• TribblesBestFriend@startrek.website
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    10 days ago

    Obscure because it comes from my country but

    Kim’s convenience is an amazing show. Like fucking incredible! Netflix had a the diffusion right for a time but I don’t know if they have it anymore, exactly like the next suggestion (this one is in French)

    Série Noire where two writers tried to write a crime story and get embroiled with the … gay mafia. Personally I prefer Les invincibles

    Not obsucure (still consider one of the pioneers in New Waves documentaries) but I cannot help myself, Pierre Perrault’s Shimmering Beast and Pour la Suite du Monde (for the next world, the link have English subtitles) where he investigates what it is to be Québécois, to be human in the modernity

    • runner_g@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      9 days ago

      I knew if I scrolled long enough I’d find this show mentioned. As someone who works in the biological sciences, I recommend this show to my coworkers all the time.

  • Nusm@peachpie.theatl.social
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    11 days ago

    The Shield is an amazing, gritty series about The Strike Team, a special unit in an LA police department. The writing is tight, the story threads are engaging, and the end of every episode makes you want to immediately start another one just to see how it all plays out. It was seven seasons long, and they all connect from the first episode to the last one.

    It’s on Hulu in the US, and well worth the watch.

  • whotookkarl@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    11 days ago

    Garth Marenghi’s Darkplace: '80s BBC horror drama satire from the early '00s, and I think it used to be more popular but has fallen out of the zeitgeist just based on its age, space ghost: coast to coast.

    • klu9@piefed.social
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      11 days ago

      I think it was a satire less of BBC horror drama and more of author-branded spooky anthology series like The Ray Bradbury Theater and Roald Dahl’s Tales of the Unexpected. But done by someone who’s part terrible horror author like Shaun Hutson, part terrible 80s action movie hero. (Full disclosure, I would read Hutson schlock like Slugs etc as a kid in the 80s.)

      But that’s just my tuppence.

      Started rewatching it last month, saving the last episode.

      I think it’s going to get more attention now because it’s finally been released on streaming (Peacock in the US IIRC).

      I’ve still never seen the spin-off, Man to Man with Dean Learner

      • monotremata@lemmy.ca
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        9 days ago

        I think the choice of a hospital in particular may have been influenced by the 1994 show Riget, directed by Lars von Trier, which was brought to English-speaking countries under the name The Kingdom (not to be confused with the 2014 show about MMA fighters someone else mentioned in a thread here). It’s a horror show set in a hospital, and also kind of a soap opera, and also it’s kind of supposed to be funny sometimes? That show…I guess I felt like it tried very hard, but also that conspicuous effort isn’t a good look for something that’s supposed to be unsettling. Which is kinda the feeling that Garth Marenghi’s Dark Place takes the piss out of so effectively. I dunno, maybe it’s my imagination, but I can’t help but see them as connected.

      • whotookkarl@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        10 days ago

        I think you’re right, it reminded me of watching Dark Shadows and other similarly written and shot old soap opera reruns with my grandma. But it’s really closer to the horror anthology single creator style like the influences you mentioned. There’s an in-character commentary track too that’s pretty good

    • reddig33@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      That show was a hoot. I couldn’t get into Garth’s recent novels though. ☹️

    • Lorindól@sopuli.xyz
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      9 days ago

      It was truly special. The characters had real, believable motives and flaws and they grew with every season, while trying to survive in a gloriously chaotic universe.

  • shittydwarf@piefed.social
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    11 days ago

    I feel like Black Books was very underrated. A drunken Irish misanthrope runs a bookshop with an idiot for a sidekick

  • dkppunk@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    Galavant, at least the first season, the second season wasn’t as good. It’s fun. It’s hilarious. It’s a musical.

  • jacksilver@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    Corner Gas is a pretty good Canadian sitcom. It’s got a number of seasons and then a animated continuation that was made during covid.

    Its not the best sitcom, but has good dry humor and a somewhat unique setting for a sitcom.

  • aliceblossom@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    Mission Hill. It was 90s era animated sitcom that was taken off the air before the first season finished, resulting in the last few episodes never getting animated.

    Today it stands as a really engaging period piece, and if you ever wanted to see Spongebob (Tom Kenny) as a flamboyant gay man or a violent teenage ne’er-do-well it’s well worth the seven or so episodes.