My favourite MR James adaptation. Absolute masterpiece - every role is perfectly cast. The dusty antiquarian shopkeeper is creepy beyond words. The atmosphere is beautifully created, brilliant score, and there’s a real sense of impending doom.. ‘No digging ‘ere!’
@@horrorfanandy4647 Yes that’s a Charles Dickens’ story - wonderful. Brilliant central performance by Denholm Elliot. Dickens was inspired by his own experience of being in a train crash. It’s hard to believe the BBC used to make drama of this quality, given what they currently produce (with a few, rare exceptions).
@@LadyOfShaIott Denholm Elliot was one of the best supporting actors this country ever produced. He was a bit like our Steve Buscemi; an essential foil, which the big stars need so that they can sparkle. Elliot had a knack for playing the mysterious, malevolent, over educated and devious types, and by turn he could also inject a level of humour into a film, having a level of versatility which never failed to bring the character’s emotions and intensity into play. He had memorable roles in Trading Places with Dan Ackroyd and Eddie Murphy, as Dr Marcus Brodby in Raiders of the Lost Ark and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, with Harrison Ford, and he was also involved in the first adaptation of The Bourne Identity, playing Dr Geoffrey Washburn in a 1998 mini series adaptation, a good 14 years before the first Hollywood film was made in 2002. In his last five years of his life, he was desperately ill, having contracted HIV; sadly at the same time just as his career had had a resurgence with roles in such as The Bangkok Hilton, the aforementioned Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade and as George Smiley in John LeCarrre’s first book, A Murder of Quality in a 1991 made for television high quality version of the story, shown on both sides of the Atlantic. One of my favourite memories of Denholm Elliot was as the seedy conman, Charles Seymour, competing with Rigsby for the affections of Miss Jones in the film spin off of Rising Damp; he injected a bit of badly needed bite into what otherwise would have been a drab affair, as he easily stole the show in a big screen version which didn’t do the original television show justice.
I agree, back when the BBC was good, it produced the best programmes in the world, from factual to comedic, from the best of childrens tv, to honest. Respectable journalism, it was once the best. Seems now, to be the anchor that sinks the country!
There was something uniquely chilling about late 60`s - 1970`s supernatural tales on TV. These ghost stories, Thriller and some of the plays etc. Superb.
It's a nice touch that Dr Black is shown weeping at the end, when he catches up with the battered to death Paxton, not screaming or just horrified, he's so distressed at Paxton's Fate. The Excellent Always Actor Clive Swift - he wrote a book on being an actor, a book that Glenda Jackson called the most Practical she had ever read. He wrote about the boring stuff like signing on when out of work, not the glam side of Acting, the Reality, ironically! Nice to see Vaughan playing a gentle character, usually given the ruthless types.
Clive Swift's Dr Black also appears in The Stalls of Barchester, another of the early 70s Xmas Ghost Stories. Robert Hardy was the evil cathedral deacon Dr Haynes.
@@Oakleaf700 You're thinking of Peter Vaughan, playing Paxton. Vaughan had so many great roles, including his 2015 performance in Game of Thrones when he was 92. Amazing.
I remember watching this with the family when i was a wee lad. A little creepiness during the Christmas season was welcomed. Miss those days when families spent hours together in one room.
I remember, watching Ghost Stories for Christmas, back in the 70,s as a teenager. They always frightened me. The Signal Man, was one of my favourites 😮
Watching these ghost stories, Thriller and some of the supernatural plays on TV in the 1970`s used to chill me to the bone. They had a quality that was sometimes marrow freezing. The people who conceived, wrote & produced these shows had a tremendous understanding of the human psyche.
@@richardcummins5465 No, I was born in 1945, so I am a bit before Blair's time. However, although I may be old, I'm not a bigoted old git. - and we don't need to look very far to find those, do we?
Has to be one of the few films where watching in low quality actually enhances the atmosphere. Felt like a nightmare in the best possible way, loved this to bits.
Wonderfully atmospheric and creepy. I'll take a sophisticated, beautifully produced ghost story like this, over any number of formulaic slasher movies.
Agreed fully. This was really well done from the beautiful, haunting seaside setting, to the creepy atmosphere to the score. This is how a ghost story should be told.
@@peterbamforth6453yes particularly drama from Thames/ Euston films, Yorkshire , London Weekend & Granada. Anglia, Tyne- Tees, Southern/ TVS also made quality drama.
An object lesson in the use not only of atmosphere, but also of location, silence, near silence and music. None of that what would be subtitled as 'ominous synth' intended to 'guide' us into the 'correct' feeling or reaction. In short, our imagination, assuming of course that it hasn't been sucked out of us by the 24/7 society we're all supposed to be enamoured with, fills the void that this production creates. It's a little masterpiece.
For being under an hour this lovely little production produces more dread and spooky atmosphere than many feature films. I've watched this several times and it never fails to give me the chills.
I can remember watching this way back in the 70's.I was 12 at the time, couldn't sleep for a week. I always looked forward to the BBC Christmas Ghost Stories. Great stuff, someone should revive the tradition.
Likewise! Interesting how many people have had the same experience at approximately the same age. I’m in Norfolk atm with my wife and intend to visit Holkham beach from Sheringham. Like you I’ve never forgotten this brilliant film. Great series BBC ghost stories for Xmas however Schalcken the Painter was my favourite
This is the very best dramatisation of an mr James classic. The atmosphere throughout is fantastic. An early appearance by the late, great Clive Swift (hyacinth bucket’s husband in keeping up appearances) is the icing on the cake! Brilliant!!
In the 1970's, we used to get the Christmas Radio Times ( the only time we got one !) For some reason (!) i used to find reading about what was on the radio a bit 'scary'. There would be a feature about a radio programme with some 'abstract' picture ( like something in a 1970's psychology magazine )illustrating it.
Imagine now trying to find the ramshackle old cottages and houses littered about these ghost stories. They've all been done up or are very expensive second homes, or many demolished. So sad. I miss the sense of mystery of these houses when they were in these conditions, and they greatly added to the atmosphere of these films. We still have a lot of old buildings in the UK but they've been prettified mostly to the point where they have lost the sense of time, history and total authenticity. Miss Peter Vaughan. He was such a versatile actor.
I've watched old ramshackle British homes/houses/barns/ etc get renovated by folks who have no sense of history and strip these great old buildings of any character and architectural details only to create sterilize slick soulless homes. It breaks my little American heart to watch, why do they do it ?
