How We Built Britain (BBC)
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![]() | Product Details: Studio: 2 Entertain Video Region: 2 Number of Discs: 2 Format: Colour, PAL Rating: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Sales Rank: 928 | ![]() | Look for similar DVDs by genre:
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| ![]() | Customer Reviews:![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The Best (24 December 2008)I was simply glued to the TV watching this brilliant and informative documentary. Richard D. is an amazing presenter and a great character who keeps you fascinated. I think this is the best documentary I have seen. BUY it...you will love it, I've watched it three times! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Worth it for the music alone...... (19 August 2008).....Music which oddly, Radio Times chose to criticise on more than one occasion. I"m not one for patriotism, I see no reason why a geographical accident of birth should tie you to being emotionally invested in a country but this programme, especially the conjunction of sweeping, swooping image and epic soundtrack, brought me closer than anything else has to feeling a sense of national pride. Wonderful television, simply wonderful. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() A journey through time and place. (01 August 2008)Once again David Dimbleby takes to the road to drive his Land Rover through Britain and reveal some of the best places of interest it has to offer. Moving on from his previous series, A Picture of Britain, this time he invites us to explore the built environment. In six glorious episodes we are conducted through the purposeful castle and cathedral building era of the post Norman Conquest, visiting the homes and public buildings of rich and poor alike throughout successive ages. We examine British architecture and its relationship to the people who lived at the time the buildings were constructed. This is not merely an opportunity to admire great buildings but to visit asylums, music halls and even sewers! This series is a very high quality production which I found thoroughly compelling to watch. The photography is absolutely first class and David Dimbleby's commentary is conducted with humour and charm. This is the kind of production which leads me to believe television still has something to offer. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Not HOW but WHY (23 April 2008)Written and presented by David Dimbleby, this is a sister series to his "A Picture of Britain" with many of the same production team on-board. The concept is broadly the same too, in that the different episodes focus on a different part of the country, but this time there is a distinct chronological element as well. For example, the first episode focuses on East Anglia but also deals with its medieval architectural exuberance So the second episode looks at the sixteenth-century transformations in architecture that took place in the heart of England, from Wiltshire up to Cheshire; the third episode is the odd one out since it is wholly concerned with Scotland and not with any particular period; the fourth reviews eighteenth-century classicism in a westcountry context; the fifth is in the north looking at Victorian buildings; whilst the sixth and final view is of twentieth-century building in the south of England (including London). This brings us right up-to-date with the Jubilee Line extension. This is not a programme about the technical aspects of architecture - alas - but about the context in which buildings arose. As Dimbleby relates in the short fifteen-minute interview that serves as an `extra', those in power expressed it by the buildings they built. In the Middle Ages it was the church; in the present-day it is the multinational corporation. He often strays from his path too, so that his is more often than not a social rather than an art-historical essay. Not that what he has to say is without insight or interest, for example that, "The Victorians believed that for every new problem, there was a building to solve it"; or, with regard to modernism, "We may not have liked what we saw, but we were prepared to take risks." And he is not without some academic background in the subject, pointing out in the interview that he once did a course in Gothic architecture at the Sorbonne. The series is awash with the almost continuous and marvellous soundtrack provided by composer Andrew Blaney. There are also the usual breathtaking aerial shots and atmospheric photography. One can argue that this is chocolate-box Britain: it is, but sometimes I like to scoff a whole boxful. Dimbleby is his usual engaging self. He is not scared to show his fears: he is clearly uncomfortable with the Blackpool rides and felt more at home with the tea-dancing. Dressed in pink shirt with pink and blue socks, and driving again his Land Rover about the British countryside, this does, however, bode badly for his green credentials; and his talking to the camera whilst driving is a bad habit that might lead him into trouble one day. There is very little on detail. The brush with which Dimbleby paints his canvas is very broad indeed. For instance, Robert Adam is just a name mentioned in passing. There is much jumping too: in the second episode we switch speedily from the knot garden in Cheshire's Little Moreton Hall to the dry stone walls of the Cotswolds. And in a sense, the title is a misnomer, for this programme is not about HOW we built Britain, but rather WHY. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() A disappointing change from the TV version (16 February 2008)I bought this DVD set because I had watched the series on BBC TV and was very impressed with the combination of spectacular images and beautiful musical score. So I was very disappointed when I watched the first two episodes and found that the music on the DVD is not the same as in the TV version. The series is still interesting, but that wonderful pairing of images and music is what I really wanted to see and hear again, and that is gone. Now I wish I'd recorded the series when I had the chance! |

















