It is 1981 and Ritchie, Roscoe and Colin begin a new life in London. Strangers at first, these lads and Jill find themselves thrown together. But a new virus is on the rise, and soon their lives will be tested in ways they never imagined.
ٹریلر
کاسٹ
Olly Alexander
Ritchie Tozer
Nathaniel Curtis
Ash Mukherjee
Shaun Dooley
Clive Tozer
Omari Douglas
Roscoe Babatunde
Lydia West
Jill Baxter
Keeley Hawes
Valerie Tozer
Neil Ashton
Grizzle
Callum Scott Howells
Colin Morris-Jones
Toto Bruin
Lucy Tozer
David Carlyle
Gregory Finch
Paul Candelent
Protester
Tracy-Ann Oberman
Carol Carter
Delroy Brown
Oscar Babatunde
Shaniqua Okwok
Solly Babatunde
Michelle Greenidge
Rosa Babatunde
Andria Doherty
Eileen Morris-Jones
Stephen Fry
Arthur Garrison
Ken Christiansen
Karl Benning
آپ کو یہ بھی پسند آ سکتا ہے
The Day of the Jackal
A Discovery of Witches
Top Boy
The Responder
Inside Man
Unchosen
The Mallorca Files
Dark Heart
The Teacher
Gangs of London
MobLand
Bodyguard
Paris Has Fallen
Britannia
The Spanish Princess
Our Girl
Good Omens
The Buccaneers
The Fall
Alexander: The Making of a God
No Escape
Hunted
Trigger Point
The Stranger
تبصرے
10 تبصرے
It's A Sin had me bawling my eyes out. Such a moving , funny and compelling piece of work. So beautifully done and who wouldn't love a friend like Jill.
I expected to rave about this show but was a bit underwhelmed to be honest. The main problem is that the character developments are so superficial. It's all skating the surface at such a lighting speed that there's no in depth development of the characters. It's a series of impressionistic sketches done at breakneck speed so there's very little time really to experience the visceral horror of what early AIDS was like. Russell T. Davies also sometimes veers into lampoonery, devising cartoon-like Aunt Sally characters to bash us over the head in case we missed the point: the parents are generally deployed this way. Having lived with the most homophobic man at home that I've ever met not even he was quite so cartoon-like as this series paints the stereotype. If you really want to explore this topic in visceral depth then Angels in America does it a lot better. This is all very superficial.