I recognised the side of the house where they appeared to be lodging, I think it’s down the far end of Wells Next-The-Sea just beyond the chandlery ….before the path starts to wind towards the marshes … ooh er I just got a shiver !😊
In November 2018 I was lucky enough to be in North Norfolk. Remembering this story I visited Wells Next The Sea. The gust house where Paxton & Dr Black stayed is now a private residence, "Shipwrights". The scene where Dr Black was painting is at the mouth of the river, the dunes have been altered with the erection of concrete walls to prevent erosion, a walkway to the beach & an RNLI Lifeboat Station & Coastwatch Station. Holkham beach & the tree covered dunes are just as atmospheric today as depicted in the drama: sadly I could not identify the mound where the actual digging was filmed.
I visited a few years back being a life long reader of James' work and had the same experience. My wife wasn't impressed that we travelled for 2 hours so that I could take maybe 5 photos.
They could but the cast would have to be almost black and with transsexuals in it and have some form of social injustice message in it about the patriarchy of white straight men Much like Doctor Who
@chris7921 The BBC (?) ,I think it MUST have been, did a recent drama which is probably on YT or iplayer ? It's about a modern day TV crew who visit the Suffolk coast inevitably headed by an aggressive norf Landan feminist man hater, whose job is to research or more accurately perform a hatchet job on M R James. Obviously he was a repressed homosexual / misogynist/ member of the Oxbridge white male patriarchy / elitist scholar bla bla bla fill in whatever current BBC board of governors cliché is current. A yawnfest. Actually it WAS a ghost story, of a kind and a supernatural entity puts in an appearance, but by the time you've got through the current BBC / Hampstead group think and PC BS, you've lost interest. I think it was a radio or audio play come to think of it. It must have been, because it would have been unwatchable.
My Dad and I would watch the ghost stories 👻 on the BBC every Christmas Eve our favourite was always The Signalman but sadly I can't seem to be able to find it 😔 M R James was the master of ghost stories you can't have Christmas without a BBC Ghost story. I remember years ago 1988? Watching The woman in Black with Mom and Dad my goodness we jumped lol happy memories xxx
the signalman is here on youtube! ruclips.net/video/XL_4VHxdXng/видео.html wonderfully atmospheric like this one and very eerie, probably my favorite as well
@@pommiebears Blame the politicians...No one seems willing to stop troublesome immigration. Look at the recent mindless violence up north when children of migrants were taken in to care for neglect - that's what sparked the mindless violence.
@@pommiebears the very beginning of this story mentions Viking invasions, they probably had the same thoughts about them as we do about recent mass migrations.
@@juliee.7072the vikings weren’t migrants, they were mighty warriors with the technological know how to get across the sea and win battles. Many of them settled here (see Danelaw). They brought a lot to the party (as did the romans, Saxons and Normans. Today’s migrants - not so much.
I've visited the location of that actual wooded area in Norfolk where the crown was found and at the entrance to this conservation area, there's a polite sign of do's and don't's, such as, keep to the path and no littering etc. but one part of this list of rules literally says, 'NO DIGGING' in quite large, bold letters, as apparently there might be some old unexploded bombs buried in the dunes from the Second World War, due to the Germans dropping their surplus payload for a lighter aircraft on their return flight. _''No diggin' 'ere'!'_ What can I say, the rule amused me.
@@oneworldfamily Yes, the woodlands that sits on the dunes at Holkham Beach in Norfolk are very eerie indeed. I live the other side of the UK on the West coast and was in Norfolk (East coast) for a wedding and thought whilst I was in the area, I may as way take a pilgrimage to one of my favourite televised ghost stories and ghost writer. The 'No Digging' sign erected as you enter the woodland just tickled me and was very apt for the location! Here's a video of how it appears today, virtually unchanged, so you really get that unnerving feeling that you're being watched by that mysterious guardian of the crown. ruclips.net/video/B1fNHbPKtv8/видео.html
The problem with unexploded bombs a common problem in areas around Europe. When America dropped bombs in Germany during WWII some hit soft sand and were buried without going off. When one of them is found they go all out to evacuate whoever might be living there. Even World War One shells are dangerous after a hundred years. Likewise do everything they can to remove and safely detonate them. If the sand shown here is where those bombs landed it's no surprise they might still be there.
@Mekonta Did you visit Happisburgh, the site of St Mary's ( I think it's called) parish church, which Paxton visits in this production ? Apparently it's not far from the rapidly eroding coastline and might be in danger of falling into the sea within the next few decades, or sooner.
I love this adaptation. It has nice touches not even from the original story (the sacrificial bones found w/ the treasure, the encounter with the intimidating farmer) which heightens the sense of dread. The filmmakers even added a significant explanation for Paxton’s motivation (he has suffered from the economic downturn and is humiliated by the contempt shown by society towards the poor as reflected by the character Boots). Also, having the film tell the story in real time from Paxton’s point of view (rather than as a diluted memory from another character) gives it a greater sense of immediacy.
Hmmm... For me, James' stories need no embellishment. In another adaptation "Oh whistle and I'll come to you" t(starring John Hurt) they introduced a wife (Gemma Jones) suffering from dementia. Completely unnecessary. James deliberately kept the biographical details of his characters vague to allow the focus to remain on the central plot. The stories are very well crafted and I think they stand on their own merits. Having said that, this is very well done. Peter Vaughn is always brilliant whether he's playing a villain in "Porridge", a regulation-bound quartermaster in Zulu Dawn, or a crazed/violent Cornishman in "Straw Dogs". But I would love to see an adaptation of James as it was written.
Recognised the lovely Wells-Next-The-Sea towards the eastern end of which the house where they appear to be lodging can I believe still be seen . It all looks a lots simpler here , I have an old pal who lends me his little house near Kings Lynn and I sometimes go for a few days wander around the coast including atmospheric places like this , absolute magic , like this little film
yes agreed but it was 50 years ago. brilliant film. I remember watching in when it was first shown - frightened the living daylights out of me at the time.
Has to be best BBC Ghost story televisation ever. Strong performances from entire cast, especially Peter Vaughn and Clive Swift. SUPERB! Only wish it could be remastered. 👍🏻
@@Thecrowseye Thanks for the update, that's great news! These early 'seventies, M.R. James BBC productions are classics. But half a century on, they're in desperate need of some modern-day, technical TLC! I hope the new, 'buffed-up' versions will do full justice to all the fantastic, sadly now deceased actors who starred in them (eg Peter Vaughan, Clive Swift, Robert Hardy, Denholm Elliot etc), and will also significantly ramp up the 'creep factor'. M.R.James' 'Ghost Stories were remarkable - not least because they were created on 16mm film, and made on a very low budget! All credit to Producer Lawrence Gordon Clark, whose talent and vision created unforgettable, chilling drama of which M.R. James would surely have been proud. These ghost stories have passed the ultimate - indeed the only truly accurate judge of art - the test of time, with flying colours!
