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The Take is a four-part British television crime drama series, adapted by Neil Biswas from the novel by Martina Cole, that first broadcast on Sky1 on 17 June 2009. Directed by David Drury, The Take follows the activities of criminal sociopath Freddie Jackson (), who has recently been released from prison, only to find that his cousin Jimmy (Shaun Evans) is attempting to make a name for himself ...
The Taking, a 2003 novel by J. D. Landis; The Taking, a 2004 novel by Dean Koontz; The Taking, a 2004 short film directed by Matt Eskandari; The Taking, a 2011 studio album by Loaded "The Taking", a 2012 episode of the Canadian television series The Listener; The Taking, a 2021 documentary film written and directed by Alexandre O. Philippe
June 5, 1970 – November 8, 1980 December 6, 2002 ( 2002-12-06 ) Featured characters: Eric Close as John, Catherine Dent as Sally Clarke, Chad Donella as Jacob Clarke, Julie Ann Emery as Amelia Keys, Dakota Fanning as Allie Keys (voice), Matt Frewer as Chet Wakeman, Desmond Harrington as Jesse Keys, John Hawkes as Marty Erickson, Ryan Hurst as ...
The Guardian was less enthusiastic, concluding it to be a "twisty if lacklustre drama", giving the opening episode only three stars out of five. [ 14 ] Reviews improved over the course of the series, and the finale was highly praised by critics, with many drawing positive comparisons with the BBC 's similar series Bodyguard which was broadcast ...
Taking the Flak is a comedy drama which aired on BBC Two in summer 2009. It is set in a fictional Central African country that is the middle of a civil war. A team of BBC journalists arrive from London, to the annoyance of the local BBC stringer Harry Chambers (Bruce Mackinnon), and send reports back to BBC News in London. [1]
"The Sacred Taking" is the eighth episode of the third season of the anthology television series American Horror Story, which premiered on December 4, 2013, on the cable network FX. The episode was written by Ryan Murphy and directed by Alfonso Gomez-Rejon .
The series is inspired by [3] the Ankh-Morpork City Watch from the Discworld series of fantasy novels by Terry Pratchett.Set in the fictional Discworld's principal city of Ankh-Morpork, The Watch was described by Terry Pratchett in 2012 as a "Pratchett-style CSI"; [4] it was to have an episodic storyline, following the format of a "crime of the week" as tackled by the city's police force under ...
Comedy Bang! Bang! (formerly Comedy Death-Ray Radio) is a weekly comedy audio podcast, which originally began airing as a radio show on May 1, 2009. [1] Popularly known as Humanity and the Animal Kingdom's Podcast, it is hosted by writer and comedian Scott Aukerman, best known for his work on the 1990s HBO sketch comedy program Mr. Show with Bob and David, creating and hosting the Comedy Bang!