Total and Complete Travesty
Jul. 16th, 2018 10:43 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I have just finished watching two episodes of the BBC Father Brown.
There is nothing good to say of it. To proceed from most fundamental to less so:
There is nothing good to say of it. To proceed from most fundamental to less so:
- The scriptwriters show no signs of having read Chesterton.
- The plots are unrecognizable.
- There is no Chestertonian paradox; none of Chesterton's style; no theology.
- Where is Flambeau?
- Why is an RC priest shown in a chasuble, about to celebrate a nuptial mass in the 1950s, without a biretta?
- Why is a RC priest shown wearing a surplice and black scarf?
- He is neither short enough nor plump enough.
no subject
Date: 2018-07-17 01:06 pm (UTC)I do think getting the vestments correct would be a reasonable expectation, though.
no subject
Date: 2018-07-17 08:19 pm (UTC)It's essentially Miss Marple in a cassock and occasional soutane as far as the content goes.
The thing is, Chesterton's Brown does very little active detecting. In the later-set stories, Flambeau does do some leg-work, but Chesterton's point was that the antecedent knowledge of human nature and orthodox ontology gave Brown the perceptiveness to see through to the heart of a situation. He didn't do much material investigation.
The show substitutes standard amateur-detective plots for anything remotely Chestertonian. They also replace Brown's reliance on (what Chesterton saw as) fundamental orthodoxy, especially as regards human nature, with a generic attractive to the 21st century general humanism. It's also badly researched; it looked very much to me as though the writers couldn't really tell the difference between the RCs and the C of E, which is actually minimal in practice today in terms of integration into society - the C of E has become in practice less familiar and the RCs have become far more thoroughly integrated - but was significant in the period.
There really isn't much left, after all that's gone.