Doctor Strange
I'll Lock Up
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- 5,252
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- Hudson Valley, NY
The new four-part Starz/BBC miniseries adaptation of Howards End written by Kenneth Lonergan, starring Hayley Atwell. I waited until all the parts had aired so I could watch it in two sittings. And I recently watched the classic Merchant-Ivory film with Emma Thompson and Anthony Hopkins - which I'd hadn't seen since the nineties - to remind myself of the story so I could compare them.
I thought it was very good, with the added length allowing for a bit more subtlety and detail, and some of that post-Downton Abbey/The Crown opulent soap opera approach. Definitely a step up from the usual Masterpiece Theater level production. There are still a number of things about the story and characters that don't add up, but I suspect that goes back to the original novel (which I must shamefully admit I've never read). Atwell is, of course, outstanding as Margaret Schlegel... who's not so different from Peggy Carter: a woman ahead of her time, secure in her abilities and attitudes, navigating her way through a patriarchal society with sharp finesse. The rest of the cast is also very good, especially Julia Ormand as the first Mrs. Wilcox, and it was particularly nice to see Tracy Ullman in a straight dramatic performance. And of course, it all looks fabulous.
Where both adaptations run into trouble - and again, this is probably in Forster's novel - is in the schematic division to represent the very wealthy (but stodgy, conservative) Wilcoxes, the wealthy (but progressive, artistic) Schlegels, and working-poor Basts as representatives of the class divisions in Edwardian England. It seems closer to something from a George Bernard Shaw play - not that there's anything wrong with those! - where the characters are all arguing archetypes. And the romantic relationships depicted are superficial camouflage for access to security and privilege. Again, if that's the intention, okay. But it plays a bit oddly.
Definitely recommended if you dig period pieces based on literary classics (and Hayley Atwell). Just be prepared for an economic treatise barely disguised as a romance.
I thought it was very good, with the added length allowing for a bit more subtlety and detail, and some of that post-Downton Abbey/The Crown opulent soap opera approach. Definitely a step up from the usual Masterpiece Theater level production. There are still a number of things about the story and characters that don't add up, but I suspect that goes back to the original novel (which I must shamefully admit I've never read). Atwell is, of course, outstanding as Margaret Schlegel... who's not so different from Peggy Carter: a woman ahead of her time, secure in her abilities and attitudes, navigating her way through a patriarchal society with sharp finesse. The rest of the cast is also very good, especially Julia Ormand as the first Mrs. Wilcox, and it was particularly nice to see Tracy Ullman in a straight dramatic performance. And of course, it all looks fabulous.
Where both adaptations run into trouble - and again, this is probably in Forster's novel - is in the schematic division to represent the very wealthy (but stodgy, conservative) Wilcoxes, the wealthy (but progressive, artistic) Schlegels, and working-poor Basts as representatives of the class divisions in Edwardian England. It seems closer to something from a George Bernard Shaw play - not that there's anything wrong with those! - where the characters are all arguing archetypes. And the romantic relationships depicted are superficial camouflage for access to security and privilege. Again, if that's the intention, okay. But it plays a bit oddly.
Definitely recommended if you dig period pieces based on literary classics (and Hayley Atwell). Just be prepared for an economic treatise barely disguised as a romance.