Here are the next ten episodes of Inside Cinema: Shorts starting with Episode 81 The Lord of the Wings, narrated by Catherine Bray. She tells us about the new age of digital effects (CGI) when this kind of film could not have been made before. Typically, we see the motion capture technique for Gollum. And we hear about the number of techniques employed by director Peter Jackson. Lots of clips, including how they aged Bernard Hill.
In Episode 82 Roll Credits, Michael Leader explains how end credits have a long history. Some films use outtakes, some (boringly) include scenes from the sequels. Here the Marvel cinematic universe are the masters, or should that be the worst borers? Then Toy Story had fully realised fictional clips made just for the end credits. Or we can see how stunts were created. Does that spoil the effect? But this was a terrific episode.
There just had to be an episode (number 83) that dealt with Merry Christmas. It's James King who throws at us all those predictable recent movies. But first we go back to 1898 and the very first Santa Claus. A silent short. We fast forward to 1940's and World War 2 with Holiday Inn (1942) and post war with Miracle on 34th Street (1947) and It's a Wonderful Life (1946). Then all those Dicken's movies before the more recent Love Actually and The Holiday. Although the even more recent unfestive thrillers are not the same.
Looking wistful in the picture above is David Bowie, the title of Episode 84 introduced by Rhidian Davis. I'm not sure he deserved his very own episode ahead of much more famous actors. So we get films that inspired him (why?) including A Clockwork Orange for his Ziggy Stardust. His acting never really made it above hammy, as can be seen in The Man who fell to Earth. Or just watch him in Christopher Nolan's The Prestige.
On to Episode 85 and Mike Muncer's Carry On. Thirty films, would you believe, in the 1960's and 70's, that tapped into every single genre they could find. Infantile but highly successful. That familiar ensemble cast used time and time again (well underpaid and no one star), and cheaply made at Pinewood Studios, All that innuendo. The first was Carry On Sergeant (1958) about army recruits. But in the 1970's their "outright smuttiness" was "embarrassing". But they are a "snapshot of a particular era of Britain". "Infamy, they've all got it in for me". Say no more.

It's Tom Huddleston who introduces Episode 86 Star Trek. From 1966 through to 1979 was the hey day of the TV series. We used to watch it a lot. But then, predictably, came the movies. Star Trek-The Motion Picture (1979) etc. Back to TV and The Next Generation (1987-1994) and then their films: from the thrilling First Contact (1996) to the dreadful Nemesis (2002). But then seven years later saw a new young crew in Star Trek (2009) where the original crew are shown in their younger days. Only for awful sequels.

I'm just not so keen on these episodes on just one star. How many could there be in the future? But in Episode 87, Tim Robey looks at Hugh Grant. All those leads he played in rom coms. But in his early days he played serious stuff as an upper class stuffed shirt. From Maurice (1987) to Impromptu (1991) and Remains of the Day (1993). But it was his next movie that paved the way for all those roles that followed. Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994) made his name. After that he was everywhere. Notting Hill, Nine Months, Mickey Blue Eyes, Love Actually and Extreme Measures. However his career changed with more grown up roles. Bridget Jones Diary (2001) was followed the next year by About a Boy and Two Weeks Notice. Then the Paddington films. But his roles became serious as he aged with a more mature Grant in Florence Foster Jenkins and A Very English Scandal. Robey thinks "how much we underrated him all along". But I never did.
Another bio is Episode 88
Olivia Colman narrated by Anna Smith. She starts by looking at her early work. From TV's
That Mitchell and Webb Look (2006-2010), to the
Green Wing (2004-2007) and
Peep Show (2003-2015). Not forgetting
Flea Bag (2016-2019). Olivia's film career took of with
Tyrannosaur (2011) in Paddy Considine's "brilliant directorial debut". Then came
The Lobster (2015). But stardom awaited for her next movie: she won the Oscar for best actress in
The Favourite. This was followed by
Mothering Sunday (2021), and
The Lost Daughter (2021). That last one is on my to see list.
Episode 89 by Rhianna Dhillon is Will Smith.
The last in this batch is Episode 90
Martin Scorsese. It's Christina Newland who has so many films to get through. Starting with
Italianamerican from 1974, she races through all those masterpieces at a ferocious pace. Before heading back to 1973's
Mean Streets that started it all off.