Episode 72 – TV G.O.A.T. Pt. 2: 'The Singing Detective' - a podcast by Phi Phenonenon

from 2021-08-19T20:58:36

:: ::

Before Peak TV, what was considered the television medium’s G.O.A.T.? One prominent candidate among TV critics for many years was another British import, this 1986 mini-series from the famed playwright/novelist/screenwriter Dennis Potter. On this episode, joined by Ted Heycraft, we discuss:

- Why this TV mini-series works as a deep, literary genre-hybrid;
- how that hybrid incorporates with Potter’s distinct, self-proclaimed genre of the lipsync-musical (with examples likes Pennies from Heaven);
- its relation to the American Singing Detective feature, directed by Keith Gordon.

Also:

- The three-level fever-dream aspect of blending detective fiction, hospital disease-feature, and autobiographical skin-disease time;
- how long — and cinematically — it takes to reveal the biographical details;
- why this show, previously a critical favorite, has been forgotten;
- and why it ends with such a deceptively happy ending, and whether it deserves it?

The Singing Detective TV series is not streaming anywhere, not even at the BBC. It is available on DVD.

Further episodes of Phi Phenomenon

Further podcasts by Phi Phenonenon

Website of Phi Phenonenon