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Benutzer:Snellius

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Hi!

habe den Account erstellt, weil ich von Zeit zu Zeit Seiten finde, bei denen ich Rechtschreibfehler finde (oder jedenfalls der Meinung bin). Manchmal gefällt mir auch eine andere Kleinigkeit in diesem oder jenem Artikel nicht und ich versuche sie zu korrigieren.

Hab jetzt doch nen kleinen Artikel angfangen: club 8

Habe einen kleinen Artikel zum Hallermann-Streiff-Syndrom geschrieben, da ich eine Betroffene kenne...

Was auf jeden Fall noch fehlt sind:

Birdie (Popband)

Für alle Fälle Fitz (nicht mehr :) )

Wild Palms

Cornelius (Musiker)



cracker

Seriendaten
Deutscher Titel: Für alle Fälle Fitz
Originaltitel: Cracker
Produktionsland: GB
Produktionsjahr(e): 19931996
Länge pro Episode: ca. 60-90 Minuten
Episodenzahl: 22
Originalsprache: Englisch
Idee: Jimmy McGovern
Genre: Krimi, Drama
Erstausstrahlung: 1993 bei ITV1
Erstausstrahlung (D): 1996 bei ZDF
Besetzung
  • Eddie "Fitz" Fitzgerald: Robbie Coltrane
  • JudithFitzgerald: Barbara Flynn
  • Sergeant Penhaligon: Geraldine Somerville
  • Chief Inspector Bilborough: Christopher Eccleston
  • Sergeant Beck: Lorcan Cranitch

Für alle Fälle Fitz (Originaltitel: Cracker) ist eine britische TV-Serie von Jimmy McGovern, die von 1993 bis 1996 von Granada Television produziert wurde.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

[Bearbeiten] Überblick

Die Serie handelt von dem Kriminalpsychologen Dr. Eddie „Fitz“ Fitzgerald, welcher einer Mordkommission in Manchester bei der Aufklärung von Komplizierten Fällen hilft. Der depressive, trinkende und spielsüchtige Kettenraucher Fitz, ein klassicher Antiheld, der sich in die Angründe der Psyche von Mördern vertieft und durch seine unkonventionellen Methoden bei seinen Vorgesetzten aneckt, wurde zur Paraderolle des Charakterdarstellers Robbie Coltrane.

Jeder Fall umfasst mehrere Episoden. Einige Fälle hatten reale Vorfälle wie z. B. das Hillsborough Desaster als Aufhänger, andere waren vollständig fiktional. Im Verlaufe der Zeit wurden verschiedene psychische Aspekte behandelt und im Verlauf der Serie wurden neben den Tätern und deren Motivation auch immer mehr Fitz und die Polizisten beleuchtet. In späteren Episoden treten die Mordfälle gegenüber den Reaktionen der Polizisten sogar in den Hintergrund und am Ende der Serie wurden sogar Polizisten zu Tätern und Opfern.

[Bearbeiten] Remake

Das US-Remake(1997-1998) mit Robert Pastorelli, das in Deutschland unter dem Namen Immer wieder Fitz ausgestrahlt wurde, konnte sich beim Publikum nicht durchsetzen, da der Erfolg des Originals größtenteils auf der schauspielerischen Leistung Coltranes beruhte.

Cracker is the title of a television crime series in the United Kingdom, made by Granada Television for ITV and created and principally written by Jimmy McGovern. Set in Manchester, it consisted of three series which ran from 1993 to 1995. A 100 minute special set in Hong Kong followed in 1996. The series concerned a criminal psychologist (or "cracker"), Eddie "Fitz" Fitzgerald, played by Robbie Coltrane.

[Bearbeiten] Overview

Fitz is a classic antihero, unfaithful to his wife, alcoholic, a chain smoker, overweight, addicted to gambling, manic, foulmouthed and sarcastic; and yet cerebral and excellent at his speciality: getting into the heads of violent criminals.

Each case spanned several episodes and cliffhangers were quite often used, but it was not until the end of the second series (referred to as seasons in the US) that a cliffhanger was employed to tie off the series. Some of the plotlines in the cases took as their starting point real events such as the Hillsborough disaster, while others were purely fictional with only tangential ties to actual events.

