Sod the reboot... revisiting classic Bergerac

Mel O'Drama

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Put me down as a one-time casual viewer. The first time round - particularly in the first half of its run - I was younger than the show’s intended audience, but I do remember watching occasional episodes. Not that I remember much beyond the basics: dashing John Nettles driving round in that burgundy Triumph Roadster; Charlie Hungerford chewing a cigar and grinning; nice, frumpy Annette Badland fielding phone calls; Louise Jameson as a love interest and Liza Goddard as the Ice Maiden (the kind of name a kid latches onto as it sounds rather like a supervillainess. I was probably disappointed that she had no obvious superpowers).

Oh, and George Fenton’s moody bass blended in with typically Gallic sounds.




1.01-1.04

My memory is of a series filled to the brim with sunshine, so it was a little eye-opening that a number of these opening episodes were filmed in less then clement weather. All the outdoors scenes look a bit grey, including a walk on a blustery beach and a scene in which Jim talks to a woman having breakfast out by the pool, wearing sunglasses and a thick coat while black clouds loom ominously and the surface shows evidence of recent rainfall. Not that this is a problem. Jim is a resident on Jersey, not a tourist, and these stories are evidently filmed - and possibly set - out of season. Pretty as it looks, though, Jersey would have made more of an impression had it been sunny. Other scenes appear more sunny, so I suppose it’s the luck of the draw on filming days.

The series did open with a reasonably ambitious stunt, though, involving two planes, an old van and some conspicuously placed empty barrels.

Naturally, Jim himself was on the larger passenger plane and quickly got involved. I’m getting a sense of how this series works and there’s a little contrivance. Jim keeps bumping into the right people at the right time, who conveniently feed him clues which are helpful to his investigation. I find it endearing.

John Nettles is very watchable. He’s not a traditional hunk, but is ruggedly attractive in an accessible way, and this is paired with an engaging charisma. There’s a sense that he’s a people person, and this makes his connections with people - core cast and visiting faces alike - completely believable.

I’m intrigued by the way John’s Cornish accent can be heard occasionally, with the rhoticity the dead giveaway. I’m not sure if this is close to a Jersey accent, or even if Jim himself is meant to be a lifetime native of the island.

It seems Robert Banks Stewart enjoys giving his protagonists flaws. Around six years ago, I revisited Shoestring - another BBC detective series from the creator that immediately preceded this series - and loved the thread of Eddie Shoestring finding his way back after a nervous breakdown. Echoing this, Jim Bergerac is a newly sober alcoholic who has blown his marriage and damaged his health and consequently his career. Like Eddie Shoestring, there is already a sense of the unorthodox to his methods. He is not a by-the-book police detective and it feels this is going to bite him on the backside at any moment.

It feels some good may have come out of the end of his marriage. Jim’s now-ex-wife comes across as very snarky and shrewish in her initial appearances. It’s one-sided, of course because we don’t fully know what she’s gone through, so it’s probable this is partly a defence mechanism or her way of dealing with the breakdown of the marriage. Still, one can’t help feeling he’s had a lucky break, even as I’ve enjoyed the verbal sparring between them.

And Jim’s now-ex-father-in-law shows promise as well. I remember Charlie Hungerford being a reliable figure in this series, but I’d actually forgotten how they were related. I also thought of Charlie as being quite upmarket but it’s made clear here that he’s a rogue who has made his money through dodgy dealings and is now revelling in flashing his cash. It’s a little refreshing to see an older wealthy person in a British series who isn’t old money. Charlie is as nouveau riche as they come. Terence Alexander makes Charlie affable, despite his rough edges, and even four episodes in there’s a sense that Charlie and Jim quite like one another and their verbal sparring is a way of showing that affection. It promises to be one of the best pairings in this series.

I’m always impressed by people who speak languages with any degree of fluency. John Nettles speaks some French. Annette Badland’s French sounds impressively natural. Cécile Paoli speaks English well enough, even if the language barrier can sometimes read as stilted or detached.

Sean Arnold’s face is very familiar. I would have watched him in both this and Grange Hill even though I don’t specifically remember the roles. So far he’s very promising as the authority figure clashing with Jim.

