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buckers1
12 May 20 14:33
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Date Joined: 10 Sep 04
| Topic/replies: 56 | Blogger: buckers1's blog
Just seen a cd soundtrack for a tv drama racing series 1991/2 called Trainer. Apparently David McCallum played the role of a professional gambler. This series completely passed me by. Does anyone remember it and was it any good ? Cheers.

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Replies: 35
By:
stewarts rise
When: 12 May 20 14:34
Thought was crap.
By:
lovegod
When: 12 May 20 14:40
Kim Mazelle gets her ample bosom out, funny how you remember small things, well not so small in her case.
By:
Tiger Tiger
When: 12 May 20 14:42
It was ok I suppose, the lovely Susannah York Love made it a little more bearable than it would otherwise have been.
By:
onlooker
When: 12 May 20 14:43
Good idea - But, of course, with a Drama(Entertainment) Series written bu NON-Racing people - Acted by NON-Racing people - Directed by NON-Racing people etc, etc - it could never come across a credible to the RACING PEOPLE viewer.

Compulsory romantic affairs and the like written into the plots, of course (for Joe Public viewer) but deemed irrelevant by the Racing fan viewer.

However, if you accepted it for what it was - light entertainment - in the Howard's Way vogue - then it was relaxing Sunday night viewing.

Cracking Theme Tune sung by Cliff Richard, though  Happy  - entitled  'More to Life'

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KVynPivCoBk
By:
jmdc
When: 12 May 20 14:47
Amateurish junk. Avoid at all costs.  Mark Greenstreet, the title role, still remains relatively unknown. David McCallum played the inevitable gambler, and Susannah York (the inevitable widow), who was gorgeous as always, died in 2011.  That's it.
By:
onlooker
When: 12 May 20 14:56
Here is another version - with Visual (good) Lyrics - and some info on the Series later in the video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bbqd74PFYt0
By:
sparrow
When: 12 May 20 14:57
Load of rubbish.
By:
lord skywalker
When: 12 May 20 15:09
Mark Greenstreed was considered for the role of James Bond in The Living Daylights (1987) before Timothy Dalton was cast.

never to be heard of again
By:
buckers1
When: 12 May 20 15:10
Thanks for the replies. Did it revolve around one racecourse?
By:
jmdc
When: 12 May 20 15:11
Filmed in Compton.
By:
geordie1956
When: 12 May 20 15:11
What was the ITV series ... late 70s? which was a drama (of sorts) about horse racing ... I remember Wetherby was shown so might have been a Yorkshire TV production of the day?
By:
lord skywalker
When: 12 May 20 15:12
i think so as it says filmed in and around the village of compton near newbury
By:
lord skywalker
When: 12 May 20 15:18
there was also luck starring dustin hoffman (2011) and the adventures of  black stallion (90-93)
By:
buckers1
When: 12 May 20 15:20
Really enjoyed Luck. Apparently season 2 was stopped due to the number of horses having accidents.
By:
lord skywalker
When: 12 May 20 15:26
i dont tend to watch many gambling related tv series/films as many have a terrible plot
By:
Ramruma
When: 12 May 20 15:30
It was not very good. There was a book of the series which you might be able to pick up cheaply. There was a tipster who kept his readers in the dark over a coup and a pro punter who blackmailed a steward iirc.
By:
lord skywalker
When: 12 May 20 15:32
though i did watch a film the other week about a guy who knew he was going to jail and entrusted his 100k to a friend in a rucksack along with some rope and other items, if he held on to it for a few months he would give him some of the money as a thank you, so the guy went on a gambling spree and the film had a pretty crap ending as  i remember
By:
Ramruma
When: 12 May 20 15:33
@geordie1956 -- ITV had a series based on Dick Francis stories called The Racing Game. It was not very good but was released on DVD if you look around.
By:
lord skywalker
When: 12 May 20 15:34
casino starring sharon stone, robert de niro and joe pesci was a decent movie,reccomend watching that
By:
geordie1956
When: 12 May 20 15:35
cheers Ramruma
By:
lord skywalker
When: 12 May 20 15:40
found a film called ride like a girl starring sam neill, The inspirational story of Michelle Payne, the first female jockey to win the Melbourne Cup despite facing odds of a 100 to 1
By:
fairweather
When: 12 May 20 17:30
Was Sam Neill convincing as Michelle?

As for Trainer, yes, a right load of old rubbish, although i'd happily watch an episode or two at the moment just for a laugh and a reminisce..
By:
lord skywalker
When: 12 May 20 18:20
Was Sam Neill convincing as Michelle?


that doesnt even deserve a reply
By:
themightymac
When: 12 May 20 23:38
Trainer was the biggest load of garbage ever made.
By:
flushgordon1
When: 13 May 20 08:15
Based on the life of Jenny Pitman.
By:
Johnny_Mustang
When: 13 May 20 08:35
Geoff Deacon trains from the yard now.
By:
G Hall
When: 14 May 20 09:39
Ot was rubbish
By:
Somerset Sam
When: 14 May 20 12:31

May 12, 2020 -- 11:38PM, themightymac wrote:


Trainer was the biggest load of garbage ever made.


Would still watch it in the current climate.

By:
onlooker
When: 14 May 20 14:21
Johnny_Mustang  13 May 20 07:35 

Geoff Deacon trains from the yard now.
----------------

The yard was originally where ATTY CORBETT trained from.

