Jimmy Savile: Un cauchemar britannique
Titre original : Jimmy Savile: A British Horror Story
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6,7/10
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Jimmy Savile a autrefois régné sur les ondes avec un personnage original et de bonnes œuvres. Cependant, cette icône a réussi à cacher ses nombreuses mauvaises actions présumées pendant long... Tout lireJimmy Savile a autrefois régné sur les ondes avec un personnage original et de bonnes œuvres. Cependant, cette icône a réussi à cacher ses nombreuses mauvaises actions présumées pendant longtemps.Jimmy Savile a autrefois régné sur les ondes avec un personnage original et de bonnes œuvres. Cependant, cette icône a réussi à cacher ses nombreuses mauvaises actions présumées pendant longtemps.
- A remporté le prix 1 BAFTA Award
- 2 victoires et 1 nomination au total
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An uncomfortable but neccesary watch but probably not for the reasons we might think. My take away was that this series wasn't at all about JS, but actually about us - the British public, the British institution. Yes we know he was a monster and we as a nation were arguably victims ourselves of his grooming - but we also were the ones who placed him on that pedestal, who made him untouchable by the cult of celebrity, who turned a blind eye even when he flaunted his perversions in our faces (look at allllll that bloody archive!!) - that's the true British Horror Story. I feel a few true crime fans will miss the point of this by assuming it's going to be a tell-all victim-lead, come for the gory details Finding Neverland-esque, type of doc. But this is a story that's far bigger and sinister as it turns the camera back at us and forces us to confront the roles that we all played in this.
The Jimmy Savile story is horrific , complex, and was needing told properly, an in depth study of what made this man the way he was. It needed an insight into his many victims,their stories and how lives were ruined.
Unfortunately this latest documentary offered nothing new. The same stuff wehave seen many times. It was slow paced and never really got its teeth properly into why Jimmy Savile did what he did. What were his early days like, as a child, his upbringing ? It was briefly mentioned but never elaborated on. Instead we get the same story thats been told many times before in similar documentaries.
It had its interesting moments, but overall this documentary was a disappointing anti-climax after all hype from Netflix.
Unfortunately this latest documentary offered nothing new. The same stuff wehave seen many times. It was slow paced and never really got its teeth properly into why Jimmy Savile did what he did. What were his early days like, as a child, his upbringing ? It was briefly mentioned but never elaborated on. Instead we get the same story thats been told many times before in similar documentaries.
It had its interesting moments, but overall this documentary was a disappointing anti-climax after all hype from Netflix.
An extremely long documentary which goes all over the place, except the one you want to learn about.
This documentary is 240 mins and divided into 2 episodes. It is only the final act of this documentary they talk about the actual sexual exploits. The entire show is a build up to the last 25 mins which actually deals with what happens.
Its one of those doco's where a person will come on and say, "You would hear these things, but you wouldn't believe it.... but deep down. I knew!". This goes on for everyone who comes on the show. It's really laughable.
So, I would say, don't watch it. Watch a YouTube video which deals with this topic. I will also say, it is just a Netflix thing to stretch out shows and this was really stretched out. You might find your attention wandering.
Its one of those doco's where a person will come on and say, "You would hear these things, but you wouldn't believe it.... but deep down. I knew!". This goes on for everyone who comes on the show. It's really laughable.
So, I would say, don't watch it. Watch a YouTube video which deals with this topic. I will also say, it is just a Netflix thing to stretch out shows and this was really stretched out. You might find your attention wandering.
I remember driving through the beautiful hills of Glencoe years ago, when my eye was attracted to a remote cottage on a high promontory which must have commanded a spectacular view of the glens. However, the house looked burned-out and ruined, covered in graffiti, like a desecration. I later learned that this was one of Jimmy Savile's retreats and that after his fall from grace when the news broke about his unspeakable criminal offences against mostly defenceless underage girls (although the programme-makers in fact inform us that allegations were made by victims ranging from the ages of 5 and 75 and included members of both sexes), some locals had taken the law into their own hands and laid waste to it.
Savile was certainly a part of my growing up. Always as much a TV as radio personality, I remembered listening to his "Pick Of The Pops" chart history programme on Radio One and also his "Savile's Travels" Sunday afternoon show, the latter seeing him visit towns and villages the length of the country. With what we know now, one hesitates to think what he might have got up to in these different places. However, his fame and later claim to "National Treasure" status was based mostly on his TV persona, not only as a zany presenter of "Top Of The Pops" but as a bona-fide family entertainer on shows like "Clunk Click" and his biggest TV hit "Jim'll Fix It" where he came across as an avuncular granter-of-wishes, mostly to young kids, making childhood dreams come true. It was massively successful prime-time TV, and ran for years on BBC1.
Savile used his celebrity to raise funds for charities he said were close to his heart, like local hospitals or children's homes and in so-doing raised his society profile so that he was soon mixing in circles with the Royal Family and then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Away from the spotlight however, stories were starting to circle about his propensity for underage girls. He never seemed to have a steady girl-friend, far less wife, living alone after his beloved mother died, occasionally boasting on TV about his roving eye for young girls.
Somehow, by a combination of his "untouchable", TV god-status as well as hiring a powerful, big-name solicitor to aggressively take down any threat of exposure of his crimes to the wider-public, he got away with his abuses all his life and in fact received what was akin to almost a state funeral in his home town before, within a year, the truth about his vile misdeeds finally broke out.