Several different psychotic types were explored during the run of the show with increasingly complex psychological motivations that, as the series entered the middle of the second season, began to expand beyond the criminals being investigated to the regular cast members. As the series moved forward the storylines became as much about the interactions of the regulars as it was about the crimes. In many later episodes, in fact, the crimes often became background to intense, provocative explorations of the police officers' reactions to the crimes they investigated. For some viewers the series' increased focus on the regular characters and their interwoven stories, as opposed to the crimes themselves, detracted from the series' story telling. Others, however, believe that the interplay between the regular characters' work environment and the work itself provided drama.

To emphasize how fine a line the police (and Fitz) walk in their close association with criminals, the final two series featured several stories in which the police themselves become criminals or victims of crime.

[Bearbeiten] Cast and crew

As well as Coltrane, the show starred Christopher Eccleston as Detective Chief Inspector David Bilborough, Geraldine Somerville as love interest Detective Sergeant Jane "Panhandle" Penhaligon, Lorcan Cranitch as loose cannon DS Jimmy Beck, Barbara Flynn as Fitz's long suffering wife Judith and Kieran O'Brien as his teenage son Mark. When Eccleston's character was killed off by disturbed football fan Albie (memorably played by guest star Robert Carlyle), Ricky Tomlinson took over as DCI Charlie Wise ("Wise by name but not by nature," quipped Fitz).

Although Jimmy McGovern wrote the lion's share of the early stories, Ted Whitehead contributed the fifth serial, "The Big Crunch". Claiming that he had "nothing more to write about," [1] McGovern originally planned to leave after the second season, but was allowed to write the controversial rape storyline, "Men Should Weep", when he agreed to contribute a three-part story to the third season.[2] Paul Abbott, who had produced the second season, wrote the remainder of the episodes (including the final feature-length special, "White Ghost"). Abbott later went on to create several high-profile dramas, including Touching Evil (1997), State of Play (2003) and Shameless (2004). Another crewmember, Nicola Shindler, who worked as script editor on the programme, later went on to found the highly successful Red Production Company.

Of the regular cast, only Coltrane and Tomlinson featured in "White Ghost" (retitled "Lucky White Ghost" for some overseas markets), which was set in Hong Kong. Although the series was still drawing large audiences, after "White Ghost" Coltrane declined to return as Fitz unless McGovern returned to write the series.

[Bearbeiten] Location

The series was principally filmed in South Manchester, at locations including Didsbury (where Fitz lived) and Longsight (the police station at which he worked).

[Bearbeiten] Stories

All episodes were 60 minutes long, with the exception of "White Ghost", which was 100 minutes.

Season-
Story
Title Writer Episodes Original
Airdate(s) (UK)
Synopsis
1-1 The Mad Woman in the Attic Jimmy McGovern 2 27 September to
4 October 1993
A young woman is brutally murdered on a train, the victim of a serial killer. The prime suspect is an amnesiac man, who cannot confess to the crime if he cannot remember committing it... unless Fitz can crack him.
1-2 To Say I Love You Jimmy McGovern 3 11 October to
25 October 1993
While his own marriage is falling apart, Fitz goes up against a young couple who would literally kill for their love, leading to an equally literally explosive climax.
1-3 One Day A Lemming Will Fly Jimmy McGovern 2 1 November to
8 November 1993
The disappearance of a 14-year-old boy inflames the local community as a teacher becomes the prime suspect. But has Fitz got the right man and is a result that fits more important than the truth?
2-1 To Be A Somebody Jimmy McGovern 3 10 October to
24 October 1994
A Pakistani shopkeeper is killed, and a skinhead is seen leaving the premises. The police are convinced that it is a racist killing, but the real reasons are more complex, and the cost of being wrong may be the life of one of their own.
2-2 The Big Crunch Ted Whitehead 3 31 October to
14 November 1994
A young girl missing for several days is discovered naked, covered in strange symbols and quoting the Bible. The trail leads to a fringe Christian sect and its charismatic leader.
2-3 Men Should Weep Jimmy McGovern 3 21 November to
5 December 1994
The case of a serial rapist who wears a mask, yet tries to develop a relationship with his victims strikes at the heart of Fitz's personal and professional life when Penhaligon is raped and the rapist, apparently acting on Fitz's advice, starts to kill as well.
3-1 Brotherly Love Jimmy McGovern 3 22 October to
29 October 1995
The brutal murder and violation of a prostitute quickly leads to an arrest, but while the suspect is in custody, an identical murder happens. At the same time, the death of Fitz's mother reunites him with his brother Danny, and Jimmy Beck finally reaches his breaking point.
3-2 Best Boys Paul Abbott 2 6 November to
13 November 1995
When the older Stuart Grady meets the teenage Bill Nash, the instant attraction between the two leads to murderous consequences. Meanwhile, the birth of Fitz's new son is not the solution to his marital strife that he expected.
3-3 True Romance Paul Abbott 2 20 November to
27 November 1995
Fitz is the target of a secret admirer who is willing to kill — and keep killing — to get his attention, understanding and love.
Special episode White Ghost Paul Abbott 1 28 October 1996 While in Hong Kong on a lecture tour, Fitz is asked by the local police to help investigate the murder of a Chinese businessman.

