Tag Archives: BBC

Kanopy: BBC Christmas Ghost Stories

26 Mar
Image showing a single lit white candle on a dark table, its wax dripping, with blurred bookshelves in the background. The text reads “BBC – A Ghost Story for Christmas.”

BBC’s Christmas Ghost Stories on Kanopy are ‘snuggle into your armchair,’ oral folklores that let the ghosts come through the quiet, not the loud. We’re in a cozy inn or country home, under the lamplight of a study, in the official capacity of authority and tenured procedure, or in the storytelling intimacy of public radio. These stories present fright as if they’re a three part/pint story told against a pub’s fire. 

(You can watch these stories any time. Christmas, in fact, has very little do with them, and in most cases none).

Each episode begins with a tea-time beginning that introduces us to the characters and establishes the whispers of their confusion or animosity in piecing their current situation together – the job they have, the move their making, their qualms with society, or the injustice on them no one in their rationality believes

There are seven 30-minute episodes available on Kanopy. These are the four I enjoyed the most:   

Woman of Stone – A woman recounts the chilling tale of newlyweds settling into a small cottage in a quiet village and how the couple soon finds themselves overshadowed by superstitious warnings of the legend of two marble tomb effigies who are said to rise each year and walk. The husband dismisses this as mere folklore. The wife does not, and one night she is all alone…

The Dead Room – The tale of a long-running radio horror series where a veteran presenter of the series and renowned celebrity of sorts for his voice and oratory skills finds he must adapt to changing times and tastes of radio listeners and digesters of horror stories. He asks, “Whatever happened to the classic ghost stories and the good old days?” 

Be careful how much of the past you want to revisit.  

The Mezzotint (A very intensive process where a picture’s lines are intended to hold ink) – A curator of a small university museum who specializes in topography of the British Isles is baffled when an art dealer sends him details of an interesting engraving of an old country house. It’s ordinary though…at first, until the curator sees a figure where there was none before. With every viewing, it has moved, getting closer and closer to the house. Rationality falls to the impossible drawing closer in the picture and eventually until it knocks. 

Martin’s Close – An adaptation of a ghost story by MR James. 1684. Someone is on trial for his life and he’s facing the infamous ‘hanging judge’. However, this is not a cut-and-dried murder case and the unexplainable cannot be explained (or at least believed by judge and jury).

The Mezzotint and The Dead Room were my favorite because both presented the supernatural and strange as an inconvenience and a break from reality that logic just couldn’t define. The fear is quiet and suspicious, presented in a way that you believe the character is challenging his own rationality, and even when others challenge them. Dread pushes through – the tap, tap, tapping, if you will – and slowly drives them mad until their psyche is too mushed to defend against the horror revealing itself in form before their eyes.  

The terrifying and supernatural find their voice through the quiet and uncertainty and not the characters giving it to them, which is something wonderfully distinctive to the British way of telling ghost stories. There is a deep questioning quality to the investigation of what exactly is happening that drags us along as if we were standing right beside the actor or actress. They ramble through their broken logic and spin a yo-yo of logic while desperately grasping pieces together. 

Additional episodes include:

Kanopy can be accessed with your Hoboken Library Card and episodes streamed with your complimentary tickets (you get 60 per month-each of these individual episodes is between 1-2 tickets).

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Written by:
Sean Willey
Information and Digital Services Assistant

The Many Adventures of Sherlock Holmes

21 Aug

It is ironic that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle felt that his Sherlock Holmes stories diverted him from what he felt were his more important historic writings since even today his stories and adaptations of Holmes are hugely popular.  Doyle may have tired of his detective, but it seems the world at large never will.  Doyle brought Holmes back even after his death at the Reichenbach Falls in the “Final Problem” for more adventures and it seems since then the character will be immortal.  If you are interested in reading Doyle’s original stories, there are several collected works available through BCCLS.  If you can’t get enough of the great detective, below are two novels and two television adaptations mystery lovers will enjoy.

Sherlock sherlockbbc2
Sherlock is a BBC production which airs on PBS stations in the US.  It brings Sherlock Holmes to the present day, but keeps his Baker Street address.  Many of the beloved characters including Watson, his landlady Mrs. Hudson, his brother Mycroft, and his nemesis Moriarty are all represented in contemporary versions of their classic selves.  Sherlock is played by Benedict Cumberbatch, who stared as Khan in the most recent Star Trek movie.    I find sometimes in adaptations Watson is often played as a buffoon, but I found Martin Freeman’s portrayal of Dr. John Watson, a veteran injured in Afghanistan, to be very nuanced and interesting.  I particularly like the way this series adds to the source material while still remaining true to the original feel of Doyle’s work.  Season one and two are both available from BCCLS libraries.

Elementarykinopoisk.ru
Elementary was my favorite new show last year.  It strays further from the source material than does Sherlock.  Not only is it set in modern times, but Holmes is now living in New York and Watson is an Asian American woman played by Lucy Liu.  There is also an interesting twist on Moriarty that I wouldn’t want to spoil for those who haven’t seen the show.  Sherlock Holmes is played by Johnny Lee Miller.  His interpretation of the character reminds me a lot of Hugh Laurie’s portrayal of the brilliant but acerbic Dr. House; both of whom struggle with their former addiction.  I liked seeing Holmes’ interaction with the local New York setting in many of the episodes.  The Federal Reserve’s East Rutherford Operations Center is even featured at the center of one episode during a blizzard.  The first season of Elementary on DVD will be available to check out at the end of August.  You can watch the second season this fall on CBS.

The Beekeeper’s ApprenticeBeekeeper's_Apprentice
The Beekeeper’s Apprentice or On the Segregation of the Queen by Laurie R. King is the first book in an ongoing series.  The books are set after the original Holmes novels with Sherlock Holmes having “retired” to the countryside.  Watson is still around and along with Mycroft and Mrs. Hudson appears in the novel, but Holmes’ new apprentice is Mary Russell, a modern American woman who develops into his equal in matters of deduction.  Though in this book their relationship is strictly that of friendship between teacher and student, in later books in the series Russell becomes his wife.  Some of the earlier smaller cases and the focus on background details made the book a bit slow moving, but overall I enjoyed the period setting and seeing a female version of Holmes.  King is a member of the exclusive Baker Street Irregulars, a Sherlock Holmes fan organization.  The Beekeeper’s Apprentice is available at HPL.

The Bughouse Affairbughouse
Marcia Muller and Bill Pronzini’s The Bughouse Affair is set in 1894 San Francisco.  The husband and wife writing team are both past Mystery Writers of America Grand Masters.  In this case Holmes plays a supporting role to detectives John Quincannon and Sabina Carpenter.  Throughout the novel it is unknown whether the strange character claiming to be Sherlock Holmes is actually the famous detective who had supposedly died at the Reichenbach Falls or if he is an impostor.  The novel lovingly pokes fun at some of Holmes’ classic idiosyncrasies.  This is the first in a new series and the novel hints that Holmes will continue to both help and bedevil Quincannon and Carpenter in their future cases.  Stop by the Hoboken Public Library to borrow The Bughouse Affair.

Aimee Harris, Head of Reference