This film making is like from another world in its artistry and created atmosphere. I have watched this movie six or seven times and I'm just as chilled by this haunting as when I first saw it. I cannot choose between Oh whistle and I'll come to you - Lost hearts - and this masterful ghost story. We seem to have lost something in film making which is very difficult to define - but I reckon it has something to do with the suggestion of ideas to the viewer rather than directly showing. The former is much more unnerving and still resonates long after the closing frame.
Yes, and remember how different it was for folks who were raised on radio. I sort of think that it may have really been the best format. The listener knows that he is an active participant in his own entertainment. Like most things in life, you "get out of it" what you "bring to it", and that primary concept -- that some things speak to you at different phases in your life and "that all changes as you change" is lost.
I love the name of this channel. No remaining commercial potential. In other words, they've squeezed every last drop of money from it. I see movies on various sites that are 50-60 years old and they still want to charge for them.
I chose the name because with the shows I upload here, usually there is no interest in rebooting the franchise or giving it a sequel, because it has no perceived commercial potential. A lot of good stuff gets forgotten this way unless we archive it.
I just love this so much. Peter Vaughan was a genius actor. This is tv that made you think. I still find it an eerie,spooky ethereal tale. Really makes you think. I have watched this so many times, and never get tired of it. Ant p uk Teacher
Yes! The background music is often so over the top and absolutely not needed, as we can synchronise the video and audio for over 120 years now! It's also disrespectful to the people who have composed the music, as others talk over it! I've seen a film called "The wishing tree",(1976) made completely without any music, apart from the opening credits. It's a Georgian film, drama, with subtitles, well worth the time. Beautiful cinematography and fantastic actors.
This story is utterly gripping from start to finish. 1970's classic ghost film and Peter Vaughn plays the part very well. Without the special effects and sounds that you see in today's ghost shows , A warning to the curious really sends a shiver down the spine today as It did when it was first broadcast , love the chilling music and the William Ager bloke standing still in the distance really gave me the chills , also at the end when he is chasing mr paxman through the forest is also quite disturbing.
My thoughts exactly about the final scenes of the chase, the ghost's cloak worked a lot better than any special effect giving it the sense of something unearthly coming after him.
This is how films should be made. No musical stings, sound effects. Just let the story unfold. Just one small thing - the surname Ager is pronounced Ay-jer here in Suffolk. With a soft g.
Incredibly the BFI, which have possessed for many years the original camera negatives for this film (and all the others in the Christmas ghost stories series), decided a few years ago to restore (at great expense) the negatives and release this film (along with others they have also restored) on HD Blu ray. I have loved this film ever since I watched its first broadcast on Christmas Eve 1972 (enjoying the frisson of terror!) as a teenager and later in life, getting to know this part of North Norfolk where the film was shot, learning to appreciate the eerie haunting beauty of this landscape especially during the dark grey winter months. The film was shot on 16mm film stock (as were most of the others in that period) so the restored image is not razor sharp (as modern audiences now expect from cutting edge digital cameras) but retains that beautiful period hue and film grain while displaying much improved detail and colour. I highly recommend seeking this out, and “Part 2” with the remaining filmed stories is due to be released soon. A perfect Christmas present for all fans - including yourself!
What a beautiful and very informative comment! I appreciate every word of it and I had the pleasure of reading it already twice and I might read it again, when I finish writing this, as everything you have mentioned in the comment, is always very important to me when I'm watching films. It's so wonderful to find another person seeing the same things as I do. Thank you very much again. My best wishes.
@@E-Kat Thank you for your very kind comments. Fifty years ago, the BBC would “green light” a film, agree the budget, and the filmmaker was left to get on +make the film as they wanted (the only constraint being budget). Fifty years later everything is now micro-managed by diversity, correctness, and language “police” - artistic creativity must now be controlled, not given freedom to flourish 🙁
@@jaywalker1233 yes, in front of our eyes we're losing the qualities which were synonymous with England and it makes me very sad indeed. The very English " Bobby" says the "f" word whilst on duty and if one complains, one is told to " grow up" by his superiors, as swearing is part of everyday life!! Hmm, so is crime, isn't it? I'm glad, I don't watch TV anymore as I couldn't stand the brainwashing anymore. The quality of programs was already so substandard and then they started planting exaggerated data into the nature programs and that had made me furious! I'm buying books now, in their original form as these cannot be remotely altered and whole paragraphs cannot be removed as it happens with the audio books, which also have character's pronouns often changed!!!!! It's begging to look like we're in the North Korea, and we're being slowly cooked without realising! We need to jump out before we'll be issued with a list of permitted hair cuts. It's so sad to see how did we allow this evil to get into our country? Is this the long term Chinese/ North Korean plan, to infiltrate our community with these highly sensitive issues and distract us from what's really going on, right in front of our eyes? Our newspapers have been plagued by pseudo news, full of celebrity gossip, but average citizens don't have any idea what's really going on with our country! Our children don't belong to us anymore, they belong to the state and it's the state, who decides if our children can have an abortion behind our backs, or change their gender, also without letting the parents know!!!! How has this happened? When was the law changed, taking away parental responsibility away from parents? Who has made this law, and when? We were shocked to learn that in the 50's unmarried young mothers had their babies taken away from them and shipped to Australia for them to be sexually abused in various children homes or/and foster homes!! But nothing has changed much now, as a young mother's baby can be so very easily taken away from the mother, just to meet the yearly council's adoption quota!! I've seen so many " horror" stories, which make me feel sick when I had learned about how young mothers were tricked into letting some government agencies to help them to get some respite and as a result, not getting their child back ever again!! Family courts, held in the middle of the night, people would think are a figment of our imagination and really bad conspiracy theory, but they really exist. I could write about these subjects, which should be close to everyone's heart, all day. I'm completely powerless to do anything about it and this is very scary. Governments are the real biggest offenders. Take care. My best wishes.
I would buy myself a tv & pay the licence fee if the Biased Broadcasting Company still produced gems of this quality, unfortunately this will never happen ❤
I remember clive smith from keeping up appearances and peter vaughan from the rivals of sherlock holmes. Everything was done so perfectly in this production. Thank you for unearthing this gem.
Bruh the quality makes the ghost even creepier cause you can't really see his human features, you can only see the figure silhouette. The shots with him running too is what makes this even more chilling wow! Also I love the atmosphere!
Excellent. I have seen this several times and will again. Christmas TV these days is not much. I guess the ghost had to kill Paxton even if he returned the crown, because he knew where it was. Which means that Dr Black is now on the list.
Effective use of Geoge Ligeti's ATMOSPHERES from 2001: A Space Odyssey.....very atmospheric, if you'll pardon the pun! Excellent actor that he was I can only ever see Peter Vaughan as Grouty in Porridge....
