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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writer:
Tony Saint (writer)
Release Date:
8 October 2009 (UK) more
NewsDesk:
(2 articles)
BBC plans film on MPs' expenses row
(From digitalspy. 31 October 2009, 9:08 AM, PDT)
Armstrong, Freeman for BBC '80s drama
(From digitalspy. 30 June 2009, 7:10 AM, PDT)
User Comments:
The rise and fall of the UK computer business more (4 total)
Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Alexander Armstrong | ... | Clive Sinclair | |
| Martin Freeman | ... | Chris Curry | |
| Edward Baker-Duly | ... | Hermann Hauser | |
| Sam Phillips | ... | Steve Furber | |
| Stefan Butler | ... | Roger Wilson | |
| Colin Michael Carmichael | ... | Jim Westwood | |
| Derek Riddell | ... | Nigel Searle | |
| Rhona Croker | ... | Valerie | |
| Amy Beth Hayes | ... | Cynthia | |
| Nicola Harrison | ... | Ann Sinclair | |
| Anthony Smee | ... | Norman Hewett | |
| Michael Keating | ... | Derek Holley | |
| Peter Davison | ... | Bank Manager | |
| Jon Glover | ... | John Radcliffe | |
| Theo Barklem-Biggs | ... | Sinclair Journalist |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Syntax Era (UK) (working title)
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Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Cameo: [Sophie Wilson]Barmaid at the Baron Of Beef pub. Wilson is portrayed (accurately) in the film as Acorn engineer Roger Wilson, but undertook gender reassignment after the events of the film. more
Goofs:
Anachronisms: The archive footage used just before Chris is presenting the Acorn Atom to the press in 1980, shows a Commodore 1701 monitor, 2 Amstrad CPC464s and glimpse of a BBC Micro, all of which did not exist in the year where the scene takes place. more
FAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (4 total)
Message Boards
Discuss this movie with other users on IMDb message board for Micro Men (2009) (TV)| Recent Posts (updated daily) | User |
|---|---|
| Best Quote | jren57 |
| Alexander Armstrong as Clive Sinclair! | jren57 |
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Just saw this on BBC4. A very interesting take on how close the UK came to dominating the world computer development and manufacturing industry in the early 80s, only for it to all fall apart just 5 years later.
Despite some garish and unconvincing make-up, Armstrong shows he can do serious drama in his portrayal of Sir Clive Sinclair, the man who brought affordable computing to the masses. Martin Freeman is good (as always) as the confidante in Sinclair's company who, unable to understand Sinclairs bloody mindedness over what to concentrate their efforts on, leaves and sets up arch rival 'Acorn Computers' with an Austrian business partner.
The production team have done a solid job in displaying the drabness of the era. The mix of archive TV footage of the time inter-cut with this filmed TV drama works quite well. The background story of how the UK became a world leader in the home PC market, and then blew it, is a fascinating tale for anyone interested in recent history. At one point Freemans character turns to Sinclair and says 'We could have been the British IBM but you wouldn't listen to me' is very apt. Sinclairs obsession with the notorious C5 is also addressed. It does make you wonder what would have happened had there been more cohesion in the industry at the time rather than the arrogant self interest of the industry that resulted in the UK losing such a massive foothold.
A thought provoking drama that has just enough momentum to keep itself interesting despite some flaws.