A comedy based around the lives of pensioner pals Jack Jarvis and Victor McDade Still Game is set in and around a fictional part of Glasgow called Craiglang and Jack and Victor's home in Osprey Heights. Focusing on the ironies and comedy of old age with humour tenderness and pathos these OAPS prove they're still game for anything the world can throw at them! Series 1: 1. Flittin' 2. Faimly 3. Cauld 4. Courtin' 5. Waddin' 6. Scones Series 2: 1. Gairden 2. Wummin' 3. Doacters 4. Brief 5. Tappin' 6. Scran 7. Shooglies 8. Buntin' 9. Dug Series 3: 1. Hoaliday 2. Swottin' 3. Cairds 4. Big Yin 5. Oot 6. Aff Series 4: 1. Kill Wullie 2. Wireless 3. Dial-a-Bus 4. Ring 5. Hatch 6. Who's The Daddy Series 5: 1. Drama 2. Fresh Lick 3. Smoke On The Water 4. Hard Nuts 5. All The Best 6. Saucy Series 6: 1. Hot Seat 2. Fly Society 3. Seconds Out 4. Hyper 5. Recipe 6. One In One Out 7. Plum Number 8. Hootenanny
Little Secrets is a delightful cautionary tale about modern childhood. Blair Treu's film manages to be reassuring about the reality of a world in which kids are perceived to grow up too quickly, without patronising them about the scale and scope of the problems that preoccupy them. At 14, Emily (Evan Rachel Wood) has it all mapped out. Wise beyond her years, she is a musical prodigy who also runs a neat sideline keeping the secrets of the neighbourhood children for a small fee: broken china, kittens hidden in the bedroom, money stolen from dad's wallet to buy his own birthday present. These enjoyable scenes owe a huge debt to Peanuts. But Emily has a secret of her own, and over one cataclysmic summer the burden of this and all the others she is keeping on behalf of her friends becomes insupportable. Moralising is kept to a minimum as events resolve themselves in a dramatic way and saccharine levels are modest thanks to the determinedly unsentimental performances of Wood, David Gallagher and Michael Angarano. All told this is a pleasing family film of some quality. On the DVD: Little Secrets might be a small film, but it has a big picture feel, enhanced by the anamorphic widescreen presentation and a super-clear Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack. Extras include a good director's commentary in which Treu stresses the childish truths that make the story so touching, a short making-of documentary and a not particularly funny blooper reel. --Piers Ford
From the creators of smash hit Still Game starring Ford Kiernan & Paul Riley. Winner of BAFTA Scotland Best Entertainment Award 2006. Episode 1 - Rocksalt: Woody and Wallace attend a lecture on rocksalt MacAllister and Riordan are on the graveyard shift while Henderson finds out there's more than one Argos in the city. Episode 2 - Sorry: MacAllister accidentally reveals his secret relationship with Michelle while Henderson suffers an allergic reaction. Episode 3 - Pish: Woody and Wallace are set to fail a mandatory drugs test until Wallace's granny provides the solution. MacAllister meanwhile invents a bogus girlfriend to make Michelle jealous. Episode 4 - There's Been A Murder: The Fairweather Players visit the Botanics with Mid-Summer Night's dream. Henderson and Toner are on the trail of a swan murderer and Riordan queues against his will for Robbie Williams tickets. Episode 5 - Gimme Shelter: Michelle Riordan and Gavin discover some air raid shelters in the park. Woody and Wallace do a nightshift in the museum and Henderson is exposed as a closet jazz musician. Episode 6 - Bandstand: An eco-warrior chains himself to a bandstand threatened with demolition as the group see off the annual taxi outing to Troon. MacAllister is temporarily blinded with deadly results.
Dear Green Place Series 2 brings the return of the Glasgow Parkies for another series - six hilarious episodes of the BAFTA award winning sitcom.
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