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Una danza para la música del tiempo

Título original: A Dance to the Music of Time
  • Miniserie de TV
  • 1997–
  • Not Rated
  • 6h 56min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,5/10
563
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Una danza para la música del tiempo (1997)
A Dance To The Music Of Time
Reproducir trailer0:48
9 vídeos
13 imágenes
Drama

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaAnthony Powell's twelve volume novel sequence "A Dance to the Music of Time" has been dramatized for television.Anthony Powell's twelve volume novel sequence "A Dance to the Music of Time" has been dramatized for television.Anthony Powell's twelve volume novel sequence "A Dance to the Music of Time" has been dramatized for television.

  • Reparto principal
    • Gillian Barge
    • Nicholas Jones
    • Simon Russell Beale
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,5/10
    563
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Reparto principal
      • Gillian Barge
      • Nicholas Jones
      • Simon Russell Beale
    • 20Reseñas de usuarios
    • 3Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 1 premio BAFTA
      • 3 premios y 5 nominaciones en total

    Episodios4

    Explorar episodios
    DestacadoMejor puntuado1 temporada1997

    Vídeos9

    A Dance To The Music Of Time: Volume 4
    Clip 0:50
    A Dance To The Music Of Time: Volume 4
    A Dance To The Music Of Time: Volume 1
    Clip 0:48
    A Dance To The Music Of Time: Volume 1
    A Dance To The Music Of Time: Volume 1
    Clip 0:48
    A Dance To The Music Of Time: Volume 1
    A Dance To The Music Of Time: Volume 2
    Clip 0:49
    A Dance To The Music Of Time: Volume 2
    A Dance To The Music Of Time: Volume 3
    Clip 0:52
    A Dance To The Music Of Time: Volume 3
    A Dance To The Music Of Time
    Trailer 0:48
    A Dance To The Music Of Time
    A Dance To The Music Of Time: Post War
    Trailer 1:49
    A Dance To The Music Of Time: Post War

    Imágenes13

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    Reparto principal99+

    Editar
    Gillian Barge
    Gillian Barge
    • Mrs. Erdleigh…
    • 1997
    Nicholas Jones
    Nicholas Jones
    • Bob Duport…
    • 1997
    Simon Russell Beale
    Simon Russell Beale
    • Widmerpool
    • 1997
    Robin Bailey
    Robin Bailey
    • Uncle Alfred
    • 1997
    Jonathan Cake
    Jonathan Cake
    • Peter Templer
    • 1997
    James Fleet
    James Fleet
    • Moreland
    • 1997
    Richard Pasco
    Richard Pasco
    • Sir Magnus Donners
    • 1997
    James Purefoy
    James Purefoy
    • Nicholas Jenkins
    • 1997
    Paul Rhys
    Paul Rhys
    • Charles Stringham
    • 1997
    Claire Skinner
    Claire Skinner
    • Jean
    • 1997
    Annabel Mullion
    Annabel Mullion
    • Mona
    • 1997
    Adrian Scarborough
    Adrian Scarborough
    • JG Quiggin
    • 1997
    Grant Thatcher
    • Mark Members
    • 1997
    Sarah Badel
    Sarah Badel
    • Lady Molly
    • 1997
    Alan Bennett
    Alan Bennett
    • Sillery
    • 1997
    Emma Fielding
    Emma Fielding
    • Isobel
    • 1997
    Edward Fox
    Edward Fox
    • Uncle Giles
    • 1997
    Oliver Ford Davies
    Oliver Ford Davies
    • Le Bas
    • 1997
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios20

    7,5563
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    Reseñas destacadas

    dehodneth

    Change of actors

    It's possibly a bit late to post this question but as I have only now managed to see the video, here goes anyway. Does anyone know WHY it was deemed necessary to replace James Purefoy and Emma Fielding as Nicholas Jenkins and his wife in the last film of the series? Most of the other characters were left to age, convincingly or otherwise, even Widmerpool himself. Though Joanna David did at least bear a tolerable resemblance to how Isobel (Fielding) might have looked in later life, John Standing, excellent actor though he is, didn't look remotely like an aged James Purefoy. The changeover broke the continuum of events for me and was a constant source of irritation. What was behind this strange, irrational decision?
    5Richard-Powell-2

    Abridgement not adaptation; a lost opportunity

    This was an adaptation that was almost bound to fail. Squeezing 12 novels into eight hours of television allows just 40 minutes per novel. 'The Valley of Bones' was condensed into just 17 minutes. If this had been done well it would truly have been a miracle of compression. However, it was achieved by eliminating about two-thirds of the book.

    So it is really rather surprising that the adaptors should have created scenes which were only hinted at rather than described in the book. I counted four, all of which added unnecessary violence and gore. I think if Powell had wanted to make these scenes explicit he would have done so - but he preferred for them to happen offstage.

    What is also hard to forgive was the decision to play fast and loose with the chronology towards the end of the series. For example, the launch of 'Fission' should have been immediately after the end of the war rather than somewhere in the mid 50s, while the award of the Magnus Donners prize took place in 1968 or 9 rather than 1963. Anyone who has any feel at all for the period would know that the difference is immense.

    But there are good things about this too. The casting is excellent with no-one out of place; the atmosphere for the most part convincing and compelling. A pity that the cast did not have the chance to work through a real adaptation, rather than this drastic and unsatisfactory abridgement.
    7David198

    Memmorable adaptation with just a few flaws

    They don't make adaptations like this any more - no doubt for cost reasons and a lack of imagination and bravery at the TV companies. 7 hours of solid drama, yet full of incidental humour and some very fine characterisations.

