Boys from the Blackstuff
- TV Mini Series
- 1982
- 50m
IMDb RATING
8.5/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Five unemployed men would do anything just to have a job in Thatcher's Britain.Five unemployed men would do anything just to have a job in Thatcher's Britain.Five unemployed men would do anything just to have a job in Thatcher's Britain.
- Won 3 BAFTA Awards
- 6 wins & 5 nominations total
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Featured reviews
10a.north
Brilliance!
This series is being reshown on T.V. at the moment and it reminds one on how drama should be made. True the subject matter about poverty and unemployment in 80's Britain was a strong one for the writer,producer,director& actors to rise to. But they do it with the peak of professionalism,realism & creativity, seldom seen in more recent T.V. ( or Film for that matter ) output.
All the episodes which make up the series really move the watcher even today and it sends echoes out to everyone living in 90's Britain towards the turn of the century where some similar themes as explored in this piece are still more than ever relevant today.
All the episodes which make up the series really move the watcher even today and it sends echoes out to everyone living in 90's Britain towards the turn of the century where some similar themes as explored in this piece are still more than ever relevant today.
From a U.S. admirer of the mini-series
The opening 2 hour 'Play for Today' TV film that lead to the 5 part mini-series isn't all that strong. But the 5 remaining parts (ranging from 43 to 68 minutes) are often powerful stuff indeed. A rueful, depressing and cutting look at unemployment and personal and economic depression in the Thatcher years. The opening film isn't really needed, as one could pick up much of what happened from the 5 part mini-series, but it does serve as a good basic set up for the characters and their relationships, as a group of workers on the dole take an off-the- books job laying down tarmac (the black stuff) at a new apartment complex. But in the original film the characters stay frustratingly close to caricatures, and the story twists are largely unsurprising.
But in the 5 part mini-series, made 2 years later, that all changes. Each hour investigates one of the character's lives in great depth and detail, The performances are very strong, and the stories are almost all heartbreaking as we see what being unemployed and unwanted by society does to these men; their families, their self-esteem, even their sanity. There are occasional darkly funny moments, but this is grim, uncompromising stuff, with one episode in particular "Yosser's story" as harrowing and disturbing and honest a piece of film- making as I've seen in a long while. It's interesting (if depressing) to see how much of what was going on in England in 1982, could just as well be America in 2013.
But in the 5 part mini-series, made 2 years later, that all changes. Each hour investigates one of the character's lives in great depth and detail, The performances are very strong, and the stories are almost all heartbreaking as we see what being unemployed and unwanted by society does to these men; their families, their self-esteem, even their sanity. There are occasional darkly funny moments, but this is grim, uncompromising stuff, with one episode in particular "Yosser's story" as harrowing and disturbing and honest a piece of film- making as I've seen in a long while. It's interesting (if depressing) to see how much of what was going on in England in 1982, could just as well be America in 2013.
10vhouse
It's really good.
If you are interested in what it was like to live in Thatcher's Britain in the eighties then look no futher. You need a strong stomach - especially for Yosser's Story. Memories of Cathy Come Home from the sixties spring to mind. It's good, it's real and it hurts to watch it - that's WHY it should be seen. Thanks Alan Bleasdale- for seeing and telling it like it is.
Superb
This series is a brilliant insight to the devastation of Liverpool during the 80's it shows the hardship of job seekers and the many people who went through these times unemployed and deprived of their jobs and their futures where therefore destroyed by the high level of Unemployement during this period the five episodes are all written with a hilarious wit and a brilliant raw expression of life during this time that will make you laugh cry and feel for the characters and their situations the most touching story is Yossers Story it is brilliant and well written with a sense of comedy throughout although the results are upsetting. Yosser Hughes the Liverpool lad with his three Children alone living in a squalor he is desperate for a companion and finds himself alone when his wife tells social services of her torment suffered at the hands of Yosser (This a complete lie Yosser would not hurt his children or his wife) so they take his children and evict him he is beaten by the brutal Police who feel no remorse after they beat him to a pulp in his bare living room then he is left alone in the house desperate for work he tries to find a job at various areas of work but is never successful and in the end he is arrested and tries to drown himself to escape the life he has bean given. The brilliance within the series is the ability to upset you and make you laugh at the same time and finally realise the severity of unemployment during this period the whole series is absolutely brilliant and should be viewed by all because it is an outstanding look at life the history of a time in which Liverpool suffered the most and is an outstanding portrait of life a ten out of ten experience you will never forget
10Mashu-2
If you regard yourself as a social commentator, watch this.
Alan Bleasdale's defining production. Almost unbearably tragic characters, yet Bleasdale manages to find the opportunity for rare wit in his dialogue. As good a T.V. series as there has ever been. Truly the work of a genius.
Did you know
- TriviaThis drama was seen by many as an indictment of Margaret Thatcher's Britain, but, in fact, Alan Bleasdale wrote four out of the five episodes when Prime Minister James Callaghan and his Labour Government were in power from 1976-79. Bleasedale makes no specific or overt political commentary focussing instead on the day to day personal struggles of his characters to survive on the 'dole', apart from "George's Last Ride", where "George" makes clear his Socialist beliefs and aims.
- Quotes
[recurring line]
Yosser Hughes: Gizza job! I can do that!
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 100 Greatest TV Moments (1999)
- How many seasons does Boys from the Blackstuff have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 50m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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