This dramatisation does James' work justice. The suspense has me on the edge of my seat, even the train bit has me waiting eagerly for something to happen
There was a lot of snobbery in the 1930's with very little upward social mobility...a lot of working class people were very deferential towards the middle and upper classes...thankfully a lot of that changed in the 1960s!!
Someone above commented on modern day NBC political correctness. The original Monty James story A Warning to the Curious is about two gentlemen friends on a golfing (?) trip who bump into a frightened young man, Paxton, who tells the story of his crown discovery and his archaeological adventure. He feels a ghost is stalking him. They are all upper middle class "proper gentlemen" in the MRJ original. This TV adaptation transposed the Edwardian era published story into the 1930s depression era. Paxton is now an unemployed working class clerk. There was definitely a socio political commentary and agenda even in 1972. I agree, however, that this is better than most recent excursions into the field.
@@poohbearrichie72 it’s there, do a search for it in google and it comes up. May take a bit of finding but it is there as I watched just before Christmas
My favourite MR James adaptation. Absolute masterpiece - every role is perfectly cast. The dusty antiquarian shopkeeper is creepy beyond words. The atmosphere is beautifully created, brilliant score, and there’s a real sense of impending doom.. ‘No digging ‘ere!’
Agreed. Although The Signalman is my favourite of the overall Ghost Stories for Christmas, that’s not an M.R. James story.
@@horrorfanandy4647 Yes that’s a Charles Dickens’ story - wonderful. Brilliant central performance by Denholm Elliot. Dickens was inspired by his own experience of being in a train crash. It’s hard to believe the BBC used to make drama of this quality, given what they currently produce (with a few, rare exceptions).
@@LadyOfShaIott Denholm Elliot was one of the best supporting actors this country ever produced.
He was a bit like our Steve Buscemi; an essential foil, which the big stars need so that they can sparkle.
Elliot had a knack for playing the mysterious, malevolent, over educated and devious types, and by turn he could also inject a level of humour into a film, having a level of versatility which never failed to bring the character’s emotions and intensity into play.
He had memorable roles in Trading Places with Dan Ackroyd and Eddie Murphy, as Dr Marcus Brodby in Raiders of the Lost Ark and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, with Harrison Ford, and he was also involved in the first adaptation of The Bourne Identity, playing Dr Geoffrey Washburn in a 1998 mini series adaptation, a good 14 years before the first Hollywood film was made in 2002.
In his last five years of his life, he was desperately ill, having contracted HIV; sadly at the same time just as his career had had a resurgence with roles in such as The Bangkok Hilton, the aforementioned Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade and as George Smiley in John LeCarrre’s first book, A Murder of Quality in a 1991 made for television high quality version of the story, shown on both sides of the Atlantic.
One of my favourite memories of Denholm Elliot was as the seedy conman, Charles Seymour, competing with Rigsby for the affections of Miss Jones in the film spin off of Rising Damp; he injected a bit of badly needed bite into what otherwise would have been a drab affair, as he easily stole the show in a big screen version which didn’t do the original television show justice.
You can't beat these vintage BBC programs.
I agree, back when the BBC was good, it produced the best programmes in the world, from factual to comedic, from the best of childrens tv, to honest. Respectable journalism, it was once the best. Seems now, to be the anchor that sinks the country!
Watching this again, I'd forgotten how brilliant the score is.
There was something uniquely chilling about late 60`s - 1970`s supernatural
tales on TV. These ghost stories, Thriller and some of the plays etc. Superb.
It was an epic time for TV of this type in UK.
@@Oakleaf700 That`s the truth. Incomparable.
Agree wholeheartedly with your comments.
Yes, the gothic mode really flourished then.
Now what do we have?
Ant and Dec...
It's a nice touch that Dr Black is shown weeping at the end, when he catches up with the battered to death Paxton, not screaming or just horrified, he's so distressed at Paxton's Fate. The Excellent Always Actor Clive Swift - he wrote a book on being an actor, a book that Glenda Jackson called the most Practical she had ever read. He wrote about the boring stuff like signing on when out of work, not the glam side of Acting, the Reality, ironically! Nice to see Vaughan playing a gentle character, usually given the ruthless types.
Clive Swift's Dr Black also appears in The Stalls of Barchester, another of the early 70s Xmas Ghost Stories. Robert Hardy was the evil cathedral deacon Dr Haynes.
Wasn't he the 'Top' Old Lag in 'Porridge'?
@@Oakleaf700 You're thinking of Peter Vaughan, playing Paxton. Vaughan had so many great roles, including his 2015 performance in Game of Thrones when he was 92. Amazing.
I remember watching this with the family when i was a wee lad. A little creepiness during the Christmas season was welcomed. Miss those days when families spent hours together in one room.
I remember, watching Ghost Stories for Christmas, back in the 70,s as a teenager. They always frightened me. The Signal Man, was one of my favourites 😮
Yes, that was a good one.
I recommend Christmas Spirits from 1981
Hello, below there.
Yes, that is a scary ghost story.
“Hello, below there.”
Excellent little film.
I remember watching these M R James classics every Christmas Eve. Loved them then and still do now.👻
Watching these ghost stories, Thriller and some of the supernatural plays on TV in
the 1970`s used to chill me to the bone. They had a quality that was sometimes
marrow freezing. The people who conceived, wrote & produced these shows had
a tremendous understanding of the human psyche.
Probably the type of film used that makes it feel old and creepy(of course it's old now which aids to the feel).
This goes to show that you don’t need a cast of thousands to make a good film 🎥. You just need a good story to start with.
And some top-tier performances, even in smaller roles. This is awesome.
Exactly right!
You need a very skilful incidental composer (ahh...no wonder- Giorgi Ligeti's cello concerto 🎻 👏🏼🙏🏻)
The whole of the sound design is masterful, including when the incidental music cuts out.
From an era when Television was worth watching. Unlike now.
I believe that The Miserable Old Gits Society is on the lookout for members. I would have thought you have the perfect credentials.
@@johncraskeSpecsavers can improve both your hearing AND eyesight, Snowflake!
@@johncraskeWell you're clearly a product of BLAIRS Eddukation, Eduukkatton,Ejukashun 😮😂😮ite, aren't you 0:12
@@johncraskeWell, you're clearly a product of BLAIRS Edjuucation,Eggukaton, Edjukashon elite, aren't you?
@@richardcummins5465 No, I was born in 1945, so I am a bit before Blair's time. However, although I may be old, I'm not a bigoted old git. - and we don't need to look very far to find those, do we?
Has to be one of the few films where watching in low quality actually enhances the atmosphere. Felt like a nightmare in the best possible way, loved this to bits.
I know exactly what you mean!
