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  1. Blackeyes: With Michael Gough, Carol Royle, Nigel Planer, Gina Bellman. Blackeyes is an attempt to explore "what does go on between men and women in their heads, to show the possibilities of the ways that they see each other." Complex and multi-layered, the interweaving narrative threads include novelist Maurice James Kingsley who appropriates ...

    • (201)
    • 1989-11-29
    • Drama
    • 196
  2. Blackeyes is a BBC television miniseries first broadcast in 1989, written and directed by Dennis Potter. It was adapted from Potter's novel of the same name.

  3. 19. Nov. 2021 · Blackeyes (1989) - S01E02 - Dennis Potter / Gina Bellman / Nigel Planer. 2: Blackeyes is going all the way. To the top. "It's the attitude that counts," coos the photographer, "as well as all it takes, body-wise." The beautiful young model seems willing to do almost anything to climb the silken ladder.

    • November 19, 2021
    • OldTVShow
    • 46 Min.
    • 1466
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BlackeyesBlackeyes - Wikipedia

    Blackeyes is a multi-layered novel by British writer Dennis Potter, published in 1987 by Faber and Faber. It concerns the relationship between sexuality, exploitation, power and money. These are explored through the career of a desirable model known as "Blackeyes".

  5. Blackeyes. Jahr. 1990. Länge. 52 Min. Regisseur. Dennis Potter, Darsteller. Blackeyes ­ Eine rätselhafte Frau (2): Lange Haare, dunkle Augen, vollendete Figur und tot: Der vierteilige,...

  6. Overview. 77-year-old Maurice James Kingsley writtes a successful novel about a fashion model, in this Dennis Potter miniseries. But Maurice’s furious niece recognises her life in its pages. Gina Bellman. Michael Gough. Carol Royle. Nigel Planer. David Westhead. Gary Love. Peter Guinness. Nicholas Woodeson. Colin Jeavons. View More.

  7. An elderly writer, Maurice Kingsley, stuns the British literary world with a novel that details the tortured life of "Blackeyes", a young model who is repeatedly abused by the men whose fantasies she projects upon billboards and television screens. The public lionizes Kingsley's work as a shocking representation of the plight of women.