"Blackmail" Vacant Possession (TV Episode 1966) Poster

(TV Series)

(1966)

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8/10
Seriously good.
Sleepin_Dragon27 November 2019
It's an hour of swindling, dodgy dealings and people trying to get one up on the next one. I didn't know the first thing about this series, and randomly chanced upon it on Talking Pictures.

Daphne Heard is wonderful as the stubborn old lady who refuses to move, a young Brian Murphy is also great as the estate agent.

Lots of fun, it was interesting to see just who had the last laugh. I'd love to see more of this series. 8/10
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6/10
Humerous look at serious problem
malcolmgsw13 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Legislation enacted in the 1950s was seriously flawed.It created controlled tenancies where the tenant could not be evicted and the rent was strictly controlled by So this led to the rise of rogue landlords,who would resort to illegal tactics to obtain vacant possession.To get the tenant out the landlord would have to pay them a considerable sum.So this old programme brought back many memories.
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8/10
Only one comment
hippyhorn69-124 January 2023
Warning: Spoilers
This short is a great old black and white item, concerning an cheapskate young couple who can't resist a bargain-basement property, thinking that there's no catch but a sitting occupant, then are proven that there's more to the situation than they think. . I've only one comment on this and it concerns the end. The two "nephews", who were losing £1,500 by the old bird skipping, would only have to tell Kinsey to stop the £2,500 cheque (from which the £1,500 was coming) to shaft her plan and she would get nothing. A very big fault which, at the end, spoils what was otherwise a very good story. Oh dear!
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9/10
A Little Gem from the "Blackmail" Series - Brian Murphy and Daphne Heard are Great
andyrobert30 July 2020
I watched this on Talking Pictures. It is a little gem from the Blackmail series, that I remember watching in the 1960s. The play is a bit dated now, reminding us of what we found so entertaining in the 1960s - low budget programmes with modest production values.

It would be unfair for me to say that television shows have moved on since then, but we must remember that such shows were part of the pioneering spirit of early television, paving the way to what we are able to enjoy today - the show that I watched was even complete with the type of static interference that televisions used to have in those days.

It was nice to see a very young Brian Murphy (of George and Mildred fame) in this film playing a very devious and unscrupulous estate agent, trying to sell off a property, using all the lies and deceit from his repertoire of salesmanship phrases, to make a quick sale. The way he was being economical with the truth and glossing over the unattractive features of the property with the type of veneer remarks that we so often hear on television plays and films like this, reminded us of just how determined salesmen can be in real life.

However, the acting honours go to Daphne Heard, who we all loved to watch playing the part of Peter Bowles's Hungarian mother in that marvellous series, To The Manor Born. Here she played the part of an old, awkward and cantankerous sitting tenant in the property that Brian Murphy was trying offload onto the naïve prospective buyers. Her awkwardness and cantankerousness was displayed by the fact that she would not move out of the property.

I did not know that Daphne Heard was such a versatile actress. She seemed to be able to play any type of part. I almost did not recognise her, due to the comic Irish accent that she used to play this play - a bit different from the Eastern European accent that she used for her part in To The Manor Born.

This television show has recently been recovered from the many lost shows that we would all like to watch again. It even has the same inherent interference, shown with the odd bit of static flashing across the screen, which we all accepted in the early days of television.

So to round this review off, I would like to say that, despite the programmes low production values, gloomy atmosphere, and the style of acting, it was a very original and well scripted little play, with a neat little twist at the end that no one would have been expecting.

9 out of 10.
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5/10
Vacant Possession
Prismark1017 May 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Written by Leon Griffiths who is more famous as the creator of Minder and vernacular such as 'er indoors.'

This episode of Blackmail concerns Mrs Pearce, a sitting tenant in some dilapidated flats in London.

It opens with a couple who have come in for a viewing. They would like to buy the property and see the potential for refurbishing it. The problem is the sitting tenant in her stinky flat.

Mrs Pearce has resisted all attempts by the landlord to move. He has offered her money and now has hired some heavies, Lew and Vic.

Luckily it turns out that she knows the mother of one of the thugs. She threatens to tell Vic's mother what a naughty boy he has been and Vic is not happy about it.

When the thugs find out how much money the landlord has previously offered, they see a way of making money.

The twist is that the new owner of the property is coerced by the heavies to hand over some money and Mrs Pearce would leave quietly. It is just that Mrs Pearce gets the money directly and quickly departs. The heavies never do get their cut.

It is implied that Mrs Pearce will go to another part of London and try the same trick again. However she was living in this flat for years and I was never sure what need she has for the money.

It is a darkly comic drama. Almost Pinteresque with menace from Lew and Vic. Mrs Pearce is the type of tenant whose flat will need to be fumigated when she leaves. You can almost smell her odour. I also sensed her hypocrisy. She complains why the new owner needs such a large house but she has the biggest flat when she lives alone with her birds.
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