A proper ghost story!!! I absolutely dislike horror and gore, but nothing beats a spooky, well constructed, intelligent ghost story like this.
The scenery in England is absolutely amazing
Love these Ghost Stories for Christmas from the BBC in the 1970's.
Whistle and ill come to you (boy)...is by far the most fear fuelled ghost story ive ever read and seen .....
masterly understated creepiness, just as good as 'whistle and I'll come to you'. East Anglia is the most otherwordly area of Britain
Wonderfully atmospheric and creepy. I'll take a sophisticated, beautifully produced ghost story like this, over any number of formulaic slasher movies.
Oh dear God, yes!
Agreed fully. This was really well done from the beautiful, haunting seaside setting, to the creepy atmosphere to the score. This is how a ghost story should be told.
Lawrence Gordon Clarke was a master.
I just adore these landscapes. And the movie is amazing!
@@seasmacfarlane6418 Thanks for the tip, I will seek it out, sounds a real treat!
I think the quality of bbc drama from the late 60s up until about 1980 is unsurpassed in terms of quality and a real golden age
And the other side independent tv.
@@peterbamforth6453yes particularly drama from Thames/ Euston films, Yorkshire , London Weekend & Granada. Anglia, Tyne- Tees, Southern/ TVS also made quality drama.
@@mikemartin2957 Lol you got em all there ah highland tv?
I agree. In the past I'd buy DVDs just because they were made by the BBC. I wouldn't do that today as its wokeness has killed its creativity.
This got me from the beginning. Well done. They don't make them like this anymore.
Love the Sound of Ticking Clocks!❤❤❤❤❤ Excellent Story Telling, Reminds Me of the Good Mystery Stories played on the Radio!!😊❤🇺🇸👍
An object lesson in the use not only of atmosphere, but also of location, silence, near silence and music. None of that what would be subtitled as 'ominous synth' intended to 'guide' us into the 'correct' feeling or reaction. In short, our imagination, assuming of course that it hasn't been sucked out of us by the 24/7 society we're all supposed to be enamoured with, fills the void that this production creates. It's a little masterpiece.
Brilliant comment. Agree 100%.
A total masterpiece absolutely excellent unbelievablely unique
For being under an hour this lovely little production produces more dread and spooky atmosphere than many feature films. I've watched this several times and it never fails to give me the chills.
Yes your so right , these are much moor creepy 😎
Have to agree. This production along with ’Oh whistle and I’ll come to you’.
It's lean with no filler, like all horror film should be. Direct, to the point and eerie. Excellent!
it is superb!!
@@m.f.8752 Absolutely excellent
I can remember watching this way back in the 70's.I was 12 at the time, couldn't sleep for a week. I always looked forward to the BBC Christmas Ghost Stories. Great stuff, someone should revive the tradition.
Same here I was the same age
Likewise! Interesting how many people have had the same experience at approximately the same age. I’m in Norfolk atm with my wife and intend to visit Holkham beach from Sheringham. Like you I’ve never forgotten this brilliant film. Great series BBC ghost stories for Xmas however Schalcken the Painter was my favourite
I too watched this when I was 12 and it scared the living shit out of me! Nice to know I'm not alone...
Nice to see 'Grouty' aswell!
Yes I can understand why it freaked you out.
It has a real eerie undertone.
I love this.
Watched it so many times.
Ant p uk teacher
This is the very best dramatisation of an mr James classic. The atmosphere throughout is fantastic. An early appearance by the late, great Clive Swift (hyacinth bucket’s husband in keeping up appearances) is the icing on the cake! Brilliant!!
He was also in the opening of another of the James ghost stories - The Stalls of Barchester.
@@dahlrussell He was meant to be a recurring character to link the stories together, but was dropped after this entry, hence the ending.
Pronounced... Bouquet!.....lolololol
Im Irish but i have to admit amazing villages and scenery in England absolutely stunning countryside
Enjoy it while you can, before it gets covered in housing estates and Amazon warehouses.
I imagine Ireland also has beautiful countryside
It's somewhere I've always wanted to go and part of my heritage cones from there
Yes the English countryside has beautiful villages, the English people really look after them well
Excellent: subtle acting and effectively chilling atmosphere.
Watching this movie is like visiting an old friend you never knew you had. Well done chaps!
In the 1970's, we used to get the Christmas Radio Times ( the only time we got one !) For some reason (!) i used to find reading about what was on the radio a bit 'scary'. There would be a feature about a radio programme with some 'abstract' picture ( like something in a 1970's psychology magazine )illustrating it.
We still watch these post Christmas 🙂
Utterly brilliant, shot on low budget so superior to any Hollywood shlock-horror crap !
Imagine now trying to find the ramshackle old cottages and houses littered about these ghost stories. They've all been done up or are very expensive second homes, or many demolished. So sad. I miss the sense of mystery of these houses when they were in these conditions, and they greatly added to the atmosphere of these films. We still have a lot of old buildings in the UK but they've been prettified mostly to the point where they have lost the sense of time, history and total authenticity.
Miss Peter Vaughan. He was such a versatile actor.
I've watched old ramshackle British homes/houses/barns/ etc get renovated by folks who have no sense of history and strip these great old buildings of any character and architectural details only to create sterilize slick soulless homes. It breaks my little American heart to watch, why do they do it ?
I recognised the side of the house where they appeared to be lodging, I think it’s down the far end of Wells Next-The-Sea just beyond the chandlery ….before the path starts to wind towards the marshes … ooh er I just got a shiver !😊
I'll be watching this on Christmas eve with a glass of Croft Original. What-ho!
In November 2018 I was lucky enough to be in North Norfolk. Remembering this story I visited Wells Next The Sea. The gust house where Paxton & Dr Black stayed is now a private residence, "Shipwrights". The scene where Dr Black was painting is at the mouth of the river, the dunes have been altered with the erection of concrete walls to prevent erosion, a walkway to the beach & an RNLI Lifeboat Station & Coastwatch Station. Holkham beach & the tree covered dunes are just as atmospheric today as depicted in the drama: sadly I could not identify the mound where the actual digging was filmed.
I visited a few years back being a life long reader of James' work and had the same experience. My wife wasn't impressed that we travelled for 2 hours so that I could take maybe 5 photos.
@@incredibleflameboy A walk in the dunes & trees off Holkham beach with the wind blowing the tress is well worth the 2 hour drive.
It's a shame that the BBC can't make good TV like this any more.
They could but the cast would have to be almost black and with transsexuals in it and have some form of social injustice message in it about the patriarchy of white straight men
Much like Doctor Who
They are just woke hell now. They are hated in the UK for many reasons.
@chris7921
The BBC (?) ,I think it MUST have been, did a recent drama which is probably on YT or iplayer ?
