Description
This carefully-researched and elegantly-argued study offers close analysis of the four films, while also showing how Law and Order comments on contemporary criminal justice scandals and exploring the outrage that the broadcasts caused the year before the election of the 1979 Thatcher government. It uses interviews with the makers of the programmes to show how the films were made, and original archive research about the BBC's response to the subsequent protests in a period of political instability.
Charlotte Brunsdon argues that now the shocking claims of the series have been accepted as 'true enough', it is time to recognise its aesthetic achievement, and restore Law and Order to its place within the canon of great British television drama. Law and Order offers a much bleaker vision of 1970s policing than Life on Mars and re-runs of The Sweeney, and this study shows how the series draws on the tradition of 'serious television drama' and the popular police series to change ideas about both television serial drama and British criminal justice.
...should remain definitive for some time to come.' - The Digital Fix
About the Author
CHARLOTTE BRUNSDON is ?is Professor of Film and Television Studies at the University of Warwick. She is the author of London in Cinema: The Cinematic City Since 1945 (2007), The Feminist, the Housewife and the Soap Opera (2000) and Screen Tastes: Soap Opera to Satellite Dishes (1997).
Reviews
...should remain definitive for some time to come.' - The Digital Fix
Book Information
ISBN 9781844572946
Author Charlotte Brunsdon
Format Paperback
Page Count 144
Imprint BFI Publishing
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC