The Long Good Friday
Author
Discussion

waynedear

Original Poster:

2,351 posts

189 months

Friday 10th February 2023
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On film4 22.50 tonight.

nebpor

3,753 posts

257 months

Friday 10th February 2023
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One of my favs. Hoskins finest, soundtrack fantastic

85Carrera

3,503 posts

259 months

Friday 10th February 2023
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Great film. One of my all time favourites.

vixen1700

27,681 posts

292 months

Friday 10th February 2023
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"There's gonna be an eruption" cool

Cheers for the heads-up, reckon I'll sit up and watch it again. hehe

Randy Winkman

20,501 posts

211 months

Friday 10th February 2023
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Great 1980 film. In 1981 my girlfriend suggested we go and see Friday 13th part two at the pictures and I agreed straight away. I must have sat through at least 10 very confused minutes wondering where Bob Hoskins was because I'd mixed up two entirely different films and thought we had gone to watch the sequel to The Long Good Friday.


belleair302

6,995 posts

229 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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Top gangster film and Helen Mirren was excellent. He was dead right about the docklands!

Lo-Fi

1,274 posts

92 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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The feem choon has been my ring tone for years. My Mrs finally understands where it comes from now. Top film.

"Who's avin a go at me..?"

KAgantua

5,079 posts

153 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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COLINS BIN STABBED!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

P5BNij

15,875 posts

128 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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I caught the last hour of it last night, a great film and one of my all time favourites. It very nearly didn't get released, it was shot in '79 but didn't go on general release until '81, after George Harrison's Hand Made Films company stepped in.

''A touch of the Dunkirk spirit, know what I mean?''

wink

vixen1700

27,681 posts

292 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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Has an XJ6 ever looked so good in a film?

The stance of it just looks so right.

popeyewhite

23,008 posts

142 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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Razors' buttocks scene still makes me wince.

Oh and that ending. The look on Shand's face when he realises he's done for. Brilliant.

TwigtheWonderkid

47,806 posts

172 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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belleair302 said:
He was dead right about the docklands!
In the 70s and early 80s, there were so many brownfield sites, just wasteland, not only in Docklands, but in places in what is now Chelsea Harbour and Coal Drops Yard. I bought my first flat in London in 1986 for £62K. Thinking back, I probably could have bought about 5 acres or wasteland in Chelsea or Kings Cross for less money. Would be worth hundreds of millions now weeping

NDA

24,527 posts

247 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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Damn, missed it.

I wonder if it's on the C4 app - I'll have a look.

One of my favourite films.


ETA -it is! smile

P5BNij

15,875 posts

128 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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TwigtheWonderkid said:
belleair302 said:
He was dead right about the docklands!
In the 70s and early 80s, there were so many brownfield sites, just wasteland, not only in Docklands, but in places in what is now Chelsea Harbour and Coal Drops Yard. I bought my first flat in London in 1986 for £62K. Thinking back, I probably could have bought about 5 acres or wasteland in Chelsea or Kings Cross for less money. Would be worth hundreds of millions now weeping
When I worked at Old Oak Common in the early '80s some of the old hand drivers recalled working coal trains down to Chelsea Wharf, on more than one occasion the odd 20ton mineral wagon would end up in the Thames after a rough shunt or two. A now retired mate recalls working a train down there in 1966 and watching some scenes from 'Morgan : A Suitable Case For Treatment' being filmed with David Warner larking about in a gorilla suit! In 1975 an episode of 'The Sweeney' was shot there with Roy Kinnear being chased through the coal yard by Dennis Waterman.

I drive freight trains down the line now and the area is unrecognisable, there's a shiny new station just before the line crosses the river surrounded by apartment blocks, you'd never know there were any sidings there years ago.

I read recently that 'The Long Good Friday' was initially made as A TV film and never meant to be released in cinemas at all.

The Jag definitely looks the part on screen...


Genuine Barn Find

5,859 posts

237 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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The end scene where Bob Hoskins realises he’s not long for this world after being bundled into the back of the car is an acting master class. He’s almost calm by the close. Accepting the inevitable and knowing there is not a single thing he can do about it.

Genuine Barn Find

5,859 posts

237 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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The end scene where Bob Hoskins realises he’s not long for this world after being bundled into the back of the car is an acting master class. He’s almost calm by the close. Accepting the inevitable and knowing there is not a single thing he can do about it.

vixen1700

27,681 posts

292 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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TwigtheWonderkid said:
In the 70s and early 80s, there were so many brownfield sites, just wasteland, not only in Docklands, but in places in what is now Chelsea Harbour and Coal Drops Yard. I bought my first flat in London in 1986 for £62K. Thinking back, I probably could have bought about 5 acres or wasteland in Chelsea or Kings Cross for less money. Would be worth hundreds of millions now weeping
I remember going to the Crass 'anarchy centre' in an old warehouse in Wapping around 1981 when I was 15 and it was like some old bombed out derelict wasteland.

What a difference to now. eek

cuprabob

17,906 posts

236 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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It's a good film and excellent performances by Bob Hoskins and Helen Mirren but it's also notable that Derek Thomson's acting was as bad then as it is now as Charlie in Casualty smile

Fundoreen

4,180 posts

105 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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Always found it a bit flawed in that some gangsters cant deal with some people that sneak around planting bombs.
Does the criminal underworld have to conform to the Geneva convention or something?
Good film for the nostalgia value I guess.

Lo-Fi

1,274 posts

92 months

Saturday 11th February 2023
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Genuine Barn Find said:
The end scene where Bob Hoskins realises he’s not long for this world after being bundled into the back of the car is an acting master class. He’s almost calm by the close. Accepting the inevitable and knowing there is not a single thing he can do about it.
Funny thing about that; a sequel was actually written. Harold escapes and ends up in Jamaica. It just never got made