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Bleak House

by Christine Geraghty

Type
Studies
Subject
One FilmBleak House (2005) (TV Series)
Keywords
TV Series
Publishing date
2012
Publisher
BFI Publishing
Collection
BFI Film Classics
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Paperback • 152 pages
5 ¼ x 7 ½ inches (13.5 x 19 cm)
ISBN
978-1-84457-417-9
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Book Presentation:
A new edition to our BFI TV Classics series, this analysis of BBC's Bleak House aims to analyze this critically acclaimed production in terms of its adaptation status, narrative organization, acting, setting and mise-en-scene, while also using it to comment on more general issues in television studies.

Writing in the mid-19th century, Charles Dickens was the first media personality whose working practices compare with those of contemporary television. In publicising its 2005 adaptation, the BBC announced 'Bleak House gets the soap opera treatment' but the serial was also used to demonstrate the BBC's commitment to high-quality drama. Shot in HD, produced by double BAFTA winner Nigel Stafford-Clark and starring Gillian Anderson, the production aimed to combine soap-opera suspense, visual innovation and outstanding performances in an appeal to youthful audiences.

Starting by looking at how serialisation works for Dickens and in contemporary soap opera, this book shows how the BBC sold the programme as a soap, going on to look at its status as a classic British serial, with the traditional expectations of a high-cost co-production, strong on acting and period detail. Christine Geraghty examines the way the serial was discussed by the production team and the press, including the controversies about the missing fog and the notorious visual effects. And she takes issue with adaptor Andrew Davies for his attitude to Dickens' most complex heroine Esther Summerson, played by rising star Anna Maxwell Martin.

In a fascinating exploration of the serial, which played over eight hours in 15 episodes, Geraghty teases out the double narrative in which the youthful protagonists grow into adulthood while the doomed Lady Dedlock is hunted to death in a tele-noir adaptation of the British novel's first detective story. She looks at the innovative casting and examines how the different styles of acting relate to Dickens' own vivid characterisation.

Geraghty also explores the settings, including the creation of London - styled as a soap-opera set - and the great country houses where secrets are kept under wrap. And, using illustrations from the novel, she looks at how the traditional Dickensian 'picture' combined with HD visuals for the first time in a classic serial.

Bleak House was a successful example of the BBC's global brand and a controversial fulfilment of its public service responsibilities. Geraghty makes a critical case for Bleak House to become a TV classic.

About the Author:
CHRISTINE GERAGHTY is Honorary Professorial Fellow at the University of Glasgow and Honorary Research Fellow at Goldsmiths, University of London. She is the author of Now a Major Motion Picture: Film Adaptations from Literature and Drama (2008); My Beautiful Laundrette (2004); British Cinema in the Fifties: Gender, Genre and the 'New Look' (2000); and Women and Soap Opera (1990), and editor, with David Lusted, of The Television Studies Book (1998

See the publisher website: BFI Publishing

See Bleak House (2005) (TV Series) (2005) on IMDB ...

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