Familiar guests have included Floella Benjamin (strangely dubbed with an American accent in all her scenes); Simon Cadell (playing a bit of a nasty, most unlike Jeffrey Fairbrother); Ian Hendry and Prunella Scales.

At 55 minutes per episode, the pacing feels quite slow to me at times. I wasn’t expecting excitement, but there are times I don’t feel as invested as I could and sometimes the story feels stretched a little thin. I feel episodes could benefit from being five to ten minutes shorter, but I’m also hopeful this will improve.

The stories are fine, though. I haven’t yet been wowed, but that wasn’t really the expectation with a gentle series like this. Several scenes have been grittier than I’d have thought - such as the drugs mule being beaten up, which was mostly suggestion, but it was still enough - and I’m sure a couple were borderline daring for the time (the gay twist in the second episode could be seen coming from a mile away from a 2026 vantage point, but was probably surprising at the time).

The dialogue feels mostly very natural and real. Very few lines have jumped out at me - which I’ve noticed more because I’ve struggled to find a quote that would sum up the series or lead character to use in the thread title - but there was one particularly funny line used when Jim was trying to find a trace of an unusual perfume while interrogating a female journalist, causing her to snap at him:
Will you stop sniffing my handbag?

The score has been appropriate, but something that leapt out at me with the fourth episode was that almost all the music used was recognisable as the same stock music used in Sons and Daughters and Prisoner (with one piece also making it across to Dallas in that musician’s strike immediately post Who Shot JR?). I wonder if this will continue. I hope so.
 

Barbara Fan

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Oh @Mel O'Drama I will need to dig out my DVDs and rewatch it

Have watched a few recent John Nettles Midsummer Murders - thats just not a safe place to stay

Bergerac is full of the great and the good British character actors

Sean Arnold was Mr. Llewelyn in Grange Hill and Annette Badland will always be "Bureau des Etrangers" in a french accent secretary

We were rather unkind at school and nick named her Miss Piggy!
 

Mel O'Drama

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Have watched a few recent John Nettles Midsummer Murders - thats just not a safe place to stay

I've never seen it, but I know it has a reputation as lots of death in a pretty place. A bit like St Mary Mead.

Mind you, six episodes in and there's a lot of scandal happening in sleepy little Jersey.





Bergerac is full of the great and the good British character actors

Part of the fun of watching is seeing faces I recognise. There have been a lot already.




Sean Arnold was Mr. Llewelyn in Grange Hill

He's so very familiar. I don't know if I remember him from Bergerac or Grange Hill, but I think he was a little before I was a regular GH viewer, so it's probable I recognise him from Bergerac.




Annette Badland will always be "Bureau des Etrangers" in a french accent secretary

Another very familiar face. In recent years I've (re)watched her in Miss Marple, and I think I most recently saw her in a film called The Baker where she played a complete slob.

I must say I'm very impressed with her French. Hers is a really nice supporting role. She hasn't had all that much to do so far, really, but she's been very watchable in all her scenes.
 

Mel O'Drama

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1.05-1.10; 2.01-2.03


While I may be failing a little in my rewatching posts, it’s not for want of enjoyment. Almost every time a series takes a while to click with me, I vacillate between two options: either (1) it’s taking a while to adjust to the tone or (2) the series has genuinely improved as it’s found its feet. This time I’m quite resolute in feeling it’s mostly the latter.

Either way, I felt that as Series One progressed it developed a sparkle. The filming seemed sunnier and the scripts better crafted. Certainly there was no danger of my attention drifting as the plots felt increasingly compelling.

One of the most enjoyable for me was a good old murder-mystery (possibly in the Midsomer style) with the future Lynda La Plante playing a young housekeeper suspected of trying to kill her wealthy employer for financial gain. It had the lot, including a bit of a twist. I felt bad for enjoying it quite so much as it felt rather atypical and not specifically Bergerac (it’s a “moveable feast” kind of story that could have been used for any number of detective or crime series).

The series has improved further with some tweaks for Series Two.

