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29 October 2014
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Friends and Crocodiles
Patrick Malahide as Anders

Friends and Crocodiles


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Patrick Malahide plays Anders

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Patrick Malahide, one of the most highly regarded actors in the business, had no hesitation about accepting the role of Anders in Friends and Crocodiles.

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The character is representative of a particularly arrogant breed of Nineties businessman. Seeing himself as a "master of the universe", the supremely self-confident chief executive employs Lizzie as his protégée.

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Obsessed with newness, he won't listen to reason as he dumps his company's solid, long-established holdings in manufacturing and pours all its cash into much riskier, shiny new hi-tech businesses.

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As these new investments crash and burn and the company's share price plummets, Anders is forced to cut 20,000 jobs.

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At a stormy shareholders' meeting, investors are furious about the cavalier way he has thrown away their hard-earned money.

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"It's amazing what they've done, completely incredible," the investors fume. "One of the biggest companies in Europe has been destroyed in just under two years. It's a train wreck, staggering in its ineptitude. How could clever people be so stupid?"

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The whole traumatic experience leaves Lizzie shattered, and she needs Paul's help to piece herself together again.

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Malahide has distinguished himself in a host of high-class dramas over the years, from The Singing Detective, Middlemarch, Minder and Inspector Alleyn on the big screen to The World Is Not Enough, Billy Elliot, Quills, Captain Corelli's Mandolin and Sahara on the big screen.

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A man who knows a good part when he sees one, Malahide was attracted by the complexity of the character in Stephen Poliakoff's film.

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"Anders is a very powerful capitalist," muses the actor, who also has a successful parallel career as a writer and (under the pseudonym PG Duggan) penned the 1996 drama, The Writing on the Wall. "But he is ultimately brought down by his own obsession.

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"Stephen knows that period very, very well, and Anders is symptomatic of that era. He's extremely intelligent, and yet at the same time he is caught in that bullish Thatcherite zeitgeist and follows it blindly to destruction.

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"It is fascinating to play someone so purblind to the consequences of what he is doing and so convinced of his own abilities.

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"Common sense goes out of the window in favour

of the fashionable theory that everything must be rationalised. But the net result is that he ends up with nothing and ruins the lives of thousands of small investors in the process.

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"Anders had a perfectly decent factory making perfectly decent vacuum cleaners, but it wound up making nothing at all. I suppose there is an intellectual purity about making nothing - you have no overheads at all!"

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Malahide continues: "Anders embodies the concept of clever people being stupid. He's clearly no fool: he's built up a huge conglomerate. And yet he's got to a certain age and doesn't want to lose touch with the modern world. But in so doing, he wrecks thousands of lives.

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"Of course, he's not destroyed himself, he just glosses over the fact the company is a wreck and walks out of the shareholders' meeting leaving everyone else destroyed.

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"Stephen is not being didactic. Anders' business dealings are the most extreme example of someone throwing the baby out with the bathwater. He is so blinded to what he's doing that he loses touch with humanity.

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"Stephen is saying that we should never forget that humanity is what really counts. But that is a message that still resonates today, because business remains all-important."

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The actor still has a dedicated following from his many TV hits. "The reaction varies, depending on where I am," Malahide reveals.

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"If I'm walking past a building site, I get 'Oi, Chisholm' from Minder fans. But if I go to a library, a female librarian will flutter her eyelashes at me because she remembers Middlemarch.

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"But perhaps the highlight for me was the Singing Detective. It was groundbreaking when we made it in 1986, and the amazing thing is, it still is if you watch it today. Like all works of art, it is timeless. It's still extraordinarily original.

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"What I love about Friends and Crocodiles is that the whole drama is extremely tangential in its approach," Malahide ruminates.

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"Rather than being schematic, it is telling a story through its characters. It's also wonderful that the two principal characters never actually get it together. It's so refreshing that it's about something other than sex.

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"When people ask me what Friends and Crocodiles is about, I tell them: 'It's a history of the Thatcher years told in the guise of a platonic love story'."

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