Chasing Shadows

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    Chasing Shadows



    Trama Chasing Shadows: è un nuovo emozionante drama in quattro parti che parla di un'unità di ricerca di persone scomparse incaricata di rintracciare serial killer che si approfittano di persone impressionabili e vulnerabili.

    Reece Shearsmith (The Widower, Psychoville, The League of Gentleman) interpreterà DS Sean Stone e la sua partner, Ruth Hattersley è interpretata da Alex Kingston (Marchlands, Arrow, Upstairs Downstairs, Doctor Who) mentre Noel Clarke (Star Trek Into Darkness, Doctor Who) interpreta DI Prior.

    Sean è intenso, socialmente inetto e disadattato. Conoscendolo realizzi che è un uomo con una missione, anche se questa lo porta all'autodistruzione e se i suoi modi eccentrici lo portano spesso in acque bollenti. E' ossessionato dal decifrare codici e scoprire pattern di comportamento, specialmente in relazione a quelle persone scomparse più a rischio e vulnerabili.

    Ruth, dall'altro lato, è un'influenza stabilizzatrice. Materna, ma non fa da mamma, è un'analista del Missing Persons Bureau incaricata di lavorare al fianco di Sean. Infatti i suoi superiori lo hanno emarginato e lei è la sua ancora di salvezza. Sean rifiuta di dipendere da Ruth, ma alla fine scopre che lui e Ruth insieme formano un ottimo team. Lei ha l'abilità di connettersi alle persone e ha le giuste competenze per rintracciare persone scomparse. Lui è socialmente disagiato e fatica a comunicare; così i loro punti di forza costituiscono un perfetto equilibrio. Almeno sulla carta, in realtà si tratta di una relazione esplosiva.

    Chasing Shadows è stato creato e scritto da Rob Williams (DCI Banks, Holby City), e le riprese dovrebbero iniziare a breve nel sud-est e durare per otto settimane.

    Reece Shearsmith, Alex Kingston and Noel Clarke to star in Chasing Shadows

    Chasing Shadows is a thrilling, new four-part drama, which focuses on the work of a missing persons field unit charged with tracking down serial killers who prey on impressionable and vulnerable people.

    Reece Shearsmith (The Widower, Psychoville, The League of Gentleman) will play DS Sean Stone and his partner, Ruth Hattersley is played by Alex Kingston (Marchlands, Arrow, Upstairs Downstairs) whilst Noel Clarke (Star Trek Into Darkness, Doctor Who) takes on the role of DI Prior.

    On the face of it Sean is intense, socially awkward and a misfit. Get to know him and you realise he’s a man on a mission even if it leads him to self destruction and his eccentric manner frequently lands him in hot water. He’s obsessed with deciphering codes and uncovering patterns of behaviour particularly in relation to those most at risk, vulnerable missing persons.

    Ruth, on the other hand, is a stabilising influence. Maternal, but not mumsy, she’s an analyst from the Missing Persons Bureau tasked to work alongside Sean. In effect his bosses have sidelined him and she is his lifeline. Sean refuses to be tethered to Ruth, but eventually learns that he and Ruth make an awesome team. She has the ability to connect with people and has the expertise to trace missing persons. He is socially awkward and struggles to communicate; yet their strengths strike the perfect balance. On paper. In reality, it is a rocky partnership.

    Chasing Shadows is created and written by Rob Williams (DCI Banks, Holby City), and is due to begin filming shortly in the South East for eight weeks.

    Chasing Shadows will be produced by the ITV Studios drama team headed by Francis Hopkinson (Lucan, Wallander) who will also executive produce. Rob Bullock (Legacy, The Suspicions of Mr Whicher) will produce the drama and Christopher Menaul (The Suspicions of Mr Whicher, See No Evil: The Moors Murders) will direct the first self-contained story ‘Only Connect’ across two episodes. The Director of the second story ‘Off Radar’ will be Jim O’Hanlon (In The Flesh, Quirke, The Reckoning).




    Fonte testo originale.
    Traduzione dello Sgarzullino.




    Così disadattato :yama:

    Edited by Krigerinne - 31/12/2014, 16:37
     
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  2. Jesus…TantoMilitoSbaglia
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    io ancora non ho visto l'altro, fin quando qualcuno non fa sub :mrs: cmq la piccola Pond SPOILERZ :mrs:
     
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  4. Jesus…TantoMilitoSbaglia
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    cmq è iniziato, ma attendo subs :baffo:
     
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  5. zoof
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    CITAZIONE
    Sean è intenso

    :morfeo:
     
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    CITAZIONE (zoof @ 6/9/2014, 00:14) 
    CITAZIONE
    Sean è intenso

    :morfeo:

    No? :lool: Ho sbagliato traduzione?

    Bravo jesus che mi avverti. :gusta:
     
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  7. Jesus…TantoMilitoSbaglia
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    madonn, non sò riuscito a vedere più di 15 minuti :krigerinne:
    cè per me è inguardabile, ridicoli tutti i personaggi
     
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    OMG :krigerinne:
     
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    Lo inizio a vedere. Il posto dove sono finita per lo streaming ci cita come fonte della trama. Misà che in Italia ho il monopolio delle info su Reece Shearsmith. :krigerinne:

    Reece sta anche in Burke e Hare ladri di cadaveri :baffo:
     
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    Visto il primo episodio.
    Lol, un altro detective asperger, questa cosa la metterei tra le mode degli anni 10. :??:
    Sì sicuramente non è strabiliante ma non l'ho trovato nemmeno insopportabile. Lui è abbastanza patetico, il che è per una volta azzeccato perché nei telefilm gli asperger sembrano geni strafighi mentre dal vivo sono degli stramboidi fastidiosi con idee fuori dal mondo. :morfeo: Si capisce bene qual è il profilo di Stone, c'è poco da approfondire, già prevedo come si comporterà e come si "evolverà" il personaggio.
    Lei invece è interessante, e anche suo figlio. Per ora sembra una specie di detective Monk + Elementary.
    In definitiva né imperdibile né brutto.