It's about a modern day TV crew who visit the Suffolk coast inevitably headed by an aggressive norf Landan feminist man hater, whose job is to research or more accurately perform a hatchet job on M R James. Obviously he was a repressed homosexual / misogynist/ member of the Oxbridge white male patriarchy / elitist scholar bla bla bla fill in whatever current BBC board of governors cliché is current. A yawnfest. Actually it WAS a ghost story, of a kind and a supernatural entity puts in an appearance, but by the time you've got through the current BBC / Hampstead group think and PC BS, you've lost interest. I think it was a radio or audio play come to think of it. It must have been, because it would have been unwatchable.
@@AndriyValdensius-wi8gwThey make worse crap than the PBS does here in the states LOL.
@@edgarplummer6750
They certainly do.
😁
This is an engrossing rendition of the story. But read the short story too. It is fabulous and will chill you for a while afterwards.
Sheer class absolutely excellent unbelievablely unique a total masterpiece
lol, I'd recognize that voice anywhere. Richard from Keeping Up Appearances.
My Dad and I would watch the ghost stories 👻 on the BBC every Christmas Eve our favourite was always The Signalman but sadly I can't seem to be able to find it 😔 M R James was the master of ghost stories you can't have Christmas without a BBC Ghost story. I remember years ago 1988? Watching The woman in Black with Mom and Dad my goodness we jumped lol happy memories xxx
the signalman is here on youtube! ruclips.net/video/XL_4VHxdXng/видео.html wonderfully atmospheric like this one and very eerie, probably my favorite as well
Two excellent actors. An expat watching in Florida.
Watching in Fort Myers(Fort Misery)
@@joenickell6323 I’m closer to Ft Lauderdale
"Running for the train?......"
A great film filled with that wonderful mix of suspense by suggestion and vague imagery.
Watching with wife on Sat Dec 23 2017.A Christmas ghost story-effectively creepy.With an excellent performance by Peter Vaughn a fine character actor.
Wonderfully atmospheric. I hope you enjoyed.
If anyone is feeling nostalgic for England this is your channel.
England as we knew it has gone for ever.
@@Oakleaf700 We ALLOWED it. We did nothing to stop it. Made it more than welcoming to boatloads of fighting age men! No one did anything.
@@pommiebears Blame the politicians...No one seems willing to stop troublesome immigration.
Look at the recent mindless violence up north when children of migrants were taken in to care for neglect - that's what sparked the mindless violence.
@@pommiebears the very beginning of this story mentions Viking invasions, they probably had the same thoughts about them as we do about recent mass migrations.
@@juliee.7072the vikings weren’t migrants, they were mighty warriors with the technological know how to get across the sea and win battles. Many of them settled here (see Danelaw). They brought a lot to the party (as did the romans, Saxons and Normans. Today’s migrants - not so much.
I've visited the location of that actual wooded area in Norfolk where the crown was found and at the entrance to this conservation area, there's a polite sign of do's and don't's, such as, keep to the path and no littering etc. but one part of this list of rules literally says, 'NO DIGGING' in quite large, bold letters, as apparently there might be some old unexploded bombs buried in the dunes from the Second World War, due to the Germans dropping their surplus payload for a lighter aircraft on their return flight.
_''No diggin' 'ere'!'_ What can I say, the rule amused me.
That would properly creep me out! Was it not an eerie place to be?
@@oneworldfamily Yes, the woodlands that sits on the dunes at Holkham Beach in Norfolk are very eerie indeed. I live the other side of the UK on the West coast and was in Norfolk (East coast) for a wedding and thought whilst I was in the area, I may as way take a pilgrimage to one of my favourite televised ghost stories and ghost writer.
The 'No Digging' sign erected as you enter the woodland just tickled me and was very apt for the location!
Here's a video of how it appears today, virtually unchanged, so you really get that unnerving feeling that you're being watched by that mysterious guardian of the crown. ruclips.net/video/B1fNHbPKtv8/видео.html
The problem with unexploded bombs a common problem in areas around Europe. When America dropped bombs in Germany during WWII some hit soft sand and were buried without going off. When one of them is found they go all out to evacuate whoever might be living there. Even World War One shells are dangerous after a hundred years. Likewise do everything they can to remove and safely detonate them. If the sand shown here is where those bombs landed it's no surprise they might still be there.
They don't want you to get your skull fractured by the vengeful ghost of William Ager. It's for your protection.
👻
@Mekonta
Did you visit Happisburgh, the site of St Mary's ( I think it's called) parish church, which Paxton visits in this production ? Apparently it's not far from the rapidly eroding coastline and might be in danger of falling into the sea within the next few decades, or sooner.
The master of the ghost story genre !
Beautiful location. And what stunning weather they had
for filming..
A brilliant adaptation - the atmosphere is perfect. So sad to know that all of the actors are now dead.
Yes, and we could be next any day.
We're programmed not to think about it, so, we could carry on, running on this crazy treadmill of life.
@@E-KatLife with all its tawdry frivolities
My favourite adaptation of any of M R James’ stories by far. Peter Vaughan and Clive Swift are superb in this.
I love this adaptation. It has nice touches not even from the original story (the sacrificial bones found w/ the treasure, the encounter with the intimidating farmer) which heightens the sense of dread. The filmmakers even added a significant explanation for Paxton’s motivation (he has suffered from the economic downturn and is humiliated by the contempt shown by society towards the poor as reflected by the character Boots). Also, having the film tell the story in real time from Paxton’s point of view (rather than as a diluted memory from another character) gives it a greater sense of immediacy.
Hmmm... For me, James' stories need no embellishment. In another adaptation "Oh whistle and I'll come to you" t(starring John Hurt) they introduced a wife (Gemma Jones) suffering from dementia. Completely unnecessary. James deliberately kept the biographical details of his characters vague to allow the focus to remain on the central plot. The stories are very well crafted and I think they stand on their own merits. Having said that, this is very well done. Peter Vaughn is always brilliant whether he's playing a villain in "Porridge", a regulation-bound quartermaster in Zulu Dawn, or a crazed/violent Cornishman in "Straw Dogs". But I would love to see an adaptation of James as it was written.
Recognised the lovely Wells-Next-The-Sea towards the eastern end of which the house where they appear to be lodging can I believe still be seen . It all looks a lots simpler here , I have an old pal who lends me his little house near Kings Lynn and I sometimes go for a few days wander around the coast including atmospheric places like this , absolute magic , like this little film
That haunting score has been stuck in my head for days. Eerie stuff!
So atmospheric , so gothic , so baleful wow! Its a head and shoulders above modern flicks.
yes agreed but it was 50 years ago. brilliant film. I remember watching in when it was first shown - frightened the living daylights out of me at the time.
