词条 | The Roads to Freedom (TV serial) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
| show_name = The Roads to Freedom | caption = | show_name_2 = | genre = Drama | creator = | based_on = {{based on|The Roads to Freedom|Jean-Paul Sartre}} | developer = | writer = David Turner | director = James Cellan Jones | creative_director = | presenter = | starring = Michael Bryant Daniel Massey Rosemary Leach Georgia Brown Alison Fiske | opentheme = La Route est Dur | endtheme = | composer = | country = United Kingdom | language = English | num_series = 1 | num_episodes = 13 | list_episodes = | executive_producer = | producer = | editor = | location = | cinematography = | camera = | runtime = 45 minutes | company = | distributor = | channel = BBC2 | picture_format = | audio_format = | first_run = | first_aired = {{Start date|1970|09|22|df=y}} | last_aired = {{End date|1970|12|27|df=y}} | preceded_by = | followed_by = | related = | website = | production_website = }} The Roads to Freedom is a 13-part drama serial broadcast on BBC2. Based on the trilogy of novels by Jean-Paul Sartre, The Roads to Freedom was adapted for television by David Turner and directed by James Cellan Jones. It was first shown in late 1970, with Sunday episodes repeated the following Saturday. The serial was repeated in 1972 and again in 1977.[1] ScriptDavid Turner spent fifteen months on the script.[2] While Sartre's trilogy is divided into three more or less equal parts - The Age of Reason (novel), The Reprieve and Iron in the Soul – Turner's adaptation was divided as The Age of Reason (6 episodes), The Reprieve (3 episodes) and The Defeated (4 episodes), thereby placing greater emphasis on the protagonists' pre-war lives in Paris. ControversyReception was mixed. The series drew several comments over its nude scenes and frank sexual references, including a comic yet highly sympathetic portrayal of a homosexual man. Some doubted if Sartre could or should be adapted for television[3][4][5] Cast
Episodes
Theme MusicThe show's theme song, La Route est Dure, was sung by Georgia Brown, who also played the part of Lola. Awards and nominationsThe Roads to Freedom was nominated for five BAFTAs (Best Writer, Best Drama Production, Best Actor, Best Actress and Best Design). In 1971 David Turner won the Writers Guild award for 'Best British Television Dramatization: Jean Paul Sartre's Roads To Freedom (BBC)' [7] LegacyThe serial has never received a home media release in any format, despite existing in full in the BBC's archives.[8] In 2011, considerable interest was generated by a screening of episodes 7,8 and 9 as part of a BFI season dedicated to director James Cellan Jones. The following year a 'rare and complete screening' took place at the BFI South Bank, with all thirteen 45-minute episodes being shown on the 12 & 13 May. [9]References1. ^BBC genome, BBC2 schedules 1970 & 1977 2. ^The Stage, 5 March1970 3. ^”Start of Sartre serial was not even a near triumph”, Patrick Campbell, The Stage, 8 October 1970. 4. ^James Presto. The Stage, 18 February 1971 5. ^'No sign of the permissive revolution”, Allan Prior, The Stage, 12 August 1971 6. ^Limelight, The Stage, 12 October 1972 7. ^”Television Today”, The Stage, 18 February 1971 8. ^{{cite book |last=Monk |first=Claire |date=2015 |title=Upstairs and Downstairs: British Costume Drama from The Forsyte Saga to Downton Abbey |chapter=Pageantry and Populism, Democratization and Dissent: The Forgotten 1970s |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |pages=7-8 |editor1=James Leggott |editor2=Julie Anne Taddeo }} 9. ^BFI Screening, 2012 External links
6 : 1970s British drama television series|BBC television dramas|English-language television programs|1970 British television programme debuts|1970 British television programme endings|Television programs based on French novels |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。