Category: (DVD)
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In the mid-eighteenth century London's perilous streets were overrun by notorious gangs, prostitutes, pimps and corrupt night watchmen. Out of this dark underworld, emerged two Westminster magistrates - novelist Henry Fielding (Ian McDiarmid) and his blind half brother, John (Iain Glen). These unlikely crime-fighters organized the infamous Bow Street Runners and introduced law and order to the crime-riddled city. Combining the excitement of contemporary crime drama with the detail of actual historical research, this graphic, five-part series tells the true story of London's first police force.
Quite EntertainingReviewed by Meme, 2010-03-17
I like the series very much, although I thought Ian McDiarmid is a bit too old to play Henry Fielding who was at the time, I believe, on his mid forties. I love History and the London map constantly shown makes you really travel in time to the 18th century city. Iain Glen in my view has wonderful moments as Henry's blind younger half-brother, but sometimes I was hard pressed to imagine a blind person presenting such facial expressions. This is not a happy-ending film, but has brutal scenes and presents a dark, quite Gothic London. Still, a fascinating view of how that great city might have looked at that time. If you can especially pass the highly sexualized atmosphere, and above all, the "Molly" wedding, which I found disgusting, you might even want to watch this more than once.
As close to the 18th Century as you'll get without a time machineReviewed by Thinker, 2009-06-28
Well researched, well acted and well staged, without sacrifice to
modern correctness or language - yes, this is the other side of the
coin, and the language then was rough, as was the life for many,
but people still poured into London by the thousands every year
from the countryside seeking work, opportunity, fame, or just
anonymity. There was nothing anywhere like London and it was
seductive. During this period London's population stayed static
despite the constant in-migration from the countryside, because the
city consumed people like a monster: crime, overcrowding, bad food,
gin - it's all here: The staging claustrophobic, shadowy and very
real, the mapping innovative, the camera work nuanced and almost
speaking, the fight scenes convincing. There's a great deal of
humour in this series, as well, some of it very gallows, but that
was another feature of the 18th century - a sense of black, ironic
humour which may even seem a little callous to us today. The viewer
sees how really rough the brothers had it during a time when you
could get held up in Hyde Park at high noon by a highwayman, with
little help but a few fellow crusaders like Saunders Welch. Henry
alone, and then later (which this series depicts) with his younger
half-brother John, fought 12-16 hours a day to keep the peace and
to somehow, some way, put a stop to the Hydra-headed monster called
crime that was devouring London. All in the face of deep distrust
of anything resembling a standing police force from the mob and the
aristocracy alike. The Brothers Fielding's efforts were paid from
secret service money.
Here is where it all began, drawn from contemporary records (the
Bow Court records) with a good job done even in small details. The
series is worth watching more than once not only for pleasure, but
to catch some of the subtleties.
Ian McDiarmid is older than the Fielding he plays, who died at 47,
but he really captures the spirit of the man so well, his humour
and his rough tongue, his passion and that awful gout - it could
hardly be better! Even the way he guzzles rather than sipping his
wine - Fielding could take down 3 bottles of port in an evening -
with almost palpable pleasure. I feel John is also played quite
well by Iain Glen, with a very haunting and really quite creepy
questioning of a gang member in one of the latter episodes. This
includes portraying the struggles the brothers first had working
together until they could come to an understanding and a system -
in his early 30s at this time, John was an ex-military man (he had
had his eyes injured at 19 in the Navy, and later went blind by the
'ministrations' of a supposed noted London eye surgeon. He didn't
have a barrister brother for nothing; Henry sued for £400-500);
and like his brother, brilliant, if less wild. Although John looked
up to and admired Henry, and Henry loved "dear Jack", their
distinct and at times contradictory personalities were bound to
clash under the constant pressure.
This is styled as a police drama - it is in a way a fictionalized
account of a factual occurrence, based on solid historical research
with the Fielding brothers working as detectives; something which,
as noted in Hue and Cry (Patrick Pringle) actually did happen. In
fact, John Fielding was a predecessor of Sherlock Holmes in
implementing deductive reasoning in investigation. Henry did
similarly in his close questioning and investigation, with
subsequent recording, of various cases. Very unfortunately, much
was lost when the Lord Gordon rioters torched Sir John Fielding's
house in the 1780s, burning many of Henry Fielding's papers and
notes, so in fact it is very difficult to recreate the exact
methods of detection and interrogation.
