Brideshead Revisited - Complete Series [DVD] [1981]
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1378 in DVD
- Released on: 2008-09-01
- Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
- Formats: Box set, PAL
- Subtitled in: English
- Number of discs: 4
- Running time: 663 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
The legendary television series, BRIDESHEAD REVISITED, based on the 1945 novel by Evelyn Waugh, is included here in its entirity. Set in the glittering, yet fading world of the British aristocracy, the series stars the astonishing trio Jeremy Irons, Anthony Andrews, and Diana Quick, and features stunning performances by Sir John Gielgud, Claire Bloom, and Sir Laurence Olivier.
Customer Reviews
ONe of the greatest pieces of TV - ever!
Quite simply this is brilliant. Producing the book as a TV series gave the director the opportunity to indulge in Waugh's lush and vivid text and whole sections of the book are quoted verbatim. And of course, in hindsight, the casting was inspired, with Jeremy Irons as Rider and Anthony Andrews as the rather beautiful Sebastian Flyte. But don't forget such cameo's as Nikolas Grace as the effete Anthony Blanche - masterful!
The film I understand, leaves a lot to be desired, so better to buy this AND read the book. You will regret buying neither.
The Beautiful and the Damned
This was 'watercooler' TV in the 80s,(it wouldn't be today, of course). When I first saw Brideshead all the interest - and the talk - seemed to be about Sebastian (the character and the actor playing him). New Romantics nicked the fashion ideas, families went to visit Castle Howard at the weekends. Redtops found a few half-witted Oxford students clutching teddybears and took photos to amuse their readers. And there was a sudden increase in the number of (Blair-like) conversions to Catholicism.
Watching it all again, I appreciated so much that hadn't at the time moved me - the romance between Charles and Julia, the sense of damnation hanging over the characters.
I've put Brideshead away now, but I am sure I'll revisit it again in another 27 years time, God willing.
Television of the highest quality
This is a staggeringly good piece of TV drama which has justifiably become a classic. It's hard to imagine any producer today taking the time to explore a novel in the way this adaptation does, a full 11 episodes which allow the viewer to luxuriate in the story and thoroughly explore the characters. There has always been debate over whether there was a mythological "Golden Age of TV", but I think the early 1980s saw something quite remarkable at Granada Studios, at least in the field of period adaptations, and Brideshead might just be the pinnacle.
Evelyn Waugh's novel is a heady evocation of time and place, as well as an exploration of spirituality, and the series captures all this with consummate skill, from the glorious period detail to the brilliant script by John Mortimer. The acting is simply faultless, to be expected when talent like Irons and Andrews stands alongside veteran greats like Olivier, Gielgud and Claire Bloom.
In sum, I enjoyed this series immensely. Craft and class like this don't come together very often, more's the pity.

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