The triumph of BBC. Excellent upload
Wonderfully creepy excellent ghost story.
Superb,intelligent,understated as only the Brits could make it
Excellent. Never scratch where there is no itch.
The best BBC Xmas horror story was "The Stone Tapes".
Makes my skin crawl remembering it. 🙂
Thanks, I'll look it up👊
Absolutely love this and bought the DVD.
great short movie. The English have always been good at ghost stories, among other things. Makes one think. Thanks for uploading.
Has to be best BBC Ghost story televisation ever. Strong performances from entire cast, especially Peter Vaughn and Clive Swift. SUPERB! Only wish it could be remastered. 👍🏻
Your wish is granted. Out on blu ray december 5th 2022.
@@Thecrowseye Thanks for the update, that's great news! These early 'seventies, M.R. James BBC productions are classics. But half a century on, they're in desperate need of some modern-day, technical TLC!
I hope the new, 'buffed-up' versions will do full justice to all the fantastic, sadly now deceased actors who starred in them (eg Peter Vaughan, Clive Swift, Robert Hardy, Denholm Elliot etc), and will also significantly ramp up the 'creep factor'.
M.R.James' 'Ghost Stories were remarkable - not least because they were created on 16mm film, and made on a very low budget! All credit to Producer Lawrence Gordon Clark, whose talent and vision created unforgettable, chilling drama of which M.R. James would surely have been proud.
These ghost stories have passed the ultimate - indeed the only truly accurate judge of art - the test of time, with flying colours!
It doesn't need to be remastered ! the slightly dodgy visual quality only adds to it's atmosphere.
@@antonchristian873 - Yes!
🙂
I watched this as a kid in the late 80’s and it absolutely terrified me. I love the disquieting atmosphere created here, brilliant ghost story.
My personal favourite M R James adaption. Flawless in every way - great performances, wonderful location work and a very eerie atmosphere.
This film making is like from another world in its artistry and created atmosphere. I have watched this movie six or seven times and I'm just as chilled by this haunting as when I first saw it. I cannot choose between Oh whistle and I'll come to you - Lost hearts - and this masterful ghost story. We seem to have lost something in film making which is very difficult to define - but I reckon it has something to do with the suggestion of ideas to the viewer rather than directly showing. The former is much more unnerving and still resonates long after the closing frame.
Yes, and remember how different it was for folks who were raised on radio. I sort of think that it may have really been the best format. The listener knows that he is an active participant in his own entertainment. Like most things in life, you "get out of it" what you "bring to it", and that primary concept -- that some things speak to you at different phases in your life and "that all changes as you change" is lost.
They gave you enough background to paint a picture of events. It was left to your imagination to fill in the colors and shading. Far more chilling.
As an old norfolk lass i really enjoyed this old programme thanks
Beautiful location, haunting music.
Mostly Ligeti
I love the name of this channel. No remaining commercial potential.
In other words, they've squeezed every last drop of money from it.
I see movies on various sites that are 50-60 years old and they still want to charge for them.
I chose the name because with the shows I upload here, usually there is no interest in rebooting the franchise or giving it a sequel, because it has no perceived commercial potential. A lot of good stuff gets forgotten this way unless we archive it.
@@NoRemainingCommercialPotentiallovely I love nature and great stories this one i believe we can see something new each time.
I just love this so much. Peter Vaughan was a genius actor. This is tv that made you think. I still find it an eerie,spooky ethereal tale. Really makes you think. I have watched this so many times, and never get tired of it.
Ant p uk Teacher
M R James was a master in his craft, this one is a classic, many thanks.
Great days when TV was well acted and scripted and no overpowering music when people are talking. Thanks!
Yes! The background music is often so over the top and absolutely not needed, as we can synchronise the video and audio for over 120 years now!
It's also disrespectful to the people who have composed the music, as others talk over it!
I've seen a film called "The wishing tree",(1976) made completely without any music, apart from the opening credits.
It's a Georgian film, drama, with subtitles, well worth the time.
Beautiful cinematography and fantastic actors.
@@E-Kat well said.
This story is utterly gripping from start to finish. 1970's classic ghost film and Peter Vaughn plays the part very well. Without the special effects and sounds that you see in today's ghost shows , A warning to the curious really sends a shiver down the spine today as It did when it was first broadcast , love the chilling music and the William Ager bloke standing still in the distance really gave me the chills , also at the end when he is chasing mr paxman through the forest is also quite disturbing.
Have you seen 'whistle and I'll come to you'.?
My thoughts exactly about the final scenes of the chase, the ghost's cloak worked a lot better than any special effect giving it the sense of something unearthly coming after him.
This is how films should be made. No musical stings, sound effects. Just let the story unfold.
Just one small thing - the surname Ager is pronounced Ay-jer here in Suffolk. With a soft g.
@@degsbabe which dk u prefer i think a warning to the curious is extremely good absolutely excellent
@@michaeldevaney5728 I think this story just might have the edge on whistle.... Michael Hordern version .
"No diggin ere" then the next scene, a guy getting off a train with a spade, you know it's going to end in tears for the poor bugger.
Excellent to the extreme
Cannot imagine the BBC making this now. No lgbt people, no ethnicity etc., Excellent film.
I can see that you are another loser in life. Old, Tory, bigoted, bitter....
Never rewrite history to suit the present! We'll learn nothing!
Like seeing someone plug in a bigot lamp and brag about its wattage.
Karens in their dotage.
You dont mind acting like a bigot? My goodness!!
@@Mister_Listener It seems that like moths to the flame, anything filmed in the UK 50 years or more, brings out the bigots in their droves.
Incredibly the BFI, which have possessed for many years the original camera negatives for this film (and all the others in the Christmas ghost stories series), decided a few years ago to restore (at great expense) the negatives and release this film (along with others they have also restored) on HD Blu ray.
I have loved this film ever since I watched its first broadcast on Christmas Eve 1972 (enjoying the frisson of terror!) as a teenager and later in life, getting to know this part of North Norfolk where the film was shot, learning to appreciate the eerie haunting beauty of this landscape especially during the dark grey winter months.
The film was shot on 16mm film stock (as were most of the others in that period) so the restored image is not razor sharp (as modern audiences now expect from cutting edge digital cameras) but retains that beautiful period hue and film grain while displaying much improved detail and colour. I highly recommend seeking this out, and “Part 2” with the remaining filmed stories is due to be released soon. A perfect Christmas present for all fans - including yourself!
What a beautiful and very informative comment!
I appreciate every word of it and I had the pleasure of reading it already twice and I might read it again, when I finish writing this, as everything you have mentioned in the comment, is always very important to me when I'm watching films.
It's so wonderful to find another person seeing the same things as I do.
Thank you very much again.