It’s out with Francine - a perfectly serviceable supporting character, but an ill-suited romantic pairing for the series’ lead (tellingly, when I watched the initial scenes of Series Two’s first episode, I spent some time believing that Jim and Francine were out walking, only to realise that he was actually hugging and talking to his daughter, Kim). I was aware Francine was only in early series but didn’t know how she departed. This added a sense of jeopardy to Francine being held hostage in the final episode of Series One as I genuinely thought they might do a Teresa Bond and kill her off. Instead, she’s simply done away with in expositional dialogue telling us she returned to France for a visit at Christmas and decided to stay.

The series wastes no time in introducing a new character to become romantic interest. Happily, Marianne Belshade is played by Celia Imrie who is not only rather more age appropriate (she’s a mere nine years younger than John Nettles) but also a stronger, feistier character who has genuine presence and good chemistry. There’s a bit of a “will they/won’t they” angle, which is promising, particularly given the clashes in their initial scenes.

In both her episodes so far, Jim has tried to find out information about one of her clients as part of his investigation which she has refused to give up in deference to client confidentiality. Which I suppose is Series Two’s version of the “tour guide” angle the previous year, where the girlfriend’s career kept getting them involved in the story of the week.

I’m curious about Jim’s status with the force. Early in Series One, there was a question mark over whether he would continue after his injuries and he was on a kind of probation until it was resolved. This angle (unless I’ve not noticed something, which is quite possible) seems to have been quietly dropped, and yet Jim is still very much a loose cannon. He’s always swiping evidence from crime scenes and barging into places to snoop without a warrant or any kind of authority. As an example, one of the latest episodes I watched saw him travel across to London under the guise of being a potential house buyer in order to snoop round a suspect’s house and extract information from his unwitting wife.

Guest-star watching is good fun in this series. Some of those seen in this run include Dandy Nichols, Anthony Head, Greta Scacchi, Sarah Douglas, Patrick Mower, James “the wine has reacted with the cork” Cossins, Warren Clarke and Joanne Whalley (the future Mrs Val Kilmer).

Something that strikes me about this series is that I’m reminded at times of Jaws. Both are set on small islands, removed from a mainland, that is a haven for tourists and the wealthy. Even the interiors of buildings like town halls have similar aesthetics and energies. Each has a relatively small population where word gets round quickly and residents do what they can to keep things running, sometimes wearing several hats and sometimes being the sole person doing their job. The character who really brought this home to me was Dr Lejeune the police pathologist. I was reminded of the medical examiner from Jaws (played in turn by a real county medical examiner who lived on the real island portraying the fictitious one). Every time Lajeune reappears, I’m reminded that this is a small place and he is the only ME in town and one of the few on Jersey.
 

Barbara Fan

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It’s out with Francine - a perfectly serviceable supporting character, but an ill-suited romantic pairing for the series’ l
I thought she was so "wishy washy" in the first season and a bit of a limp lettuce so was glad to see her leave

Happily, Marianne Belshade is played by Celia Imrie
I like Celia Imrie now but all those years ago I didnt like her in Bergerac and always thought she was rather mannish for Jim (as only a teenage girl can think!!) and not very pretty with that severe / harsh haircut - always thought he could do better - someone like me would suit him!! ;)
 

Mel O'Drama

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2.04-2.09; 3.01

The guest stars continue to add interest. Norman Wisdom was a surprise, and his image was used to good effect for a little twist. Art Malik - soon to go on to big things - was very endearing in his central role, with a smile that melts the heart a little. Richard Griffiths was a key figure in another episode. Hammer Girl Barbara Shelley purred her way through her episode with her icy cool demeanour wrapped up in a velvet voice. Playing her daughter was Tracey Childs, soon to become Lynn Howard.

Car spotting also fun. All those delightful objects that formed the street furniture of the early Eighties, captured here in a little time capsule. I did notice a continuity error featuring a yellow Renault 5 in one episode (I think it was the Birdman episode with Richard Griffiths). In some scenes the car had hollow head rests which I think were attached to bucket seats. In others it had padded head rests. I assume it was two different cars and find myself wondering why this would be. The only logical reason I can think of would be if some scenes were filmed on the mainland while others were filmed on Jersey.