Told over two lengthy episodes, this two-part Netflix documentary series is light on Savile's beginnings, really only picking up his rise to fame as it was captured on the small screen. His depravity is only hinted at before, in the second programme, after he dies, the full story emerges, no doubt shaming his high and mighty friends as well as professional colleagues who somehow missed what was in plain view all the time, that the man was a creepy, crazy monster, using his position of power to gratify his sub-normal urges.
Although it was sometimes slow in pace, this programme eventually delivered its incontrovertible conclusion with great impact as it allows two of his young female victims, now grown to obviously still-damaged adulthood, to tell their stories. As we now know, some 400 people later came forward with similar sad stories and I even remember accusations of necrophilia at one point.
The great sadness here, besides the physical and psychological damage inflicted on his victims, is that he was never brought to justice and died considered almost a national hero. His was a tale of gross abuse of celebrity status which he managed to conceal all his life, although the truth, even sordid, perverted truth like this, thankfully got out to at last set the record straight.
Savile was certainly a part of my growing up. Always as much a TV as radio personality, I remembered listening to his "Pick Of The Pops" chart history programme on Radio One and also his "Savile's Travels" Sunday afternoon show, the latter seeing him visit towns and villages the length of the country. With what we know now, one hesitates to think what he might have got up to in these different places. However, his fame and later claim to "National Treasure" status was based mostly on his TV persona, not only as a zany presenter of "Top Of The Pops" but as a bona-fide family entertainer on shows like "Clunk Click" and his biggest TV hit "Jim'll Fix It" where he came across as an avuncular granter-of-wishes, mostly to young kids, making childhood dreams come true. It was massively successful prime-time TV, and ran for years on BBC1.
Savile used his celebrity to raise funds for charities he said were close to his heart, like local hospitals or children's homes and in so-doing raised his society profile so that he was soon mixing in circles with the Royal Family and then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Away from the spotlight however, stories were starting to circle about his propensity for underage girls. He never seemed to have a steady girl-friend, far less wife, living alone after his beloved mother died, occasionally boasting on TV about his roving eye for young girls.
Somehow, by a combination of his "untouchable", TV god-status as well as hiring a powerful, big-name solicitor to aggressively take down any threat of exposure of his crimes to the wider-public, he got away with his abuses all his life and in fact received what was akin to almost a state funeral in his home town before, within a year, the truth about his vile misdeeds finally broke out.
Told over two lengthy episodes, this two-part Netflix documentary series is light on Savile's beginnings, really only picking up his rise to fame as it was captured on the small screen. His depravity is only hinted at before, in the second programme, after he dies, the full story emerges, no doubt shaming his high and mighty friends as well as professional colleagues who somehow missed what was in plain view all the time, that the man was a creepy, crazy monster, using his position of power to gratify his sub-normal urges.
Although it was sometimes slow in pace, this programme eventually delivered its incontrovertible conclusion with great impact as it allows two of his young female victims, now grown to obviously still-damaged adulthood, to tell their stories. As we now know, some 400 people later came forward with similar sad stories and I even remember accusations of necrophilia at one point.
The great sadness here, besides the physical and psychological damage inflicted on his victims, is that he was never brought to justice and died considered almost a national hero. His was a tale of gross abuse of celebrity status which he managed to conceal all his life, although the truth, even sordid, perverted truth like this, thankfully got out to at last set the record straight.
A two part documentary exposing the rise and posthumous fall of the former DJ, and prolific predator, Jimmy Savile.
The first part deals with his beginnings, where he came from, his charity work, the circles he moved in, the second, is a lot more intense, it deals with the real man underneath the cigar smoking facade.
I'm stunned how it wasn't seen by everyone, the revelations are shocking, and the accounts of his victims are truly horrific.
It's a very well made documentary, it's incredibly uncomfortable viewing, but it is interesting, shocking to believe how such things happened.
Creepier than anything, shame on those that facilitated his behaviour, and allowed it to happen. It would have been easy to say, I don't want to watch it, he makes my skin crawl, I just wanted to understand how it could happen.
Andrew Neal did at least try to take him to task.
A shocking story, 8/10.
The first part deals with his beginnings, where he came from, his charity work, the circles he moved in, the second, is a lot more intense, it deals with the real man underneath the cigar smoking facade.
I'm stunned how it wasn't seen by everyone, the revelations are shocking, and the accounts of his victims are truly horrific.
It's a very well made documentary, it's incredibly uncomfortable viewing, but it is interesting, shocking to believe how such things happened.
Creepier than anything, shame on those that facilitated his behaviour, and allowed it to happen. It would have been easy to say, I don't want to watch it, he makes my skin crawl, I just wanted to understand how it could happen.
Andrew Neal did at least try to take him to task.
A shocking story, 8/10.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis documentary features surviving archive sequences from the "Top of the Pops", "Clunk Click", and the now infamous "Jim'll Fix It", in additional to extracts from other programmes Jimmy Savile appeared in. Due to the nature of the BBC's video archiving policy up to 1978, wiping and re-using the original master tapes, many of the video extracts are from lower grade recordings, most likely VHS home recordings. The means that the documentary has a lot of grainy video material, that at multiple points causes the Netflix stream to pixelate mostly during certain image edits.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Jeremy Vine: Episode #5.70 (2022)
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- Durée1 heure 25 minutes
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By what name was Jimmy Savile: Un cauchemar britannique (2022) officially released in Japan in Japanese?
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