My best wishes.
Have you seen " The wishing tree" (1976)here on RUclips?
It's a Georgian film, without any background music. A total gem.
@@E-Kat
Thank you for your very kind comments. Fifty years ago, the BBC would “green light” a film, agree the budget, and the filmmaker was left to get on +make the film as they wanted (the only constraint being budget). Fifty years later everything is now micro-managed by diversity, correctness, and language “police” - artistic creativity must now be controlled, not given freedom to flourish 🙁
@@E-Kat
No, I haven’t seen this film. I must look it up
@@jaywalker1233 yes, in front of our eyes we're losing the qualities which were synonymous with England and it makes me very sad indeed.
The very English " Bobby" says the "f" word whilst on duty and if one complains, one is told to " grow up" by his superiors, as swearing is part of everyday life!!
Hmm, so is crime, isn't it?
I'm glad, I don't watch TV anymore as I couldn't stand the brainwashing anymore.
The quality of programs was already so substandard and then they started planting exaggerated data into the nature programs and that had made me furious!
I'm buying books now, in their original form as these cannot be remotely altered and whole paragraphs cannot be removed as it happens with the audio books, which also have character's pronouns often changed!!!!!
It's begging to look like we're in the North Korea, and we're being slowly cooked without realising!
We need to jump out before we'll be issued with a list of permitted hair cuts.
It's so sad to see how did we allow this evil to get into our country?
Is this the long term Chinese/ North Korean plan, to infiltrate our community with these highly sensitive issues and distract us from what's really going on, right in front of our eyes?
Our newspapers have been plagued by pseudo news, full of celebrity gossip, but average citizens don't have any idea what's really going on with our country!
Our children don't belong to us anymore, they belong to the state and it's the state, who decides if our children can have an abortion behind our backs, or change their gender, also without letting the parents know!!!!
How has this happened?
When was the law changed, taking away parental responsibility away from parents?
Who has made this law, and when?
We were shocked to learn that in the 50's unmarried young mothers had their babies taken away from them and shipped to Australia for them to be sexually abused in various children homes or/and foster homes!!
But nothing has changed much now, as a young mother's baby can be so very easily taken away from the mother, just to meet the yearly council's adoption quota!!
I've seen so many " horror" stories, which make me feel sick when I had learned about how young mothers were tricked into letting some government agencies to help them to get some respite and as a result, not getting their child back ever again!!
Family courts, held in the middle of the night, people would think are a figment of our imagination and really bad conspiracy theory, but they really exist.
I could write about these subjects, which should be close to everyone's heart, all day.
I'm completely powerless to do anything about it and this is very scary.
Governments are the real biggest offenders.
Take care. My best wishes.
What a gem! Thank you
I would buy myself a tv & pay the licence fee if the Biased Broadcasting Company still produced gems of this quality, unfortunately this will never happen ❤
They'd stop anyone from seeing this on any platform if they could.
One of my absolute favourite pieces of television. Incredible stuff.
You just can't beat the old BBC productions!!
Absolutely excellent amazing quality
15:51 I love the cinematography, how even though most outdoor scenes are in sunlight, it still seems dark
Wonderful, thank you.
Haven’t seen this in years. Brilliant old film
Check The Signalman, with Denholm Elliott. That's a good one too.
So agree with you,brilliant old film!!
@@adamthorntonillustration9281 yes I love that one too
Can’t decide which I prefer: This or the Signalman, they are both brilliant!
@@horrorfanandy4647 Oh The Signalman, definitely! But, yes, both are brilliant.
I wish they still made ghost films like this today.
1972 and no visible chem trails messing with the sky of Norfolk .
Try living in Dayton Ohio next to Wright Patterson AFB. Plenty of "chem trails"
This is what I think of as a real ghost story .
I remember clive smith from keeping up appearances and peter vaughan from the rivals of sherlock holmes. Everything was done so perfectly in this production. Thank you for unearthing this gem.
Maybe every forrest should have a creepy guardian😮 Enjoyed!
I always enjoyed these wonderful stories. Would love to see the original, Whistle and I will come to you.
Glad I found this channel
Bruh the quality makes the ghost even creepier cause you can't really see his human features, you can only see the figure silhouette. The shots with him running too is what makes this even more chilling wow! Also I love the atmosphere!
In all of young people's slang non-words, there is no uglier non-word than "bruh". "Bruh" is not a word. "Bruh" is the sound one makes while vomiting.
Excellent. I have seen this several times and will again. Christmas TV these days is not much. I guess the ghost had to kill Paxton even if he returned the crown, because he knew where it was. Which means that Dr Black is now on the list.
Absolutely brilliant..loved it..🌻🇬🇧🌼
I treasure watching these every December.
Me too, every December, love them....
Effective use of Geoge Ligeti's ATMOSPHERES from 2001: A Space Odyssey.....very atmospheric, if you'll pardon the pun!
Excellent actor that he was I can only ever see Peter Vaughan as Grouty in Porridge....
Excellent!!!!!
This dramatisation does James' work justice. The suspense has me on the edge of my seat, even the train bit has me waiting eagerly for something to happen
"A real Gentleman Dr. Black is".... charming!
There was a lot of snobbery in the 1930's with very little upward social mobility...a lot of working class people were very deferential towards the middle and upper classes...thankfully a lot of that changed in the 1960s!!
Someone above commented on modern day NBC political correctness. The original Monty James story A Warning to the Curious is about two gentlemen friends on a golfing (?) trip who bump into a frightened young man, Paxton, who tells the story of his crown discovery and his archaeological adventure. He feels a ghost is stalking him. They are all upper middle class "proper gentlemen" in the MRJ original. This TV adaptation transposed the Edwardian era published story into the 1930s depression era. Paxton is now an unemployed working class clerk. There was definitely a socio political commentary and agenda even in 1972. I agree, however, that this is better than most recent excursions into the field.
BBC
If anyone gets the chance try and watch the bbc adaptation of the Signalman circa 1976
Wonderful and like this so atmospheric
Would watch The Signalman every Christmas Eve with my Dad lovely memories sadly I can't seem to get hold of it 😔
@@poohbearrichie72 it’s there, do a search for it in google and it comes up. May take a bit of finding but it is there as I watched just before Christmas
I also recommend Christmas Spirits from 1981
An absolutely chilling ghost story
The more you watch it just gets better and better brilliant from start to finish ✌️🌈
clive swift.....great actor
Peter Vaughan ...also great.
Clive Swift should of been more praised ,he was a fine and nice man.
Also Peter Vaughan was a brilliant actor.
Richard Bucket 🤩
I watched it again and this tume noticed what i call the bucket walk
@42:01-42:05
😂😂😂😂😂😂@mandelbrot2232