
Stay tuned on THIRTEEN for more episodes of The Tunnel and future Tunnel posts on The British Telly Dish Blog. The English side of the refugee issue is addressed in the first episode of The Tunnel, which introduces the mysterious character Stephen Beaumont who runs a hostel for asylum seekers. This past weekend, when The Tunnel debuted in the U.S., French officials banned a privately organized, 250-vehicle British convoy from delivering food, bedding and tents via ferry to the main refugee camp in Calais. In March, the Guardian reported on what happened when officials tried to dismantle the main camp. At the end of February 2016, the BBC reported that Calais officials claimed there were 3,700 people in the unofficial camps, while a nonprofit refugee aid group said the number was closer to 5,500.
THE TUNNEL SERIES
Eurotunnel, the company that operates the Channel Tunnel, said that it has intercepted more than 37,000 migrants since January 2015. Could you tell me the name of the piano piece in Episode6 of The Tunnel series 3 please Its the piece before the Choir to the Wild is. The story's title refers to the symbol for Castel's emotional and physical isolation from society, which becomes increasingly apparent. Migrants fleeing violence in countries such as Syria, Eritrea, Somalia and Afghanistan have gathered in unofficial camps, including a main one known as “the Jungle,” with the goal of eventually reaching the UK. The Tunnel ( Spanish: El tnel) is a dark, psychological novel written by Argentine writer Ernesto Sabato about a deranged porteo painter, Juan Pablo Castel, and his obsession with a woman. The city is the terminal for a ferry line to Dover in England and lies close to the Channel Tunnel. Part of the series, including the first episode, is set in Calais, a port city in northern France where tension over non-European migrants have simmered for years.

World War II-era bunkers line the shore of Calais in northern France. In the U.S., the series airs with some subtitles (and omitted curses and pixelated nudity) Sunday nights on PBS between June 19 and August 21. It premiered in those European countries in Fall 2013, introducing the first bilingual series ever for British and French television audiences. The ten episodes are the work of two French and two British directors, and three French and three British writers.

The international crime series is a co-production of Sky Atlantic, serving the UK and Ireland, and Canal+ of France. Your first hunch might by that The Tunnel is a BBC import, but that’s a false lead. The gruesome murders becomes the first in a chain of killings by “The Truth Terrorist,” who claims to be highlighting Europe’s social problems. When the body is revealed to be in two mutilated parts - the upper half belonging to the politician and the lower part to a Welsh woman - the laid-back British detective Karl Roebuck (Stephen Dillane) and awkwardly serious French detective Elise Wassermann (Clémence Poésy) must work together. In Episode 1, a French politician’s corpse is found on the border between the UK and France in the Channel Tunnel, the 31.4-mile railway tunnel connecting the countries. Get ready to strap yourself in for The Tunnel, a ten-part PBS thriller in which the action cuts between South East England and northwestern France. Clemence Posey as Elise Wasserman (right) and Stephen Dillane as Karl Roebuck (left) in The Tunnel.