    Ho anche l'impressione che Reece sia felice di interpretare questo personaggio. Di suo è abbastanza uno stronzetto misantropo :lool:
     
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    CITAZIONE
    The trouble with Chasing Shadows' 'sort-of-autistic' hero
    Reece Shearsmith plays a blunt, obsessive detective in ITV’s new missing persons drama, but this diagnostic vagueness does a disservice to people who really have Asperger’s

    To the presumable bemusement of those affected by the condition, the autism spectrum has become a fashionable fictional accessory. The daddy of the genre, Mark Haddon’s novel The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime, remains a long-running stage hit, while a protagonist with something like Asperger’s features in another best-selling book, Graeme Simsion’s The Rosie Project.

    Two of the most successful recent TV crime series – Sherlock and The Bridge – involve detectives who lack emotional empathy: Saga Norén, played by Sofia Helin in the Swedish-Danish co-production, is intuitive but rude, while Benedict Cumberbatch’s version of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s investigator seems to have a far more psychiatrically precise isolationism and obsessive compulsion than he had in the original stories.

    And now, perhaps as a result of the obsessive list-making of previous hits to which TV executives can be prone, comes Chasing Shadows (tonight, 9pm, ITV), in which Reece Shearsmith is DS Sean Stone, a detective who, kicked out of the murder squad for foolishly telling the truth at a press conference, is transferred to work with a missing persons charity, identifying the vanished who are most at risk of being killed, where he ignores colleagues, obsessionally categorises case-files and, when asked whether he has any idea how the parents of a possible murder victim must be feeling, bluntly replies: “No.”

    This is an extreme instance of the increasing problem in TV crime fiction of telling the murder cops and the murderers apart – and Shearsmith is perfectly cast to continue this narrative trend. Having appeared as the uxoricidal Malcolm Webster in ITV’s The Widower earlier this year, he becomes surely one of the few actors to have played a serial killer (or, as DS Stone would pedantically insist, “multiple murderer”) and a detective in successive TV projects. And Ruth Hattersley (Alex Kingston), the missing persons-searcher who becomes his sidekick, subliminally makes the connection when she tells her mother that Stone is “as close to an actual psycho as you can get”.

    In common with Haddon, Simsion and the writers of The Bridge, Rob Williams’ scripts for Chasing Shadows never specify the precise wiring of the investigator’s mind. When Ruth complains to a police colleague of Stone’s that she finds him intolerably brusque, she is reassured: “I’m not entirely sure if it’s medical but it’s not personal.” Such diagnostic vagueness avoids the objection of trivialising or misrepresenting a specific condition, although it still leaves writers open to the charge of using sort-of-autism as a behavioural flavouring, like Morse’s taste in beer or Sherlock’s violin.

    And, although the moment when Stone solemnly reassures Ruth that he does not find her at all attractive will be familiar to readers of The Rosie Project, at other times the script seems to give the character something more like Tourette’s Syndrome, as, apart from giving the journalists the truth rather than the official line, he also screams “Liar!” or “Stop Lying!” at suspects during interrogations and passes on to parents of missing children devastating guesses about their offspring’s history with drugs or sex.

    Just as “consumption” became a general cause of weakness or death in Victorian novels, there’s a sense that writers of crime-fiction are trying to medicalise maverick individuality – always an important element of TV detectives – into a generically insulting but brilliant demeanour trawled from Google-searches on autism, Asperger’s, Tourette’s and anger management.

    The other problem is that, if you make a character’s mannerism his manner, you are stuck with it in every scene. Whereas Morse could occasionally be shown sipping real ale or listening to Wagner LPs, thereby demonstrating his idiosyncrasies while also leaving time for cases to be investigated, DS Stone is permanently caught in his spectrum, which also never seems to vary in intensity. (Saga, in The Bridge, has a more nuanced and spasmodic disaffection.)

    Nervously realising that no modern cop could possibly get away with this behaviour – unless, interestingly, he admitted to a diagnosis of Asperger’s, which the scriptwriter doesn’t want to give him – the show puts Stone up on a disciplinary charge in episode two, but has to have it thrown out with unconvincing rapidity in order to get back to the murder plot.

    And, although Chasing Shadows is currently a one-off four-part drama – with a single continuous narrative, divertingly turning on the on-line risks to teenagers – all-new detective dramas have dreams of becoming a returning series and, in season two of Chasing Shadows, the only possibilities would be that Stone had been murdered by his colleagues or that falling in love with Ruth Hattersley had “cured” him, in which case there would be no character left for Shearsmith to play. Puppies are not just for Christmas, and the autism spectrum is not just a dramatic personality quirk.

    Lol, è vero che va di moda ma non capisco in che modo possa nuocere a chi c'ha i problemi :??:
     
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10 replies since 17/4/2014, 22:08   287 views
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