The molly houses, the taverns, the dirt, the foul language and,
yes, the mores, are all here and distinctly 18th century. I have
only two bones to pick with the production - one is WHERE IS SEASON
2?? The other is, that leonine mane of hair John Fielding sported
was not a wig - it was his own hair.
Notes to US viewers:
1. This is not a dramatization of the excellent Sir John Fielding
novels. It is the story of the inception of the Bow Street
Runners.
2. This is not a Hollywood production.
Read the booksReviewed by P. Garrison, 2009-05-15
For those who were expecting Bruce Alexanders books to be faithfully represented on video, I only have 3 words for you don't buy this. The story lines were full of characters not in the books, sexual story lines not in the books etc. My advice is to stay with the books, a much more enjoyable way to spend an hour or two living in old London Town.
"Unhand the lady and **** off back to Clerkenwell!"Reviewed by Trevor Willsmer, 2009-05-08
TV series City of Vice has a great true-life pitch - the efforts of
brothers Henry and John Fielding (the author of Tom Jones and a
celebrated blind magistrate, played by Ian McDiarmid and Iain Glen
respectively) to form England's first police force amid the squalor
and near-apocalyptic lawlessness of a London already bursting at
the seams in 1753. With the massive growth of cities (especially
London) and a nationwide addiction to gin that makes modern
problems with drugs look almost quaint, the 17-18th century was
perhaps the most violent era in British history (though, despite
dealing with murder, child prostitution, rape and sundry
perversions, the series is not nearly so violent), yet the brothers
still faced hostility from an aristocracy who could afford private
protection to what they saw as an instrument of tyranny more suited
to foreigners than free Englishmen. While the show sometimes
downplays the casual violence, the brothers' morality, though seen
from a 20th century perspective, is distinctly 18th century - they
are not above ruining the odd reputation or contriving a robbery on
a recalcitrant would-be patron to secure the Bow Street Runners'
future. Nor does it turn them into glowing examples of police work.
They're an almost fumbling band of detectives - as the first in
their field, they're unsure even of how to investigate a murder
("How is it done?" "Ask questions?") - and often they uphold the
principle of the law with disastrous consequences to the victims of
crimes.
The series too feels like it's still feeling its way along and
doesn't always have the full confidence of its backers at Channel 4
- the metropolis a little underpopulated at times, the budgetary
limitations apparent in the less-than-bustling streets and the
nighttime hangings that fail to hide the lack of crowds. Yet often
it manages to paper over the cracks with surprising style, using
animated street maps of London to link scenes and adding
scaffolding to sets they can't afford to build in their entirety to
give an impression of a city at once sprouting up and falling down
(literally in one scene of a slum collapsing, tenants and all).
It's convincingly foul mouthed ("The Devil **** you, Mr Fielding!"
is one of the more minor terms of abuse), with McDiarmid deserving
special praise for his tireless efforts to restore the word
`****ster' to the common modern-day vocabulary. Despite the grim
material it's not without moments of wit - Henry's wife, a former
maid, cannot help herself from doing the housework - and if it's at
times overly reliant on narration to fill the audience in on
details, at least it's genuinely informative. The formidable John
Fielding's abilities sometimes tend to get short shrift - he tends
to get typed as the stern, unyielding one - and some of the guest
stars are surprisingly awkward - Juliet Aubrey's strange inflection
and Gary Lewis' often inaudible insular distemperate delivery make
the lack of subtitles particularly problematic, but despite its
problems the six episodes are compelling and intriguing enough to
leave you hoping for a more fully realised second series.
City of Vice - garbled dialogReviewed by Bruce Sproul, 2008-12-28
This purchase taught us a lesson - don't buy a DVD before you've
seen at least one episode. After watching the first two hours, we
gave up simply because we couldn't undersand much of the dialog.
Some heavy accents, poor audio pick-up and constant background
sound effects combined to make the dialog unintelligible about 30%
of the time.
Too bad, because the video portrayed the seamy side of London very
well.