Eve deja su vida provinciana para escapar a la ciudad y convertirse en cantante de cabaret. Conocerá un coronel durante un bombardeo en la Primera Guerra Mundial, con el que se irá a vivir a... Leer todoEve deja su vida provinciana para escapar a la ciudad y convertirse en cantante de cabaret. Conocerá un coronel durante un bombardeo en la Primera Guerra Mundial, con el que se irá a vivir a California.Eve deja su vida provinciana para escapar a la ciudad y convertirse en cantante de cabaret. Conocerá un coronel durante un bombardeo en la Primera Guerra Mundial, con el que se irá a vivir a California.
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I watched this when I was quite small as an English channel showed this as a tele-series back in the late 80's or beginning of the 90's in Sri Lanka....
There's not many that I've watched that has been able to take a special person in my memory.... but this was one greaaaaaaat series that I looked forward to seeing every week when it was running in episodes...
To think that I remembered the name upto date and to think that I fell for Hugh Grant at a very young age, when other of my age hardly knew that such a character existed, is amazing... when I read through the cast, I even remembered that his role was "Bruno".
Whats even more surprising is my sudden remembrance of the series in 2004... so many years after watching it for the first time... and this is very reason I'm here seated in front of the comp taking time off a pretty busy schedule to give my thoughts on it....
I simply loved it... and thumbs up for the director of the series and the author (judith krantz) both : ). Pls make more of this kind... so that my daughter would be able to enjoy something similar : )
There's not many that I've watched that has been able to take a special person in my memory.... but this was one greaaaaaaat series that I looked forward to seeing every week when it was running in episodes...
To think that I remembered the name upto date and to think that I fell for Hugh Grant at a very young age, when other of my age hardly knew that such a character existed, is amazing... when I read through the cast, I even remembered that his role was "Bruno".
Whats even more surprising is my sudden remembrance of the series in 2004... so many years after watching it for the first time... and this is very reason I'm here seated in front of the comp taking time off a pretty busy schedule to give my thoughts on it....
I simply loved it... and thumbs up for the director of the series and the author (judith krantz) both : ). Pls make more of this kind... so that my daughter would be able to enjoy something similar : )
The saga of the French family de Lancel, since 1910 until the end of the Second World War, is not a bad movie. The video released in Brazil has two and half hours runtime, and the story has all the ingredients of a soap-opera: love, hate, betrayal, rape, war, death, birth etc. There are too much characters, and they are reasonably well developed in a shallow way. Michael York and Hugh Grant, with their strong British accent, are hard to be accepted as French. But Courtney Cox and Hugh Grant in the beginning of their career have a great performance and hook the attention of this romance. The careful production and the selection of good cast and landscapes are also good points in this movie. My vote is six.
I totally loved this movie and cannot rave about it enough. Full of wonderfully stong characters, especially the female ones. It would be easier to talk about if I had seen it more recently, but it has been a while. It is well worth reading the book too, like the movie you just melt into it... I wish I had the PAL version!!
10staceym
Well, I thought this was quite good. As a rule, TV mini-series can be pretty hit-and-miss, but I was pleasantly surprised by this one.
A good pre-Friends performance from Courteney Cox, who proves that she can act and a brilliant cast on the whole. Isn't Barry Bostwick just dreamy??
Anyway, if you want to see one book adaptation, then see this one! Go on! See it!
A good pre-Friends performance from Courteney Cox, who proves that she can act and a brilliant cast on the whole. Isn't Barry Bostwick just dreamy??
Anyway, if you want to see one book adaptation, then see this one! Go on! See it!
Since this miniseries is based on a Judith Kranz story, you can expect a lot of steam, several illicit affairs, and a fair amount of incest. This is a very soapy melodrama that a lot of women will love, but if it's not your cup of tea, you should know from the get-go. The villain is one-dimensional, the heroes never get a break, and family secrets are revealed in the worst way. Hugh Grant is so evil, it's a wonder he even had a career after this and wasn't typecast because of his very convincing performance. You'll want to throw things at your television, you'll want to scream at him, and you'll want terrible things to happen to him. Isn't that one of the necessities of a melodrama?