Charlie Hungerford throwing his hat into the political ring has added a certain something. All the same, it’s amusing how someone in practically every story is somehow an old acquaintance of Charlie in the same way everyone seemed connected to the tourism industry in Series One when Francine was about. Marianne, too, seems to have connections to some of the stories or visiting characters. And likewise, everyone stays or socialises at Diamante Lil’s hotel where she’s shown to have a keen eye, a sharp memory and a good instinct for anything off-kilter.

Meanwhile, poor Crozier and Charlotte haven’t had any stories of their own.Unless you count Charlotte taking a tumble from her bike… and even that happened off-screen (seems it was written in to explain a cut on Annette Badland’s face from riding into a tree).

I suppose I will have to get by without most of them at some point, though. This Third Series is the last for Charlotte and I already feel a little sad at the thought of the series without Annette Badland’s eyebrows raising and furrowing furiously as she gives her all to every line, be it in English or French.

The opening of Series Three also saw the final appearance of my favourite recurring character LeJeune. He brought something very special to the series, and I’m sorry he won’t appear again. insouciantly smoking over his flammable chemicals.

And I’ve now watched every episode featuring Celia Imrie’s Marianne Bellshade. She’ll be missed by me, but it seems not by anyone else since apparently she is never mentioned again beyond her last episode (which was left open with no sign the character was going anywhere). I thought she was a good match for Jim

From the initial opening episode, it’s pleasing to see that there isn’t an immediate new love interest stepping in for Jim. It’s time we saw him as an independent person rather than quickly moving in yet another short-term girlfriend.

Effectively replacing Celia Imrie in the opening credits is Deborah Grant, which opens up more possibilities in my eyes.

Deborah is the character who perhaps made the least-favourable first impression. Back in those first couple of episodes it was all bitterness and criticism and felt to me as though the primary objective with her character was to elicit viewer sympathy for Jim. The good news is that she’s had the most dramatic turnaround in my opinion, going from a shrew to someone with more shades. Her verbal sparring with Jim has been great fun. It’s usually Jim who gets the last word, but Deborah has been very sporting about it, seeming to enjoy and perhaps even admire his wit. Through Series Two she’s hit all the right notes, albeit sometimes from the peripheries.

Series Three has started with strength, with Ninety Per Cent Proof being a very densely plotted episode. A lot happened in those fifty five minutes and, appropriately, Deborah really came into her own as she stepped up for Jim to support him through a difficult time. The idea of someone pouring booze down the unconscious Jim’s throat is a stretch, but that was kind of the point. Why would anyone believe such a tale instead of the simpler idea that he has simply taken a drink after a period of sobriety? It was certainly a test of strength for him, and that helped make it one of the most compelling stories yet.







always thought he could do better - someone like me would suit him!! ;)

I think you had a narrow escape, BF. With those breezy rides in his car, it would cost a fortune in hairspray.
 

Barbara Fan

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Art Malik - soon to go on to big things - was very endearing in his central role, with a smile that melts the heart a little
Ive always had a huge soft spot for Art Malik ever since Hari Khumar role in Jewel in the crown, he was so handsome so will need to tune into Bergerac

Have you seen the episode yet with Ricky Fulton who was a very popular Scottish comedian and a must every year to see in Pantomime?

loving the reviews @Mel O'Drama and will dust off the DVDs soon x
 

Mel O'Drama

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Ive always had a huge soft spot for Art Malik ever since Hari Khumar role in Jewel in the crown, he was so handsome so will need to tune into Bergerac

He's a really nice actor and from what I've seen always seems to generate really good chemistry with anyone who shares the screen with him. His Bergerac episode made me think I need to check out more of his work (whenever I can find the time :eek:).



Have you seen the episode yet with Ricky Fulton who was a very popular Scottish comedian and a must every year to see in Pantomime?

Oh yes. I really liked how that episode was structured so that I thought it was about clearing his name, before the twist that hedunnit after all. I'm not familiar with him, but it was a nice performance that fooled me.
 

Mel O'Drama

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3.02-3.07


Is it me, or is Bergerac getting rather more violent. Not specifically the series - although there has been some graphic stuff when it comes to the crimes - but Jim Bergerac himself. In recent episodes it’s become the norm for him to get hands on with those he apprehends, usually throwing some punches.

