Become a Member
Opinion

Mira Hamermesh, pioneering film director

February 28, 2014 10:13
2 min read

If I had to name the one element most sadly lacking in television schedules today, I would say at once, “the single documentary”. This is the film that tells you not what, as part of a series, you saw last week, the same subject in the same format, but the very opposite, a “one-off”, unlike anything you ever saw before.

Once, in fiction, as well as series and serials, we had the single play; authors worth heeding, creating as their fancy led them.

“Try this,” they would say, “react, consider and respond”. The single play, the glory of early television schedules, has simply vanished from the screen, replaced, to some extent, by an infrequent, in-house, feature-length film.

But the loss of the singleton’s quality is mostly made up by series and serials, many imported from abroad, from the United States or Scandinavia. And very fine they are too, from The West Wing to The Wire; from Borgen to The Bridge.

Editor’s picks