I said I'd made a post about Enemy at the Door, and here it is. (I'm thinking of doing some more fandom manifesto type posts for old TV I've watched, because they're fun and possibly even useful, if only to inform people of things to avoid. :-D)
So, what is it? Enemy at the Door is a 1978-80 UK drama series about the German Occupation of the (
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Hmm, the Nescafe thought is a cunning one, although Anthony Head might be one of the few people who doesn't get to drink any tea or coffee in it. POssibly. He probably does. Everybody has tea or coffee at some point, even German generals visiting the Island to conspire against Hitler!
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Tea: it's how we won the war(!).
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Or watch shows with less tea drinking & stop screen capping mugs.
It really is just as well you didn't want EatD back, after all, in that case. Although you get tea cups, not mugs - people are posh in the 1940s, even when they haven't got actual food to eat that isn't parsnip.
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And I first came across Terence Hardiman as the second Father Abbot in the Cadfael series, an incredibly good and decent man and one of my favourite characters, so it was a culture shock and a half when I first ran across him as a baddie...
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Heh, I must have seen him in Cadfael - but I expect by that time, I was only wondering if perhaps they were going to try a plot twist of making the abbot evil, because, look, Terence Hardiman! (I rewatched his episode of this, and then was watching Wish Me Luck, and he turned up as another Nazi in that!) John pointed that out to me, over on Dreamwidth, too, and says he's not evil in Sleeping Murder, either, which I've also definitely seen.
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It sounds like it might well be sponsored by a tea or coffee company. It's also already on my Amazon wishlist and that is entirely your fault. Or maybe it's my fault for being easily intrigued by old TV. Either way, this sounds so good.
(There is probably something in which Terence Hardiman is not a Nazi, the demon headmaster or some other villain, but this is not it.)There is - Cadfael! He played the second abbot, Abbot Radulfus. Which amused me as Michael Culver played Prior Robert who'd been angling for the abbot's job until Radulfus turned up. Terence Hardiman and Michael Culver were testy with each other in Secret Army too, so I just imagine Michael Culver being all, "Not him again!" when Terence Hardiman turned up to be the abbot. It's a lovely scene in Cadfael when Abbot Heribert says he's no longer the abbot ( ... )
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And, yes, everybody has reminded me about Cadfael. And don't worry, it did make sense! I only watched some Cadfael ages ago and don't recall all that much about it, but I've read the books several times each.
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