Get Lost! (TV Mini Series 1981– ) Poster

(1981– )

User Reviews

Review this title
3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Fascinating!
vintageTVaddict22 March 2013
This show helped set us on the road to the excellent Beiderbecke Trilogy, and there are signs of the brilliance to come! Get Lost! is rich in quirky dialogue, and hilarious moments - a car chase whilst keeping to the speed limit is one that is simply unforgettable. The mystery throughout is "Where's Jim?" - husband of teacher Judy Threadgold. He's disappeared. But there's no intense drama. The story is beautifully low-key and intelligent. This show was intended to have a sequel after its successful broadcast in the summer of 1981, but the fact that Alun Armstrong, one of the two lead actors, was unavailable, led to a reworking of the idea and the creation of Jill Swinburne and Trevor Chaplin, schoolteachers like Judy and Neville of Get Lost, for the 1985-1988 Beiderbecke Trilogy. Like Judy Threadgold, Jill, played by Barbara Flynn, was a keen environmentalist, but she was a somewhat better humoured, less astringent character. James Bolam, of course, brought his own acting style to the character of Trevor Chaplin. Get Lost! is not Beiderbecke, nor are the events of Get Lost! pertinent to the trilogy, but it's a fascinating precursor and well worth viewing.
10 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Gentle mystery - and a love story
philaypee31 March 2009
Hi,

This was Alan Plater's first screenplay about the Leeds schoolteachers who quickly became Jill Swinburne (Barbara Flynn) and Trevor Chaplin (James Bolam) in the Beiderbecke trilogy (The Beiderbecke Affair, The Beiderbecke Tapes and The Beiderbecke Connection). You can easily tell from references in the Beiderbecke trilogy to things that happened in Get Lost!.

Though it is entirely reasonable to mark this lower than the Beiderbecke trilogy (singly or as a trilogy) it is still very good. Quirky and dry, it is both a love story and a mystery - as are many of Alan Plater's own plays (and screenplays).

One thing that comes through clearly in this, the Beiderbecke trilogy, Misterioso, Last of the Blonde Bombshells and several other Plater works (including some for radio) is his love of jazz. He also loves history - but that isn't evident here.

The thing that most of these have in common is a lack of violence (not quite total here, though there is no visual violence - there is gunfire in Oliver's Travels but nobody gets hit). He has written for many other series (Z-Cars, Dalziel & Pascoe, etc.) but his own works are often lighter and much less violent.

But here his love of music, particularly jazz, is clear, his principal characters real, his situations eccentric - and ciné verité could have been invented for him. His principals are played by Bridget Turner and Alun Armstrong here - and very well too.

His radioplays are excellent too. As with the TV shows he uses the medium beautifully - in fact some of his radioplays could only be adapted to video with radical rewriting.

Take care, Phil.

"Time wounds all heels."
7 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Before 'The Beiderbecke Trilogy' there was 'Get Lost'
Tweekums6 March 2024
This series, written by Alan Plater' who would go on to give us the better known 'Beiderbecke Trilogy', is centred on two teachers; Judy Treadgold and Neville Keaton. They aren't even friends but for the last three years he has driven her home as it is on his way. On the first day of the half term holiday she gets home and is surprised to find that her husband isn't there. The only person she can think to ask for help is Neville. And so begins a somewhat surreal adventure.

This series is included as an extra in the 'Beiderbecke Trilogy' DVD set; its status as a mere extra put me off watching it for a while. This was a real pity as when I did finally watch it I really enjoyed it. Our protagonists are clear precursors to those in the later series but different enough that once it starts we aren't constantly thinking of Jill and Trevor. The story is delightfully quirky providing plenty of character driven laughs as well as a solid mystery... and even a sense of danger. Bridget Turner and Alun Armstrong are really good as Judy and Neville and the supporting cast are solid too. The Yorkshire locations give a real sense of place to the story. Overall I'd certainly recommend this to anybody who enjoyed 'The Beiderbecke Trilogy', especially as it comes bundled with that series' DVD set.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed