Boys from the Blackstuff (1983) continues the
stories of an interlinked group of characters who first featured in writer Alan
Bleasdale's single play, Black Stuff (BBC, tx. 2/1/1980). The eponymous 'stuff'
is the asphalt used to tarmac roads; in the original play the 'boys' - Chrissie
Todd, the focal point of the group, and his sidekick 'Loggo' Logmond; 'Dixie'
Dean and his son Kevin; 'Yosser' Hughes; and George Malone - are working in
Middlesborough, away from their native Liverpool. By the time we rejoin them,
all are back in Liverpool, struggling with unemployment, poverty and desperation
in a city going to waste under harsh Thatcherite economic
policies.
The cast features what feels like a whole generation of Liverpool character
previously appeared in The Liver Birds; Jean Boht later turned up in Bread; Tony
Scoggo and Vince Earl subsequently took roles in Brookside. The three actors who
broke out of this particular ghetto were Julie Walters, Bernard Hill and Ricky
Tomlinson (although Tomlinson also passed through Brookside).
Bleasdale never merely shows the effects of environment on passive characters
in a one-dimensional surface naturalism. His characters each react differently
to circumstances. Director Phillip Saville found a visual analogue for this in
his notion of 'the interruptus' - an abrupt or shocking change of tone, as in
the cut from the interior of George's house, during the wake, to the shot of the
priest vomiting in the drain. 'George's Last Ride' is characterised by what the
crew were calling 'Saville shots': big signature images that took the drama
beyond surface naturalism. Examples include the cutaways of dock architecture
and the final pull away shot of George's body slumped in his wheelchair.
Boys from the Blackstuff represents several radical departures in the filming
and production of television drama. All episodes except one - 'Yosser's Story',
which was shot on film - were made using the new Light Mobile Control Room - an
outside broadcast unit developed at BBC Pebble Mill studios in Birmingham. The
LMCR enabled multi-camera operation on location, and was developed to cover
sporting events; it had never before been used in drama. Even here, its use was
innovative. Instead of live vision-mixing the feeds from the cameras, the output
was recorded and post-produced. The result was to capture the spontaneity and
energy of live performance, with the leisure and contingency of film
production. Mark Reid
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