The setting of Till We Meet Again spans from pre-WWI to post-WWII. It's a very romantic time period, with soldiers leaving women behind and never knowing if they're to return. When high-class Lucy Gutteridge falls for a slimy actor, she runs away from home assuming he'll marry her. He doesn't, and instead they live in sin together in Paris. When the war breaks out, Lucy meets handsome soldier Michael York and falls in love with him instead. He's married, though, and has an infant son. He tries to get a divorce, but after his reckless wife kills herself, his parents take his son away from him and quickly turn the boy against his father. That's just the beginning! I haven't told you anything about Michael and Lucy's two daughters, who grow up to be played by Courtney Cox and Mia Sara.
As a girly girl who loves everything soapy and melodramatic, I really enjoyed Till We Meet Again. Of course, there were certain parts I couldn't actually enjoy because they were upsetting, but that's also what makes a great drama. Characters suffer losses, and those injuries only make you root more for them. As I always feel in generational sagas, the early historical parts were more interesting than the modern ones. I could have watched hours more about Michael and Lucy, rather than Mia and her Hollywood career. The age makeup was excellent, and seeing the parents stoop and wrinkle as the years go by was a lot of fun. The costumes were also beautiful and very authentic looking, and the automobiles and airplanes really took me back in time to the first half of the century.
As authentic as the costumes and cars are, there are a couple of major faux pas: men didn't wear mullets in the 1930s, and women didn't belt 1980s-style ballads in music halls in the 1910s. Popular songs sounded like "Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree" and "You're the Cream in My Coffee", with singing styles like Edith Piaf and Ruth Etting. If Lucy Gutteridge performed the way she did in the miniseries, audiences wouldn't even applaud for her. Once Courtney Cox got in the picture and sang songs around the piano with the Air Force boys, they finally got the memo and sang WWII style songs.
If this type of saga appeals to you, rent this soapy miniseries and invite your girlfriends over. Literary types might want to find a copy of the book, since I'm sure it goes into even more detail. I would probably watch it again, even though Courtney was still very green as an actress. She was very pretty, so you could just focus on her lovely face rather than the delivery of her lines.
Kiddy Warning: Obviously, you have control over your own children. However, due to incest and a rape scene, I wouldn't let my kids watch it.
The setting of Till We Meet Again spans from pre-WWI to post-WWII. It's a very romantic time period, with soldiers leaving women behind and never knowing if they're to return. When high-class Lucy Gutteridge falls for a slimy actor, she runs away from home assuming he'll marry her. He doesn't, and instead they live in sin together in Paris. When the war breaks out, Lucy meets handsome soldier Michael York and falls in love with him instead. He's married, though, and has an infant son. He tries to get a divorce, but after his reckless wife kills herself, his parents take his son away from him and quickly turn the boy against his father. That's just the beginning! I haven't told you anything about Michael and Lucy's two daughters, who grow up to be played by Courtney Cox and Mia Sara.
As a girly girl who loves everything soapy and melodramatic, I really enjoyed Till We Meet Again. Of course, there were certain parts I couldn't actually enjoy because they were upsetting, but that's also what makes a great drama. Characters suffer losses, and those injuries only make you root more for them. As I always feel in generational sagas, the early historical parts were more interesting than the modern ones. I could have watched hours more about Michael and Lucy, rather than Mia and her Hollywood career. The age makeup was excellent, and seeing the parents stoop and wrinkle as the years go by was a lot of fun. The costumes were also beautiful and very authentic looking, and the automobiles and airplanes really took me back in time to the first half of the century.
As authentic as the costumes and cars are, there are a couple of major faux pas: men didn't wear mullets in the 1930s, and women didn't belt 1980s-style ballads in music halls in the 1910s. Popular songs sounded like "Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree" and "You're the Cream in My Coffee", with singing styles like Edith Piaf and Ruth Etting. If Lucy Gutteridge performed the way she did in the miniseries, audiences wouldn't even applaud for her. Once Courtney Cox got in the picture and sang songs around the piano with the Air Force boys, they finally got the memo and sang WWII style songs.
If this type of saga appeals to you, rent this soapy miniseries and invite your girlfriends over. Literary types might want to find a copy of the book, since I'm sure it goes into even more detail. I would probably watch it again, even though Courtney was still very green as an actress. She was very pretty, so you could just focus on her lovely face rather than the delivery of her lines.
Kiddy Warning: Obviously, you have control over your own children. However, due to incest and a rape scene, I wouldn't let my kids watch it.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaA TV movie made for the CBS network.
- ConexionesFeatured in Hugh Grant: A Life on Screen (2019)
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- Fecha de lanzamiento
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- Judith Krantz's 'Till We Meet Again'
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