Drame de la police britannique à la suite de l'équipe du bureau d'enquête sur les plaintes - l'unité qui surveille la police.Drame de la police britannique à la suite de l'équipe du bureau d'enquête sur les plaintes - l'unité qui surveille la police.Drame de la police britannique à la suite de l'équipe du bureau d'enquête sur les plaintes - l'unité qui surveille la police.
- A remporté le prix 1 BAFTA Award
- 5 victoires et 5 nominations au total
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The first two series were about the work of the Police Complaints Department. The slightly disappointing third series was basically about a team of private eyes who used to work together in the Police. I would have preferred all the characters to have remained in the Police Complaints department because to take them out, just made it into a normal detective programme. All of the regular cast were more than excellent, but my favourite was actually John Deakin, the villain of the piece. My favourite quote was when Deakin spoke to Superintendent Graves in the Toilets and went something like, " Whilst Clarke may considerably p*ss me off, my dislike of him pales into insignificance compared with my permanent and utter contempt for you. Got It ? " Some of the scenes between Harry Naylor and his dying wife Joyce ( Serious Crumpet ! )were very well done.
It seems unlikely anyone would be able to make a series like this in today's television climate, given the preference today for light drama with happy endings, which this series eschewed almost constantly, almost masochistically so. Yet no series made since this one ever felt as real and believable as this did. The second series moved away from police complaints to the increasing involvement of MI5 and managed to be even better. Certainly the portrayal of Box 500 here seemed much more real and convincing than "Spooks". Indeed this is the series that "Spooks" wishes it was and the plot lines featured were much more gripping and believable than "Spooks" managed without having to resort to our heroes saving London and/or the world every week. Even the maligned third series, where Clark, Naylor and Connell go private, is still better than most dramas today. The producers had the good sense to call it a day after the third series and at least every episode ever made is preserved for posterity on DVD to be savoured again and again. When will something of the quality of this series ever get made again? Not for a long time, if ever, I fear.
"Between the Lines" was a show which reflected British television's attitude to the police in the Thatcher years...namely, that the police are brutal, corrupt and fascist. If the show was merely about corrupt officers, then it could have made for gripping drama, but it had a heavy political agenda so corruption was always from up on high and institutionalised. One or two episodes of this might have been gripping, but it was constant and often Neil Pearson's character would often act as an apologist for the criminals. One of the more ludicrous episodes featured Pete Postlethwaite as a senior Metropolitan Police commander putting down a riot (by good lefties or course) which he agitated and he ends up quoting the speech made in the Falklands War: "The flag is flying over Port Stanley"...oh, is this a dig at Thatcher? But apart from the student level politics, the show gained notoriety and earned the nickname "Between the Loins" for its preponderance for sex scenes bang on the stroke of the 9 o'clock watershed. Any chance for Pearson to drop his trousers (but always in a sensitive way) and he'd grab it. Sometimes it seemed he'd abandon a case to get some more sex...can't say I blame him.
This brilliant 90s police drama series makes the more recent Line of Duty series look very basic indeed. I remember Between the lines being compulsive viewing and subsequently found line of duty to be a pale facsimile in comparison.
When it grows up Line Of Duty would like to be Between The Lines.
I like Line Of Duty but Between The Lines was more realistic I think.
Daily Mail readers might be critical of Between The Lines but when you consider Hillsborough and the Miner's strike the corrupt police in league with the establishment while protecting themselves the plots in the series seem realistic.
It is April 2021 and the news reports a met cop charged with being a fascist you think Line Of Duty should be set in London.
But enough reality this is a well acted drama with usually great scripts and a big budget for its time.
Like all these older productions the supporting cast is interesting.
There is a Daniel Craig in this,whatever happened to him?
People slag off series 3 but I like it but it is not as good as the first 2 series.
I like Line Of Duty but Between The Lines was more realistic I think.
Daily Mail readers might be critical of Between The Lines but when you consider Hillsborough and the Miner's strike the corrupt police in league with the establishment while protecting themselves the plots in the series seem realistic.
It is April 2021 and the news reports a met cop charged with being a fascist you think Line Of Duty should be set in London.
But enough reality this is a well acted drama with usually great scripts and a big budget for its time.
Like all these older productions the supporting cast is interesting.
There is a Daniel Craig in this,whatever happened to him?
People slag off series 3 but I like it but it is not as good as the first 2 series.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe series was nicknamed "Between the Sheets" because of the bedroom activities of lead character Tony Clark.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Comedy Connections: Drop the Dead Donkey (2006)
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