyone watch it ?
any good?
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Report xmoneyx January 19, 2018 8:57 PM GMT
taped it

watching it now
good so far
Report northanlite January 19, 2018 9:08 PM GMT
watched 3 & that is it for me not watching any more. not very good is being kind.
can't make its mind up whether it wants to be game of thrones type prog or a carry on movie
Report xmoneyx January 19, 2018 9:32 PM GMT
history channel

barbarians - awesome
Report xmoneyx January 19, 2018 9:38 PM GMT
game of thrones type prog or a carry on movie

starting to get that feeling
Report xmoneyx January 20, 2018 12:49 AM GMT
very disappointed considering the build up on network channel
Report Knight Commander January 20, 2018 5:07 PM GMT
Hoping Kelly Reilly gets her kit off Whoops
Report GoOnThen January 20, 2018 9:00 PM GMT
Just watched the first episode. It's a "no" from me. On the other hand "Before we Die" is very good indeed.
Report northanlite January 20, 2018 9:04 PM GMT
The last Kingdom was reasonably good & 100 times better than this piece of nonsense
Report wit-ham January 21, 2018 2:33 PM GMT
You should always work on the rule that if
a prog/film gets loads of hype 99 times out of 100
it's utter shyte
Report Facts January 21, 2018 3:03 PM GMT
Agreed
Report northanlite January 21, 2018 6:19 PM GMT
i was waiting for Bigus Dickus to arrive
Report xmoneyx January 21, 2018 10:33 PM GMT
barbarians history channel is brilliant
Report xmoneyx January 28, 2018 10:31 AM GMT
Britannia's historic gaffs don't matter: it's a marvellous yarn that tells us much about Britain 2000 years ago

Award winning historian and writer Alistair Moffat gives his verdict on history drama series Britannia.

Our ancestors were not like us. They believed differently and behaved differently. In a series of caves at Covesea near Lossiemouth, children were decapitated, either alive or dead –some time in the late Bronze Age – and their decorated heads were hung from the roof of one cave.

Much later, Roman commentators reported that before battle some Celtic warriors worked themselves into what was called "the rage-fit" and fought naked, protected only by their torques and their magical tattoos. You might want to call it woad rage.

Tattoos like these gave Britain its name. The earliest Celtic root-name for its people was Pretani and it meant something like the People of the Designs, by which they meant tattoos. By the time the Emperor Claudius ordered an invasion in 43AD, it had become known as Britannia.

All of which the makers of the Britannia drama series (Sky Atlantic) must have known. It is covered in tattoos and skulls are piled high. The portrayal of the Romans is fairly standard stuff with brisk, cocky, confident types in red cloaks marching in step and dishing out routine brutality, with added crucifixions. But the way in which the Celtic kingdoms of the south of England are realized is nothing short of brilliant. Tribal blood feuds, powerful women as well as men – and best of all, the Druids.

These priests and their demented followers feel like the core of this marvellous tale (I have watched the first two episodes) and they are led by a miracle of makeup, Mackenzie Crook. There are also two wonderful women. When Zoe Wanamaker, as Queen of the Regni, sits down in rival territory, it makes her ‘arse itch’, and the red wig worn by Kelly Reilly appears to have a life of its own. She plays what seems to be an early version of Boudicca.

The opening titles relate that Julius Caesar landed in Britain 90 years before but didn’t stay long – because of the Druids. Maybe. Mackenzie Crook certainly scared the pants off me. The Romans believed that the Druids fomented resistance for they sent an expedition to the sacred island of Anglesey to destroy them. When the Twentieth Legion arrived at the shores of the Menai Straits they saw ranks of warriors with lime-washed spiky hair and black-clad women moving amongst them, screaming curses at the Romans. Behind were the Druids and their ghost fences, rows of skulls on poles facing the invaders.


If that sounds scary, the makers of Britannia have taken history and made it even more bowel-loosening. Sure, there are some hilarious gaffes. Two fugitives catch and argue about skinning a rabbit, as well they might since rabbits were not introduced to Britain until the Romans came. There are runes everywhere – even on the forehead of the King of Kent – and these don’t appear in the historical record until 150AD at the earliest (although by contrast, Aulus Plautius, the Roman general well played by David Morrissey, writes perfect Latin cursive). But none of that matters one whit. This is not a documentary – it is a marvellously conceived yarn that creates what I suspect is a very close approximation to what Britain was like 2,000 years ago.
Report Whisperingdeath January 28, 2018 3:56 PM GMT
I was ill and watched the whole series.

It was enjoyable but not brilliant. Plenty of good bits. Great hammy acting for Morrisey. Some good one liners.

I used to enjoy spooks until someone pointed out to me how unrealistic and untrue to life it was. I didn't bloody care before that, I just enjoyed it like Miami Vice.

It wont win any gongs but in a cold January - February it is an enjoyable yarn!
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