[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] CFP for upcoming Symposium: '"You're Nicked": The Sweeney and Crime Drama in British Film & Television'
Wed Jul 04 15:51:15 GMT 2012
*The UEA School of Film and Television Studies presents:*
* *
*‘You’re Nicked!’ /The Sweeney/ and Crime Drama in British Film and
Television*
* *
*Friday 21^st September 2012*
This one-day symposium celebrates a classic British television crime
drama just as the new film adaptation arrives in British cinemas. /The
Sweeney/ (2012), directed by British /enfant terrible auteur /Nick Love,
and starring Ray Winstone and Ben Drew (Plan B), demonstrates the
enduring nostalgia and cultural appeal of the series, almost four
decades after its debut.
/The Sweeney/ (ITV, 1975-78) has long been hailed as a revision and
revitalisation of the British television crime drama. Created by Ian
Kennedy Martin, and produced by Euston Films (the film arm of Thames
Television), the series focused on the London Metropolitan Police’s
‘Flying Squad’. Despite (or perhaps because of) the series’ brutality
and violence, Detective Inspector Jack Regan (John Thaw) and Detective
Sergeant George Carter (Dennis Waterman) became part of popular 1970s
British culture, appearing in four series and two films (/Sweeney!,
/1977; /Sweeney 2/, 1978).
Known for its action sequences, extensive location filming, claims to
realism, and often brutal portrayal of its central characters, /The
Sweeney/ broke away from and responded to safer police procedurals such
as /Dixon of Dock Green/ (BBC, 1955-76) and /Z-Cars/ (BBC, 1962-78);
while later productions including /The Professionals /(ITV, 1977-83) and
/Dempsey and Makepeace/ (ITV, 1984-86) are a visible response to its
success.
Although /The Sweeney /fell out of fashion during the 80s and 90s, the
convergence of lad culture and post-feminism in contemporary Britain has
renewed its appeal: catchphrases and behaviour are used and cited well
into the 21^st century, while series-based merchandise and newer
productions such as /Life on Mars /(BBC, 2006-07) draw on the nostalgic
appeal of the central protagonists.
This one-day symposium is the first attempt to celebrate the success of
this key television text, assess its legacy, and explore its repeated
adventures in cinema, including the new 2012 adaptation.__
* *
*While this is not an exhaustive list, topics could include:*
· The influence of the single-play /Regan/ (ITV, 1974) on the series
· The creation/production of the series, including the role of Euston Films
· ‘I’ll come down on you so hard you’ll have to reach up to tie your
shoelaces’: Performing masculinity in /The Sweeney/
· ‘Get your trousers on, you’re nicked!’ Sex, lies and /The Sweeney/
· Feminism, the 1970s and /The Sweeney / The Sweeney /(2012) and
Postfeminism //
· Nostalgia and /The Sweeney /(2012)//
· ‘Remember, no guns unless they use ‘em’: Morality and /The Sweeney/
· The impact of /The Sweeney/ on British crime drama
· The mythologisation of London and London locations in /The Sweeney/
· Translating /The Sweeney/ from TV to cinema: /Sweeney!, Sweeney 2 /and
/The Sweeney/
· Television stardom: John Thaw and Dennis Waterman
· Selling /The Sweeney/: merchandising paratexts from the 1970s to
modern day//
· /The Sweeney/ abroad: selling the show to the world//
· Music in /The Sweeney/: from Dennis Waterman to Plan B
· Parody, pastiche and homage: from the Comic Strip’s /Detectives on the
Edge of a Nervous Breakdown/ (C4, 1993), and the 1990s Nissan Almeira
advert, to Gene Hunt
Abstracts of no more than *_250 words_* should be submitted by *Friday
24^th August 2012* to (keith.johnston /at/ uea.ac.uk)
<mailto:(keith.johnston /at/ uea.ac.uk)> *and* (s.godfrey /at/ uea.ac.uk)
<mailto:(s.godfrey /at/ uea.ac.uk)>.
Dr Keith M. Johnston
Lecturer in Film and Television Studies
School of Film and Television Studies
University of East Anglia
Norwich
Norfolk
UK
NR4 7TJ
Tel: 01603 592274
email: (keith.johnston /at/ uea.ac.uk)
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]