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Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
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Norman Wisdom Collection (DVD)
Edward Chapman, Brian Worth, Campbell Singer, Terence Alexander, Fenella Fielding, …
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R390
Discovery Miles 3 900
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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A box set of 12 Norman Wisdom classics. In 'On the Beat' Wisdom
stars as a bumbling Scotland Yard car park attendant who gets his
chance to be a real policeman after he accidentally catches some
crooks. His advantage lies in the fact that he physically resembles
one of the ringleaders. In 'Man of the Moment' the bumbling Norman
(Wisdom) accidentally becomes the British delegate to an important
international conference in Geneva. Hilarious chaos and amusing
misunderstandings ensue. In 'Trouble in Store' Wisdom is taken on
as a shop assistant in a department store. His ambition is to
become a window dresser, and he falls in love at first sight with
his dream-girl, Sally. After a disastrous start (chasing a bus on
roller skates, entering a shop girl's hostel, the usual sort of
thing), events conspire to make Norman an unlikely hero. In 'Up in
the World' Wisdom stars as the bumbling window cleaner to Lady
Banderville. He has to cope with the pranks of her son, Sir Reggie,
but cleans up when he confounds a gang of kidnappers. In 'The
Square Peg' Norman Pitkin (Wisdom) is keen to help the war effort,
and turns out to be a dead ringer for an enemy general. Joining up
with his colleague, Mr Grimsdale, he is posted to France as part of
a team repairing the damaged roads. Captured by the enemy, he turns
his uncanny resemblance to his own advantage and comes home a hero.
In 'Follow a Star' Wisdom plays a shop worker (imaginatively also
named Norman, as indeed is every character he has ever portrayed)
who dreams of becoming a famous singer. His attempts are, of
course, disastrous, until he is encouraged by music teacher Miss
Dobson, and a crippled girl named Judy. In 'The Bulldog Breed'
Norman Puckle (Wisdom) is a grocer who joins the Navy and finds
himself chosen to man a rocket flight into outer space. After
Norman brings his own brand of madcap mayhem to the training
process, his superiors begin to suspect that they might have picked
the wrong person for the mission. Also starring Ian Hunter and
Edward Chapman. Whilst in 'One Good Turn' Norman (Wisdom) works at
the orphanage, and promises that he will buy one of its charges a
model car. But how can he get the money? Proving himself equally
incompetent at all jobs, he manages to raise a few laughs along the
way in his attempts to earn the cash and not disappoint the little
sprite. In 'A Stitch in Time' Star Wisdom plays an apprentice
butcher trying to help a sick child. His bumbling efforts end up
with him being banned from visiting little orphan Lindy, but Norman
will go to any lengths to keep in touch with his young charge.
Whilst in 'Just My Tuck', determined to win the heart of his
beautiful neighbour, Norman (Wisdom) decides he wants to buy her a
diamond necklace - but how can he possibly afford it? A solution
offers itself when he goes to a bookmaker's, learns the intricacies
of the accumulator bet, and sets out on a major winning streak.
However, whenever Norman is involved things are never quite that
simple, and soon enough our hapless hero finds himself in deep
trouble, creating havoc at the local racetrack. In 'The Early Bird'
Wisdom plays a milkman caught up in a feud between the small,
traditional company that employs him and a large, modern dairy
planning a hostile takeover. Will Norman, in his typically inept
fashion, manage to save his company from the onset of modernity?
Finally in 'Press For Time' Norman Shields (Wisdom) is an
accident-prone young reporter, who only got the job because his
grandfather (also played by Wisdom) happens to be the Prime
Minister. Hilarious chaos ensues when Norman is sent to cover a
beauty contest. Wisdom also appears in drag as a Suffragette called
Emily.
The longest 'Doctor Who' story ever. The Doctor (Colin Baker) is
put on trial by his people the Time Lords for interference in the
affairs of others; three segments of his past and future are
presented as evidence. 'The Mysterious Planet' shows the Doctor and
Peri (Nicola Bryant) in a battle with a megalomaniac machine on the
planet Ravalox, but what are the mysterious 'secrets' it protects?
'Mindwarp' shows the Doctor apparently betraying Peri to the vile
Sil (Nabil Shaban) and the Mentors - can the Matrix be falsifying
the evidence against the Doctor? In his defence he presents 'Terror
of the Vervoids', a future story where the Earth is threatened by
evil plant life forms. In the final two episodes, 'The Ultimate
Foe', the Doctor learns the truth about his prosecuting counsel,
the Valeyard (Michael Jayston), and has to enter the Matrix to
battle for his remaining lives. This was Colin Baker's last story
as the Doctor.
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Ken Loach at the BBC (DVD)
Tony Selby, Paul Copley, Pamela Brighton, Nikolas Simmonds, Carol White, …
1
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R624
Discovery Miles 6 240
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Collection of TV dramas by the acclaimed British film maker Ken
Loach. 'The Big Flame' (1967) and 'Rank and File' (1971) are
trademark Loach dramas, detailing with sympathy the plight of
workers caught up in industrial disputes at the Liverpool docks and
the Pilkington glassworks, respectively. 'Three Clear Sundays'
(1965) tells the story of Danny (Tony Selby), a young man facing up
to the death penalty after an attempt to help reduce the sentence
of two other prison inmates goes badly wrong. 'Days of Hope' (1975)
is an epic four-part series starring Paul Copley, Pamela Brighton
and Nikolas Simmonds as members of a working class family whose
fortunes are depicted from the end of WWI to what they perceive as
their betrayal in the General Strike of 1926. 'The End of Arthur's
Marriage' (1965) offers something of a departure from Loach's
conventional films, an adaptation of a musical scripted by
Christopher Logue. 'In Two Minds' (1967) stars Anna Cropper and
examines the plight of those suffering from schizophrenia. 'Up the
Junction' (1965) raised the issue of abortion, at the time illegal,
and played a major role in shaping public debate on the issue. Its
influence in this regard was possibly only surpassed by Loach's
most famous TV drama 'Cathy Come Home' (1966), which follows the
struggles of young bride Cathy (Carol White) as she struggles to
keep a roof over herself and her children in a housing system that
seems constantly to be working against her. 'The Price of Coal'
(1977) is a two-part drama set in a Yorkshire mining village which
contrasts the humour of the working men (many played by actual
comedians, including Duggie Brown) with the dangerous conditions in
which they are forced to earn a living.
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The Detectives: Series 2 (DVD)
Jasper Carrott, Robert Powell, George Sewell, Tony Selby; Contributions by Ed Bye
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R138
Discovery Miles 1 380
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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All six episodes from the second series of the BBC comedy, starring
Jasper Carrot and Robert Powell as the bumbling duo, promoted well
beyond their crime fighting talents. In this series, the inept cops
are kidnapped by local gangsters, and when they're given firearms
to protect them on a dangerous case, they end up spending more time
playing with the guns like toys. Episodes are: 'Collared;'
'Witness;' 'Never Without Protection'; 'Dutch Cops' and 'Sparring
Partners'.
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