    Unfortunately it is flawed, and the flaws make it just very good viewing rather than the excellent series it should have been. The biggest flaws to my mind are:

    1 The decision to replace Nick and his wife by new actors for Film 4 was totally wrong. Nick ages far too much in too short a space of time, and looks completely different. This creates a real problem of believability.

    2 Still on ageing, some of the actors are 'aged' very well, whilst others (especially the ladies and Odo) seem hardly any different as the decades progress.

    3 Film 4 is by far the weakest, though to be fair this reflects the books on which it is based. Perhaps it should have been cut further and the earlier years given even greater prominence.

    4 Despite a great deal of pruning, there are still too many characters and insufficient narration for non-aficionados of the books to be sure all the time of who is who.

    5 The scenes often seem to be a succession of dramatic deaths - difficult to avoid with the way the story has to be condensed, but very predictable nonetheless.

    However, it's still pretty good, and light years removed from much of the dumbed-down drama on TV today.
    ybrika

    a quick canter through the music of time

    Though nothing can compare with the books this is quite a fine stab, studded with the finest English talent of its period sensitively cast, and moderately faithful to significant portions of the books. The narrator's voice and perspective are well maintained though oddly James Purefoy is replaced by an excellent but jarring John Standing in the last episode while most of the other actors are cosmetically aged with varying degrees of success. Simon Russell Beale excels but does not dominate as the repulsive Widmerpool and the female characters live as they don't always in the books where they are seen through men's eyes. The music is well chosen and used from Coward's "Twentieth Century Blues" onwards and the use of visual art, including the eponymous Dance is apt.
    9tonstant viewer

    Execution almost perfect, subject matter a question....

    No, I haven't read the books, but I have read Proust, and you can bet Mr. Powell read him too. Powell's first volume appeared thirty years after Proust's death, and a greater valentine can't be imagined.

    Both "Dance" and "In Search of Lost Time" are panoramic multi-generational quasi-autobiographical narratives of the gentry they knew. Lower class types pop in from time to time, but they never take center stage for long. Both genteel epics run more than 3000 pages. Major characters are rarely single portraits, but are usually drawn from composites of two or three prototypes. Both works chronicle the human cycles of birth, education, coupling, re-coupling, decay and death.

    In addition to writing earlier, Proust had the structural advantage of writing the beginning and end of his novel first, spending the rest of his life filling in the middle. It was a meditation on the nature of memory, and underlying all the gossip and melodrama is an awareness that there is a coherent thesis and philosophy tying the whole journey together.

    At least as presented here, no such unifying ideas are discernible in Powell. We meet characters of greater or lesser interest, they do the things that people do (and sometimes don't do, and occasionally never have done in the history of the world). They learn, age, crack-up and die, but the whole thing just kind of trails off and rumbles to a stop rather than ends. We may have a good time getting there, but I wind up wondering why we made the trip.

    In response to criticisms of the abridgment, we should note that Powell, as a former screenwriter, was not upset at the reshaping of his work for TV. Nicholas Coleridge reports: "Powell, himself, says that 'Somewhat to my surprise' he is happy with the adaptation. 'It seems quite alright to me,' he told me with faltering voice, on the telephone. 'I think they've done it as well as this medium possibly can.'"

    Across the board, the actors are almost uniformly pleasing. Simon Russell Beale has been rightly cheered for his remarkable and daring Widmerpool, but Michael Williams (Judi Dench's late husband) is outstanding as Ted Jeavons, and Edward Fox steals every scene he's in, no surprise there. James Purefoy as Nick has to do a lot of listening, and occasionally he does it wonderfully well.

    I was not upset at the recasting of half a dozen characters in the fourth film. Some of the young actors looked quite silly in extreme age makeup as practiced 10 years ago. I'd have been happier if it had been more widespread. It took me about 8 seconds to register that Nick and Isabel and Jean were played by different actors, and then I plunged right back into the story. I'm sorry for the viewers that were derailed by the substitutions, but I wasn't.

    I am perplexed by the character of Pamela Flitton as played here in her unique patented performance by Miranda Richardson. She is a vicious, irritable, impatient, destructive, sexually voracious, uncontrolled and uncontrollable woman, everything that panics an English writer from Charles Dickens to Bram Stoker and onward.

    Pamela is a crimson-lipped vampire straight out of Hammer Horror, and not one thing she does or says has a motivation. I hope the books are more coherent in explaining why, why anything.

    BTW, the film "A Business Affair," from novels by Barbara Skelton, gives Pamela's prototype's side of the story, and I look forward to seeing it by way of further illumination. There's precious little to comprehend on view here. She just is.

    Anyway, this is all professionally done and makes for entertaining viewing. It may not be the absolute best of its genre, but it's a long way from the worst. It is highly recommended to people who like British miniseries based on long novels.

    OTOH, no one has ever made a good movie out of Proust, they're all terrible. There's a wonderful published screenplay Harold Pinter wrote for Joseph Losey, but it was never produced. If you want to spend a year reading 3000 pages, please start first with Proust, then take on Powell for dessert.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que...?

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    • Pifias
      In the final segment, when Widmerpool is kissing the feet of the disciples, the edge of his phony hairpiece is clearly visible on the back of his head.
    • Banda sonora
      Twentieth Century Blues
      (uncredited)

      By Noël Coward

      [theme]

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    Preguntas frecuentes

    • How many seasons does A Dance to the Music of Time have?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 9 de octubre de 1997 (Reino Unido)
    • País de origen
      • Reino Unido
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • A Dance to the Music of Time
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • City of London, Inglaterra, Reino Unido
    • Empresas productoras
      • Table Top Productions
      • Channel 4 Television Corporation
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      6 horas 56 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Stereo
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.55 : 1

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