Pulling Moves
Pulling Moves is a Northern Irish television series set in Lenadoon, West Belfast. It follows the exploits of four friends: Wardrobe (Simon Delaney), Ta (Ciarán McMenamin), Shay (Ciaran Nolan) and Darragh (Kevin Elliot). The series first aired on BBC Northern Ireland in 2003, and aired nationwide on BBC Three, running for one series of ten episodes.[1][2][3][4]
Premise
[edit]Set in Belfast. Each episode follows the group as they try different scams to earn money. [5]
Episodes
[edit]Episode 1. Clamitis.
Aired: Mar 5, 2004
Directed by: Brian Kirk
The guys are broke as usual and get involved in trying set up a phoney accident which would get them compensation.
Episode 2. Meat is Murder.
Aired: Mar 5, 2004
Directed by: Brian Kirk
Ta's uncle asks the guys to dispose of a cow, but the guys spot a chance of making a few pounds selling bits of it off, not realising it is possibly infected with Mad Cow disease.
Episode 3. The Quiz.
Aired: Mar 12, 2004
Directed by: Brian Kirk
Ta owes his ex-wife child support; she refuses to let him see their son until he pays up. £1,000 prize money for a quiz at the local pub might help him out.
Episode 4. Dog-Eat-Dog.
Aired: Mar 12, 2004
Directed by: Brian Kirk
The owner of a prize Shih Tzu hires the guys to steal another prize Shih Tzu so the two dogs can mate, but, as usual, things do not go as planned.
Episode 5. Spousal Arousal.
Aired: Mar 19, 2004
Directed by: Brian Kirk
'Mick Bad News' thinks his wife is having an affair and hires the guys to trail her to a local hotel, where she picks up various men. After telling him the bad news, he suggests they set up a trap for her.
Episode 6. Catch the Pigeon.
Aired: Mar 19, 2004
Directed by: Pearse Elliot
As a favour for the wife of recently deceased Barney the Bird, the guys knock down his pigeon shed, and accidentally come across the secret formula which he fed to his pigeons to make them fly faster. The guys then decide to sell it to the highest bidder, starting a bidding war between 'Honk[spelling?] Kong Paddy' and 'Petsey Pigeon'.
Episode 7. The Pirate and the Choir Boys.
Aired: Mar 26, 2004
Directed by: Pearse Elliot
Ta gets a legit job and Shay becomes a taxi driver. It looks like the boys are breaking up until Shay upsets Concepta McCluskey, the mother of the three biggest guys in the west.
Episode 8. Two Weddings and a Break In.
Aired: Mar 26, 2004
Directed by: Phillipa Langdale
Wardrobe wants to buy his mum's house for her as a birthday present, but the guys are broke. An offer from his cousin for the gang to break in and steal his wedding presents whilst he is away on honeymoon could solve Wardrobe's problem, until the local hoodlum, Hokey, gets involved.
Episode 9. The Grandfather Clock.
Aired: Apr 2, 2004
Directed by: Phillipa Langdale
Local entrepreneur JJ Diamond enlists the help of the guys to bring a grandfather clock across the border. But dissident republicans hijack their van and use it for planting a bomb.
Episode 10. All Day Long.
Aired: Apr 2, 2004
Directed by: Phillipa Langdale
Still working for JJ Diamond, the guys almost have enough money for a stag night for Ta, but when they go to do one last move for JJ, the police have arrived at his house and arrested Carol, so the guys are asked to smuggle JJ out of the country.
Cast
[edit]- Simon Delaney as Wardrobe
- Ciarán McMenamin as Ta
- Kevin Elliott as Darragh
- Ciaran Nolan as Shay
- Gerard Jordan as Hoker
- Kathy Kiera Clarke as Una
- Lorraine Pilkington as Siobhan
- Doreen Keogh as Wardbrobe's Ma
- Sean McGinley as Bap the Butcher
- Stephen Boyd as Aran
- Dennis Greig as Crazyhorse
- Tony Flynn as Dole Clerk
- Paula McFetridge as Goretti
- Lalor Roddy as Client Advisor
- George Shane as Policeman
- Louise Ewings as Niamh
- Sean McNamee as Shay's Da
- Ossian McCulloch as Ciaran
- Roisin Finnegan as Aoife
- Bridie McMahon as Ma Maguire
References
[edit]- ^ "BBC NI Drama 'Pulling Moves' Begins This Week - The Irish Film & Television Network". www.iftn.ie. Retrieved 6 March 2019.
- ^ "Not funny? Give My Head Peace, says creator Quinn". Retrieved 6 March 2019 – via www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk.
- ^ Ireland, Culture Northern (9 January 2006). "A Mighty Celt". Culture Northern Ireland. Archived from the original on 9 July 2017. Retrieved 6 March 2019.
- ^ McGown, Alistair D. (28 December 2004). BFI Television Handbook 2005: The Essential Guide to UK TV: 2005. British Film Institute. ISBN 9781844570270. Retrieved 6 March 2019 – via Google Books.
- ^ Guide, British Comedy. "Pulling Moves - BBC3 Sitcom". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 5 November 2024.