[Bearbeiten] Influences

In some respects, Cracker stories are structured like episodes of Columbo. They often begin by showing the criminal committing the crime, and so sidestep the whodunit format which is the central attraction of many television crime dramas. Both series feature a lead character who solves crimes while masking an intelligent, perceptive nature behind a slobbish exterior; in an homage to Columbo, Fitz delivers his summing-up in "To Say I Love You" while doing a Peter Falk impression. It should be noted, however, that while Lieutenant Columbo invariably solves each case to perfection, Fitz's involvement often only exacerbates the situation, for example leading police to arrest the wrong man ("One Day A Lemming Will Fly"), or causing a serial rapist to murder his victim ("Men Should Weep").

Cracker's conception was also in some ways a reaction against the police procedural approach of fellow Granada crime serial Prime Suspect, placing more emphasis on emotional and psychological truth than on correct police procedure. In an interview with the NME, McGovern dismissed Prime Suspect, noting that "Good TV writing has narrative simplicity and emotional complexity," and characterising the series as "A narratively complex story going up its own arse."[3] Gub Neal, who produced the first season of Cracker, is quoted as saying, "That we had adopted the right approach was confirmed for me when Jacky Malton, the senior woman police officer who advised on Prime Suspect, said that although the way things happened in Cracker was sometimes highly improbable, the relationships between the police were in many ways much more credible than they had been in Prime Suspect."

The "Men Should Weep" storyline was originally conceived as a plot for Prime Suspect, in which the series' protagonist, Jane Tennison, was raped.[4]

[Bearbeiten] Revival

A new feature-length episode written by McGovern is currently in production and is due to be broadcast on ITV1 in the autumn[5] of 2006.

Vorlage:Spoiler According to the Manchester Evening News, the new episode will be titled "Nine Eleven", and will see the return of both Coltrane as Fitz and Barbara Flynn as Judith Fitzgerald. The storyline involves Fitz, after 10 years in Australia with Judith and his younger son James, returning to a much-changed Manchester to attend his daughter Katie's wedding. He then gets involved in a case about an ex-soldier "haunted by his tours of duty in Northern Ireland".[6]

The episode also has Kieren O'Brien returning as Mark Fitzgerald. The Guardian reported earlier that Richard Coyle (best known for his role as Jeff in the situation comedy Coupling), will be playing Fitz's new boss, Detective Inspector Walters.

[Bearbeiten] Trivia

  • The part of Fitz was originally offered to Robert Lindsay, who turned it down.
  • In 1995 a short spoof episode, Prime Cracker, was produced for the BBC's bi-annual Red Nose Day charity telethon in aid of Comic Relief. A crossover with ITV stablemate crime drama Prime Suspect, the spoof starred Coltrane and Prime Suspect lead Helen Mirren as their characters from the respective series, sending-up the perceived ultra seriousness of both shows.
  • Some novelisations of various Cracker storylines were published by Virgin Books in the UK.

[Bearbeiten] See also

  • Cracker (American re-make)

[Bearbeiten] References

  • John Crace: Cracker: The Truth Behind The Fiction. Granada/Boxtree, 1994, ISBN 0752209744.

[Bearbeiten] External links


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