Showing posts with label North and South. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North and South. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Wednesday: Today's Era - Early Victorian (1840s - 1869) - Period Drama Fashion Week


This post for Wednesday was brought to you by Early Victorian fashions! Enjoy these pictures of Early Victorian period drama costumes! Keep an eye out for more posts today!

 The Young Victoria
Various costumes
Victoria dancing with Albert
Victoria and Albert

North and South
Margaret Hale in Milton
Margaret tries to talk to the protesters
Margaret in mourning (?)


Cranford
Left to Right: Mary Smith, Deborah Jenkyns, Matilda "Matty" Jenkyns, and Miss Pole
Sophy Hutton
Front: Frank Harrison (in his red coat), Caroline Tomkinson, Augusta Tomkinson, and Miss Pole.
Back: Jessie Brown

He Knew He Was Right
Emily Trevelyan (Right) with her sister Nora Rowley (left)
Emily Trevelyan
The French sisters with Mr. Gibson

Jane Eyre (multiple versions)
Blanch Ingram from the 1996 version of Jane Eyre.
Jane Eyre from the 1996 version of Jane Eyre.
Jane in her wedding dress in the 2006 version of Jane Eyre.
Jane in her dark dress in the 2011 version of Jane Eyre.
Bleak House
Ada Clare with Richard Carstone
Lady Dedlock
Esther Summerson



 God Bless,
God Bless, Miss Elizabeth Bennet

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Winner of The 2nd Period Drama Heroine Tournament!

The poll closed a couple of days ago. The 2nd Period Drama Heroine Tournament has concluded. The winner is... after a close race...


Margaret Hale (North and South) is the winner!

Anne Shirley -- 46 votes
Margaret Hale -- 52 votes

Thank you everyone for participating in the 2nd Period Drama Heroine Tournament! It has been a success! I apologize that I couldn't get this up sooner. I hope you all had fun!


 God Bless,
 God Bless, Miss Elizabeth Bennet

Monday, May 9, 2011

Review: North and South

I heard about North and South from various places: Amazon recommendations, other blogs, even some of my followers recommended it. A while ago, my mom and I were at Barnes and Noble, and we picked up North and South along with Downton Abbey. We finally got to watch North and South last week. Here's what I thought.
Box Art

Synopsis
When Mr. Hale, a clergyman, has a matter of conscience on his mind regarding his position, he uproots his family from Helston in the south of England to Milton, an industrial town in the north of England, to become a tutor. Mr. Hale's daughter, Margaret, takes an immediate dislike to Milton: she witnesses an employer of a cotton mill mistreating one of his employees. Margaret soon finds out that her father has taken a new pupil, Mr. Thornton, the same employer that witnessed mistreating his employee.

Characters
There are a couple of members of the cast that you might recognize: Mrs. Hale was played by Lesley Manville who was Mrs. Rose in Cranford; Nicholas Higgins was played by Brendan Coyle who was Robert Timmins in Lark Rise to Candleford and John Bates in Downton Abbey. Frederick Hale was played by Rupert Evans who was Frank Churchill in the latest adaptation of Emma.
Margaret Hale (Right) and Mr. Thornton (Middle) in Milton:
notice the grey overtones.

For about 75% of the miniseries, I really disliked Mr. Thornton... and even by the end, I only got to the point where I admitted that he was "okay". It seemed like he couldn't control his temper most of the time, or he would be extremely rude. By the end, when he started to get along with Nicholas Higgins, a former union leader, and how he started to take interested in the newly orphaned children that Nicholas was taking care of, he started to get a little more humanity to him and became a little more likable. To me, it was a bit difficult to like his character throughout the entire miniseries.

It took me a little bit to like Margaret, but it didn't take too long. For a while, I thought that she took any opportunity of butting her way into conversations between Mr. Thornton and her father, which kind of caused me to think that she was looking for any chance to argue with Mr. Thornton. By the second half of the miniseries, she stopped that and even started to like Mr. Thornton. Overall, I like her character, but like any character in literature, she has her faults like the rest of us.

Scenery
Helstone in the South
I didn't like the scenery very much throughout 95% of the movie. Most of the scenes took place in Milton: since it is an industrial town, there are a lot of gray colors (due to smoke). Milton was not pretty to look at, which was probably the angle that the film-makers were going for. The country scenes were very pretty! Whenever scenes were in the country, the colors were very bold and popped out at you. The scenes in the country were few though, so there are only a couple of scenes where you get to see the vibrant colors.

Costumes
I thought the costuming was good. I liked some of Margaret's outfits. My favorite one has to be the white blouse with the dark green skirt. Some of her dresses I really didn't care for (like the dress she had during the final scene at the train station: I really didn't like that one), but for the most part, I liked her dresses. Some of Fanny Thornton's dresses were also nice (but I disliked her character).

Music
The music was mostly very serious since the story was a serious story. Most of the pieces were slow moving and had a lower tone to them.

Overall: 4/5
I liked North and South, but I wouldn't say it's my favorite. Spoiler Towards the end, it seemed like characters were dying off one by one. At least four prominent characters died by the end and one was about to die in a short while. End of Spoiler I tend to like more lighthearted stories, so it can be difficult for me to like a more serious storyline, but I did like it. It kept me interested throughout the entire miniseries. There are some implications, violence and people do die in this miniseries, but other than that there really isn't anything too bad in this miniseries.

North and South is available on a two disk DVD. It is 235 minutes long and has four episodes.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Some Possible Upcoming Reviews!

I know I still haven't seen Amazing Grace yet, but it is still on my list of movies to watch, so hopefully soon I'll watch it and review it! I still can't wait to see it!

Last week, my mom and I went to Barnes and Noble and we bought two more DVDs.
I heard about Downton Abbey a little bit before it was announced that Masterpiece Theater was going to play it earlier this year, but I didn't know too much about it. It takes place in 1912/1913/1914, so in the Edwardian era. It's about a noble family and it's servants that live at the estate Downton Abbey. There are quite a few familiar faces to those who watch a lot of period dramas: Hugh Bonneville (Daniel Deronda), Maggie Smith (Becoming Jane, David Copperfield), Brendon Coyle (Lark Rise to Candleford), just to name a few. My mom and I just finished watching it. It was interesting, but be warned: there are some mature themes (with accompanying scenes) present in this series, but the scenes were only in the first couple of episodes.

I heard about North and South a while ago, and finally we bought it. I know that the book was by Elizabeth Gaskell, who also wrote Cranford and Wives and Daughters. I heard that it was good (and it's main character, Margaret Hale, has done well in "The Period Drama Heroine Tournament").


And I also got recently...

...the 1971 version of Sense and Sensibility. I had heard about this version, that it includes Joanna David (who was Mrs. Gardiner in Pride and Prejudice (1995)) as Elinor Dashwood, and Patricia Routledge (who was Hyacinth Bucket in Keeping Up Appearances) as Mrs. Jennings. I had only seen one version of Sense and Sensibility (the 1995 movie), so I wonder how this will compare.