The Bogeyman
- L’episodio è andato in onda il 2 nov 1985
- 48min
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaDempsey becomes obsessed with catching a tough guy called Keith Lymon. Makepeace thinks it's because the two men are different sides of the same coin.Dempsey becomes obsessed with catching a tough guy called Keith Lymon. Makepeace thinks it's because the two men are different sides of the same coin.Dempsey becomes obsessed with catching a tough guy called Keith Lymon. Makepeace thinks it's because the two men are different sides of the same coin.
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Recensioni in evidenza
I've seen the same thing in other shows of the era that I've been recently watching. I have a suspicion that some of them initially attempted to be more progressive in the area of sexual equality but were forced to abandon the idea because the audiences simply wouldn't accept it. They were too addicted to their Clark Gable & Co memories of the mighty man saving the helpless woman who would then swoon into his bed - no feminists need apply.
Obviously, as we all know, that was the norm back then. But it's a real shame to see another show that initially seemed to try to buck the trend so quickly jump over into the chauvinistic mainstream. And please don't bother with "But Michael and Glynis got married in real life!" People with no better defence invariably come out with that 'bombshell' revelation anytime someone dares to mention the sexism in this series, as if the relationship between the actors had anything to do with the scripts they were given to act out before the camera.
Okay. Now that I've got that off my chest, I may surprise you by saying that I am, nonetheless, still mostly enjoying Dempsey and Makepeace. I remember that I watched quite a few - maybe most - of the episodes as a child, but I'd forgotten everything about them apart from that there was a silly amount of gunplay for an England-set series and that Glynis Barber was beautiful. Watching it now is a real nostalgia trip, especially because I've since been to (and sometimes worked at or near to) a fair number of the locations shown.
Apart from the nowadays-sackable-offence sexism, Brandon's very cool as the typical tough New York cop. Barber's even cooler as the unflappable aristocrat (according to British TV, our police force contains an inordinate amount of members of the peerage.) And Ray Smith is fantastic as the no-nonsense boss - a real throwback to Dobey from Starsky & Hutch and Cowley from The Professionals. In this particular episode, Nick Brimble is also exceptionally good, with an amazingly menacing physical presence. Although I couldn't help but think of him as Robert Z'dar's weak-chinned little brother!
There is a big shootout but several of the gang getaway. This includes Perry the getaway driver and shooter Keith Lymon (Nick Brimble.)
Dempsey becomes obsessed with catching Lymon while the latter is planning his next job.
Dempsey regards Lymon as the flipside of the same coin.
There is an attempt to inject some psychological heft into the story. Lymon is an imposing figure, not a man to be messed with.
Brimble plays him frighteningly well but I just did not see him as a mirror image of Dempsey.
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- QuizNear the end the red car that explodes is not the red car in the earliest scene
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Makepeace: [Dempsey is reviewing video footage of Lymon for the upteenth time] You know something? He reminds me of you.
Dempsey: It's not Lyman.
Makepeace: He threw your operation, he killed Miller, he gave you the slip not once but twice and he's always a step ahead of you.
Dempsey: So is my shadow.
Makepeace: And you can't catch that, either.
Dempsey: Maybe he's the bogeyman.
Makepeace: Maybe he's what you would have been if you weren't a cop.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Dempsey and Makepeace: Bird of Prey (1986)