We've made some changes
to The Sunday Times
More than any other writer, Stevenson managed to merge two contradictory elements of storytelling: atmosphere and plot. Kidnapped is one long adrenaline rush of excitement and terrified expectation, and it is also an evocation of the despair, anger and bleak spirit of the Highlands at its lowest and darkest time. Breck is the hopelessly romantic, swashbuckling hero who befriends Davie Balfour. He is the archetype of the heroic big brother in every boys’ story that came after. But with an inspired second thought, Stevenson made him duplicitous, contradictory and not necessarily dependable. He may even be an outright liar and fantasist. You can’t help adoring Breck, but neither do you wholly trust him.
Kidnapped should be the perfect Sunday-telly adaptation, and it has been re-created many times, though never wholly satisfactorily. There is one great, gaping flaw in the novel as far as television is concerned, and it’s the thing that makes it so gripping: it’s a first-person narrative. Davie is telling you the story. You never know much about him, so, as a reader, you impose your own character, which is brilliantly engaging — but on television, you have to be shown someone, which means you have a lead character who is a sort of underage Zelig.
It’s the same defect you get with Treasure Island, Oliver Twist and Pip in Great Expectations. In all of them, the supporting cast steal the show, are far more exciting and interesting.
Making Davie an attractive, believable protagonist is the main task of an adaptation, and this latest attempt didn’t just fail, it never really took a swing. This Davie looked and sounded like that weird little loser in About a Boy: all big eyes and bad hair. Breck was played by Iain Glen as a cross between David Niven and Ian Botham. Neither of them was helped by direction that was incapable of, and apparently uninterested in, putting the act into action, and although much of the time was spent with everybody running hither and yon, the camera never broke sweat. There was no sense of pace or suspense. All the editor did was fiddle with washes and digital finishes for the film stock.
The greatest mystery of this Kidnapped, however, was how they managed to make a series on the Highlands look like London’s chic Primrose Hill. There was no sense of the harsh grandeur of the place, or of a Scotland split into two countries — a Protestant, farming, Hanoverian southeast, and a Catholic, herding, Jacobite northwest. It was all brushed aside, along with any explanation of the politics, the defeat and the injustice that are the core of the story. It was a pretty sorry, urbanised, timid, girlie, social worker’s rendering of the great adventure, as if some Tristram had said: “Look, let’s take another look at Kidnapped and do it as a costume version of The Catcher in the Rye.” A good peripheral cast all handed in fake-haired, fake-dirt, fake-accent and fake-histrionic performances. The Scots accents, too, were all more Primrose Hill than Ben Nevis.
Biopics are the rage now. All the films at the Oscars were about dead people, brought to the screen by the weirdly unlifelike. I watched the first, red-carpet bit of the ceremony, and it struck me that I was witnessing one of those leaps in natural selection that Darwin warned us about.
Film actors are evolving, or perhaps that should be devolving, into a separate species. They are growing ever more apart from humans. Look at Renée Zellweger — like a homo sapiens, but definitely different. The definition of a species is a closed breeding circle. Only actors can breed with each other. If you or I tried it, it would probably be a sort of bestiality.
Biopics on the small screen are more human-size and believable. Following the partially successful Peter Cook and Dudley Moore one, we were offered In Praise of Hardcore (Wednesday, BBC4), about Oh! Calcutta! and Kenneth Tynan. I’m not going to beat about the bush on this. It was coruscatingly awful. Not just awful, but really stupid and awful. Crass, confused, stupid and awful.
I would bet that most people watching had not an inkling of who Tynan was, and even those who knew his name probably didn’t know much about him. This play, in a careful, environmentally friendly manner, left them exactly as it found them: utterly uninformed. Rob Brydon, who played Tynan, is a comic actor of rare talent, and this week he must be feeling a great sense of relief — a weight has been lifted from his shoulders. He has just performed the worst act of his professional life. It is behind him now. He can relax and move on, knowing that he has touched bottom, that this is as bad as it gets.
On the other hand, Julian Sands, who played Laurence Olivier, reached the zenith of his envelope, did the best he could, was at the top of his game, and handed in a dramatic imitation that was by far and away the crappest bit of acting I have seen this year — probably this century. He didn’t stumble bravely. He didn’t dare to fail. He seemed simply, nakedly, humiliatingly bereft of all talent and ability in any one of the disciplines that mummery demands. It was an unspectacular rout, and as he takes up a long run driving a minicab, he should consider the rich comic irony of sending one of the least talented actors of the 21st century to play the greatest actor of the 20th.
Tynan, for those of you who, against all the odds, might still be interested, was the greatest drama critic of the 1960s. He was funny, observant and blisteringly cruel. He made me sound like Molesworth.
For all his personal vanity and sexual peculiarity, he was one of those people who changed things for the better. He helped to force the retirement of the Lord Chamberlain and official censorship. The final irony is that because Tynan was the first man to say the f-word on television, and to show the prim idiocy of broadcasting and the hypocrisy over sex and eroticism, little teams of sniggering scrotes are able to put on dramatic puke like this.
Help (Sunday, BBC2), written by and starring Chris Langham and Paul Whitehouse, I liked a lot. I’m surprised there haven’t been more comedies made out of psychiatry. This series of little vignettes, like a neurotic La Ronde, is both funny and sentimental: a winning combination. Langham, as the therapist, faces Whitehouse, playing patients in an impressive selection of wigs and accents. It is a new take on the tired old comedy double act, the straight man and the comic. It’s artfully done and, as yet, blissfully entirely free of catch phrases.
How the new breed of location based mobile services can find your nearest cashpoint, restaurant or wi-fi hotspot
Enjoy screenings of all the classic films you love, plus take advantage of two-for-one tickets
We explore leisure activities that are safe and suitable for all of the family
Times Online's new TV show helps you make the right decisions for your pet
Are you California dreaming? Explore the wonders of the Golden State. Also enter our fantastic competition
See the best entries in this year's competition
Your brain is capable of more than you might think...
An interactive preview of the brand new For Your Eyes Only exhibition
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers

Love Sudoku? Play our brand new interactive game: with added functionality and daily prizes

Are you irritable when you return from work? Drained of emotion? You could be suffering from boreout
Prepare for some shock and awe, petrol lovers. Despite the greens trying to wipe it out, the car is about to offer us the most exciting year ever
We've trawled the brochures and websites to find this summer’s best holidays for every taste and budget

Times Exclusive Tickets £25

2006
£189,500
NW England
2008/08
£169,950
NW England
2007/57
£35,000
South East England
Great car insurance deals online
Circa £82,000 per annum
Birmingham Women's Hospital
Birmingham
To £28k
Barclaycard
Northampton/Liverpool/Teeside
£
Up to £66,000 per annum
Hertfordshire County Council
South East
To £38k
Barclaycard
Northampton/Liverpool
2 Bathrooms, Balcony and Garden
Beautiful Gardens w/ stunning Thames Views
Dining, Shopping & Riverside Pk
Mortgages, bank acc & money transfers to help you buy abroad
Explore mystical Jordan
From £1030 for 7nts 4*
to USA's Most Cosmopolitan City; San Francisco!
£POA
Book Now for Winter 08/09 and Get 10% off!
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times. Search globrix.com to buy or rent UK property.
© Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.