Two Men in a Trench is a British comedic historical documentary television series, produced by the BBC, that ran from 2002 to 2004.

Two Men in a Trench
GenreDocumentary
StarringTony Pollard and Neil Oliver
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes12

Overview edit

Two Men in a Trench follows archaeologists Tony Pollard and Neil Oliver around the British Isles, where they visit ancient battlegrounds and use modern archaeological methods, bringing information about the battles and those who participated in them to their viewers. Pollard and Oliver take differing roles in their visits to each battleground, with Pollard taking a more hands on approach by visiting the sites and participating in more traditional archaeological methods, with excavation and hand-digging in the trenches among the most common.[1] Oliver takes his expertise to others, performing research and interviewing experts on the battles themselves, as well as narrating the movement of the armies and detailing the mindset of the commanders taking part.[2] It isn't a particularly grim rendition of the past either; oftentimes the two will have a pleasant rapport at the end of the episodes, and continually have comedic aspects slotted in, in order to keep the general tone of the episodes light-hearted.[2]

Seasons edit

Two Men in a Trench edit

Two Men in a Trench follows Pollard and Oliver across the British Isles, their research taking them to various battles across the United Kingdom. The battles of Flodden, Barnet and Shrewsbury, as well as the Siege of Newark and the Defence of Inchkeith, are among the conflicts studied by the duo in their first series.[3]

Two Men in a Trench II edit

The second season of Two Men in a Trench, stylized as Two Men in a Trench II, takes Pollard and Oliver to a new set of locations, their exploits taking them to the archaeological locations of the battles of Bannockburn, Edgehill, Sedgemoor, Killiecrankie, an airfield used during the Battle of Britain, and the big guns near Dover.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ Powell, Eric A. (2003). "Buddy Pictures". Archaeology. 56 (1): 58. JSTOR 41779118.
  2. ^ a b Pinkowski, Jennifer (2004). "Battlefield U.K." Archaeology. 57 (4): 60. JSTOR 41780928.
  3. ^ "Two Men in a Trench - Episode Guide". www.tv.com. November 2018. Retrieved 2018-11-26.
  4. ^ Brundle, Anne (September 2003). "Two Men in a Trench". Scottish Archaeological Journal. 25 (2): 196–197. doi:10.3366/saj.2003.25.2.196. JSTOR 27917521.

External links edit