He has the instincts of a bloodhound, though. A key example of this being the last episode I watched - A Cry In The Night - where he instinctively knew a death was murder even as other experts - including Crozier - were happy to conclude the death an accident. Sometimes - as here - he can can appear to be either as possessing a kind of superhuman level of gut feeling or just extremely cynical. And I suppose neither of those does him any harm in his role since he is invariably right. Mind you, I wouldn’t mind him being wrong a bit more. Chinks in the armour are always good, even if he does have a few in other areas.

In this particular episode I was fascinated by his treatment towards a suspect who ostensibly was pouring out his heart about a difficult childhood and the death of his father. Jim remained cold and distant and cut him down to size without really saying anything beyond a crisp goodbye, a forced half smile and some knowing looks. He was right about the man (of course), but the evidence wasn’t there.

The dialogue in this episode was particularly cheeky at times, with several lines of innuendo. This was evident from the start when a man invited a woman up to the cabin of a cruiser with the promise “I’ll show you which knob to pull” and there was a thread throughout the episode.

Crisp coolness was evident with the debut of Phillipa Vale, who had a ready answer for every question. It was fun to see the cat and mouse games she played with Jim. He needs an adversary to give him a run for his money, and she can do this. Interesting, as well, to see her use her sexuality to gain advantage. There’s been a good degree of nudity in this series - mostly female - with boobs and bums on display, and this was amped up with Phillipa. I’m fairly sure a body double was used for the longer shots, but it’s still a little eyebrow raising - especially since my main association of Liza Goddard is as one of the wholesome team chairs in Give Us A Clue.

She’s not the only familiar face. There have been a number. Chas from Dempsey and Makepeace was a boxer in a nicely structured story involving kidnaps, sporting corruption and racism (one of several episodes where the wife or girlfriend turns out to be treacherous). Raquel from Only Fools… was in the same episode with a cough and spit as a reporter. Elsewhere, Nadim Sawalha was the exotic businessman who knows the Hungerfords (effectively a variant of Art Malik’s character) in another nice story. And back in the latest episode, Hi-De-Hi’s Linda Regan (AKA Mrs Brian Murphy) delivered the most appalling Scandinavian accent I’ve heard since I saw Bjorn Again in concert.

I was distracted trying to work why one of the bad guys from 3.03 was so familiar. I questioned if it was because he resembled Gareth Thomas or James Hazeldine, but the answer was simply because I’d watched many of Bruce Lidington’s Crossroads episodes as dashing PC Steve Cater.
 

Mel O'Drama

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3.08-3.10


Although it’s not explicit in the episodes, it seems I’ve reached the end of an era, with these last stories being the final ones to to feature Charlotte, The Royal Barge and the original Bureau office. Charlotte did at least have a last waltz with Jim.

More familiar faces included Shirley Stelfox who was married to Howards’ Way’s Ken Masters. The future Barry from Summer Wine. Diana Dors’ husband, Alan Lake, appeared around a year before his suicide following Dors’ death. Patrick Allen’s face was familiar, but his voice even more so, with him having narrated numerous British films of earlier decades (from The Eagle Has Landed to Carry On Up The Khyber). There’s also Dudley Sutton, best known to most for his role in Lovejoy, but to me for his role as shady characters in a Porridge Christmas special and the George and Mildred film.

At this point a good number of the diegetic songs are jumping out at me. Among those heard in recent episodes were Culture Club’s Karma Chameleon, The Police’s Spirits In The Material World and Wham!’s Club Tropicana (appropriately enough over a sunny beach scene).

The final episode felt high stakes, what with Jim being held at gunpoint and almost forced to take a drink. The human interest around his alcoholism created a nice soapy ticking time bomb that added some depth, and I almost breathed a sigh of relief when something happened to stop that drink passing his lips.

I know that Louise Jameson makes her debut in the next episode. I had been looking forward to this but at this point my feelings are mixed. These last few episodes, the writing seemed to be moving slowly towards a reconciliation between Jim and Deborah and, even though I know it won’t happen, I have found myself rooting for them. Real time viewers at least had time to ease from one era to the next, with almost two years before this final episode and the debut of Series Four.
 
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