Ooooh the full episode is online!Home To Roost: High Spirits
The Macbeth episode?The final episode of 'Nightingales'starring Robert Lindsay was very weird, cant remember if it was ghosts or not though
I seem to remember them all dying and being replaced with themselves, it was definately odd.The Macbeth episode?![]()
Oh that's a different one!I seem to remember them all dying and being replaced with themselves, it was definately odd.
I think this it the full episodeOh that's a different one!
Edit - YouTube!![]()
Remember it well. From what I recall the previous episode ended with a teaser about the possession. It scared me a bit, set me up nicely for Hammer House of Horror a year or so later.The Soap demonic possession episode scared the crap out of me as a kid.
https://tv.avclub.com/soap-episode-44-1798228049
The Soap demonic possession episode scared the crap out of me as a kid.
https://tv.avclub.com/soap-episode-44-1798228049
There are quite a few episodes of 'normal' TV programmes where a character talks to a dead character who appears to them. I think it's Foyle's War where a young airman sees the ghost of his dead girlfriend - whom the audience don't know is dead - and arranges to go dancing with her. It's a way of coping with grief. It's also a way for a previously much-loved character to make a reappearance to boost audience numbers (she said, dryly).The West Wing – “Two Cathedrals”
Ghost: Mrs Landingham
Seen by: President Bartlet
Mrs. Landingham was killed suddenly and unexpectedly offscreen, so this scene gives both Bartlet and the viewer the chance to say goodbye that they were denied in the previous episode.
Peaky Blinders – Series five
Ghost: Grace Shelby
Seen by: Tommy Shelby
Grieving for his late wife Grace, Tommy sees her apparition several times across the six episodes. He sees and speaks with Grace, who seems to appear to comfort him.
There are quite a few episodes of 'normal' TV programmes where a character talks to a dead character who appears to them... It's a way of coping with grief. It's also a way for a previously much-loved character to make a reappearance to boost audience numbers (she said, dryly).
Admittedly I have never (knowing) watched Auf Wiedersehen Pet', but this sounds like the most bizarre synopsis of any TV programme, ever.Auf Wiedersehen Pet
Series 2; 'A Home From Home'
Oz, Neville, Moxey, Barry go to the supermarket to stock up on food, beer and toilet paper. The lads are at a loose end and Barry suggests brass rubbing but the lads try the Barley Mow. While brass rubbing Barry meets the local vicar who tells him about the ghost at Thornely Manor. Barry can't sleep due to the thought of the ghost, he goes to the toilet and sees what he thinks is a ghost.
Haha, yes..on more detailed reading it is a rather strange synopsis. Brilliant show though.Admittedly I have never (knowing) watched Auf Wiedersehen Pet', but this sounds like the most bizarre synopsis of any TV programme, ever.
I bet it wasn’t a ghost.Auf Wiedersehen Pet
Series 2; 'A Home From Home'
Oz, Neville, Moxey, Barry go to the supermarket to stock up on food, beer and toilet paper. The lads are at a loose end and Barry suggests brass rubbing but the lads try the Barley Mow. While brass rubbing Barry meets the local vicar who tells him about the ghost at Thornely Manor. Barry can't sleep due to the thought of the ghost, he goes to the toilet and sees what he thinks is a ghost.
..I believe the ghost story was true, but as you suggest the sighting wasn'tI bet it wasn’t a ghost.
I was just about to post the same thing, but you beat me to it kiwisaint. The “ghost” turned out to be an old tinker staying at the manor didn’t it..?Auf Wiedersehen Pet
Series 2; 'A Home From Home'
Oz, Neville, Moxey, Barry go to the supermarket to stock up on food, beer and toilet paper. The lads are at a loose end and Barry suggests brass rubbing but the lads try the Barley Mow. While brass rubbing Barry meets the local vicar who tells him about the ghost at Thornely Manor. Barry can't sleep due to the thought of the ghost, he goes to the toilet and sees what he thinks is a ghost.
Yeah, there was apparently an actual tinker ghost story associated with the manor. Barry sighted a real tinker who was randomly staying there (who in turn thought the Auf Wiedersehen crew were all tinkers dossing there to). Yeah, Series 1 was great...Series 2 was also good but it went downhill from there.I was just about to post the same thing, but you beat me to it kiwisaint. The “ghost” turned out to be an old tinker staying at the manor didn’t it..?
Great show – not too sure about the 3rd series though.
Yeah shame about series 3. Series 2 used to air on Friday evenings and Fridays was my snooker night when I was 14, so me mum used to video tape the show for me. I’d get home quite late, Mum and Dad in bed, and both my older brothers out, so I’d nick a beer from the fridge and enjoy.Yeah, there was apparently an actual tinker ghost story associated with the manor. Barry sighted a real tinker who was randomly staying there (who in turn thought the Auf Wiedersehen crew were all tinkers dossing there to). Yeah, Series 1 was great...Series 2 was also good but it went downhill from there.
See I knew, almost always the Scooby Doo explanation. Hardly ever something unexplainable.I was just about to post the same thing, but you beat me to it kiwisaint. The “ghost” turned out to be an old tinker staying at the manor didn’t it..?
Great show – not too sure about the 3rd series though.
Yeah, the exception to the 'Scooby Doo' type conclusion being the Bergerac 'Fires In The Fall' episode discussed earlier in this thread...to quote:See I knew, almost always the Scooby Doo explanation. Hardly ever something unexplainable.
So true. I was working on building sites when the first series came on and the characters were so realistic. I could see the same type of people every day on site. I think we tend to forget how good these early TV series were and how they made the characters seem to have real depth without just seemingly reaching for the screenwriters sterotype handbook where every policeman has a troubled past, every teenage tearaway comes from a broken home and so on.Yeah shame about series 3. Series 2 used to air on Friday evenings and Fridays was my snooker night when I was 14, so me mum used to video tape the show for me. I’d get home quite late, Mum and Dad in bed, and both my older brothers out, so I’d nick a beer from the fridge and enjoy.
I remember the episode like it was yesterday. Barry getting spooked in the darkened church, the vicar telling him about the ghost at the manor, then Barry waking up in the early hours to use the toilet and seeing the “ghost”
What a shame, we can’t make such great TV there days.
As a young Kiwi in the 1980s, between Auf Wiedersehen Pet/Coronation Street/Emmerdale/EastEnders/Taggart it was a great way to learn many of the different accents and dialects of the United Kingdom.So true. I was working on building sites when the first series came on and the characters were so realistic. I could see the same type of people every day on site. I think we tend to forget how good these early TV series were and how they made the characters seem to have real depth without just seemingly reaching for the screenwriters sterotype handbook where every policeman has a troubled past, every teenage tearaway comes from a broken home and so on.
The Tramp was in the mid 1990s episodes of lottery be LuckyHaha, yes..on more detailed reading it is a rather strange synopsis. Brilliant show though.
there was a fantastic episode of scrubs where Dr Cox is talking to his brother-in-law (played by Brendan Fraser) at multiple points in the episode. Right at the end we discover that the BIL has been dead all along, and Dr Cox is struggling to come to terms with it. I don’t mind admitting that it managed to bring a lump to my throat.There are quite a few episodes of 'normal' TV programmes where a character talks to a dead character who appears to them. I think it's Foyle's War where a young airman sees the ghost of his dead girlfriend - whom the audience don't know is dead - and arranges to go dancing with her. It's a way of coping with grief. It's also a way for a previously much-loved character to make a reappearance to boost audience numbers (she said, dryly).