A lovely small yard - Owned by cunning and successful trainer KEN CUNDELL - brother of top Jumps trainer Frank Cundell  who had a bigger yard am mile or so away down in the village of Compton, with an Indoor School, paid for from Winnings with King of Spain.

KEN CUNDELL was the brother of top Jumps trainer Frank Cundell, trained at Aston Tirroid

Their father, Len, had trained at Chilton - But the Government requisitioned his stables and created RAF Harwell, for the Second Worldd War  - hence he moved to Aston Tirroid, after the war, when racing resumed

Ken Cundell's yard is now, and has been some time, a housing estate - as -despite his father's talent, and illustrous relations, son Peter Cundell could not make a go of Training - despite eventually becoming President of the National Trainer's Federation.

There was a misnomer - if ever there was one.

Still, he has had a comfortable life living at Roden House, bolstered by the sale of the land for the housing.
------------

Here is what I posted on an ATTY CORBETT Thread on here 9 years ago

onlooker • December 4, 2011 7:34

T A 'Atty' CORBETT - started training around 1958 in Compton Berkshire.

He had 12 Jumpers listed in 1959 - with the Earl of Caernarvon as one of his owners.

The Earl, later to be known as Lord Porchester, was Her Majesty The Queen's Racing Manager -
and is the father of Harry Herbert - current supremo of Highclere Thoroughbreds and Racing.

'ATTY' trained out of 'the top Yard'-  on the way to the Ridgway Down gallops from Ken Cundell's yard.

He later moved to Lagrange, at Newmarket, in 1967, having switched to Flat Racing.

By 1968 he had 45 horses - He ceased training in the mid-1970s, and had 24 horses in 1974.

Some of his more familiar, latter, horse were ...

Scots Fusilier - who was still in training as a 13-yr-old in 1972
Sweet Revenge
Kiboletto
Pericet
Tilario
Hopping Hill
Perdu

- and from the mid 1960s ...

Brief Case
Colour Blind
Le Dauphin
Silicon
Kibenka - won the Free Handicap in 1966
Report
mange • December 4, 2011 7:37 PM GMT
propper M8

onlooker • December 5, 2011 7:38

Incidently -

The 'top yard at Compton' - that I referred to - where Atty Corbett first trained, was the Yard used  to film the BBC Drama Series TRAINER - which was shown on Sunday evenings in 1991 and 92.

Strewth - How do I know all these things. Happy

- and, Blimey! - was it really 20 years ago. Sad

TRAINER was the follow on from HOWARD'S WAY - which had run it's course - and aimed to capture that Sunday evening audience.

The series did not get a particularly good response from the critics -

But that was predictable - as those critics would know sod all about racing - and the intrigues of the plots, etc.

Likewise, followers of racing rather turned their noses up at TRAINER - as the story lines, understandably, majored on 'love affairs', the consequent jealousies, and general posturing for social positions - rather than raw racing stories.

It wasn't as bad as both factions portrayed  it, though - if you accepted it for what it was -
which was - Sunday evening light entertainment melodrama.

The opening titles and closing credits, were filmed at Newbury racecourse, showing Starting stalls, a race, crowd reaction, etc - and those were, indeed, well done ...

- and were perfectly complimented by Cliff Richard singing the theme tune - entitled 'More To Life' ...

- which could, in itself, be many a punter's theme tune. Happy

Unfortunately, I cannot find a video of the opening titles/closing credits ....

- so you will just have to listen, instead.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aDZxEACbc6w&feature=related
By:
fairweather
When: 14 May 20 15:55
You've got something the wrong way round there, he was Lord Porchester as a younger man, then became the Earl of Carnarvon (when he inherited Highclere). I remember standing next to him one fine spring day in the 80s, in the paddock at Kempton.

Im sure we all remember those fabulous colours of crimson, with a royal blue collar, white cap, carried by horses such as Lyric Fantasy, Niche, Drum Taps, Lemon Souffle, Roseate Tern and Caramba.
By:
The Knight
When: 14 May 20 15:56
If anyone does watch Trainer - it was poor - note the episode where there are 2 horses in a match race at Goodwood.

All the bookies in the betting ring are going 11/10 both of them.

If only...
By:
onlooker
When: 14 May 20 17:35
Well - thank you - fairweather for your rather ungracious riposte

That part of my post is a RE-post from 9 years ago ... where were you first time around then?

I would like to think that the vast majority on here will be well aware that my specialist subject is Flat Racing, and not the Peerage (that being poster Ged's Province)
By:
fairweather
When: 14 May 20 18:22
Apologies Onlooker, but I couldnt let it go unsaid Grin
By:
blackbarn
When: 14 May 20 20:48
Fairweather - Carnarvon's colours were Scarlet not Crimson (Hollingsworth'ish), with a Blue collar and White Cap. He should have kept his previous colours imo - Eton Blue with Black hooped cap and his Mrs's Sea Green with a Sapphire Blue Cap.
By:
loper
When: 15 May 20 12:25
There was one realistic and accurate depiction in Trainer. David McCallum, as the professional gambler, always sat on the barstool at the left hand end of the main bar leaning back against the wood paneled and frosted glass wall in the Crown & Horns, East Ilsley.

That was my seat!
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