Sigue la historia de Ruth Ellis: su violenta relación con el hombre al que luego mató a sangre fría, su detención, juicio y posterior batalla legal para conseguir su liberación antes de ser ... Leer todoSigue la historia de Ruth Ellis: su violenta relación con el hombre al que luego mató a sangre fría, su detención, juicio y posterior batalla legal para conseguir su liberación antes de ser ahorcada.Sigue la historia de Ruth Ellis: su violenta relación con el hombre al que luego mató a sangre fría, su detención, juicio y posterior batalla legal para conseguir su liberación antes de ser ahorcada.
Explorar episodios
Resumen
Reviewers say 'A Cruel Love: The Ruth Ellis Story' is compelling yet flawed, with Lucy Boynton praised for her performance. The series is lauded for its production design and period accuracy but criticized for its shallow screenplay, repetitive storytelling, and inconsistent character development. Ruth's early life and relationships lack depth, and the script is often flat. Despite these issues, strong performances and complex themes are highlighted.
Opiniones destacadas
Famed for being the last woman in Britain to be hanged, Ruth Ellis shot and killed her lover David Blakely after a turbulent and troublesome affair. Ellis was hanged by Albert Pierrepoint.
ITV have done some cracking dramas based on real life events, just think of Des and The Pembroke Murders to name just a few, whilst I'd say this was good, it doesn't perhaps quite match up to those.
It's a little slow to start, but it does get better, the final two episodes were better than the first two.
It's interesting to hear some of the legalities of the case, Ruth's admission and refusal to accept legal advice are intriguing.
Visually it's terrific, the sets and costumes are spot on, I thought the music was rather good, my only issue I guess, the script seemed a little flat at times, it just lacked a bit of sparkle.
Lucy Boynton and Mark Stanley were rather good, I thought Toby Jones was excellent throughout, a role not too dissimilar to the one he played in Witness for the Prosecution from a few years back.
Pretty good, but may I make a suggestion, check out Dance with a Stranger, it's worth hunting down, it starred Miranda Richardson and Rupert Everett.
7/10.
ITV have done some cracking dramas based on real life events, just think of Des and The Pembroke Murders to name just a few, whilst I'd say this was good, it doesn't perhaps quite match up to those.
It's a little slow to start, but it does get better, the final two episodes were better than the first two.
It's interesting to hear some of the legalities of the case, Ruth's admission and refusal to accept legal advice are intriguing.
Visually it's terrific, the sets and costumes are spot on, I thought the music was rather good, my only issue I guess, the script seemed a little flat at times, it just lacked a bit of sparkle.
Lucy Boynton and Mark Stanley were rather good, I thought Toby Jones was excellent throughout, a role not too dissimilar to the one he played in Witness for the Prosecution from a few years back.
Pretty good, but may I make a suggestion, check out Dance with a Stranger, it's worth hunting down, it starred Miranda Richardson and Rupert Everett.
7/10.
My father a WW2 veteran, he volunteered from Jamaica to serve in the RAF aged 18. After he was demobbed he returned to the UK in 1947. He was here when a great number of the notorious capital cases were tried & gross miscarriages of justice took place. I asked him about Ruth Ellis when an earlier series was made, he said that whilst she did not help herself by appearing more sympathetic, she should not have been hanged. He told me that he was vehemently against capital punishment. I watched the series and I could not fail to be moved by her situation especially knowing the effect that her execution had on her family as it cast a long shadow. Truly shocking & I am glad that capital punishment has been eradicated from the UK justice system.
As with the film Let Him Have It, Iit's hard to do a real life story but, at least 70 years on, there are few people around to state how lose to the truth the characters and the facts are.
There is a top cast here but most of them do seem to be playing themselves. Lucy Boynton is just like the posh girl she played in Why Didn't They Ask Evans, Joe Armstrong does a poor job trying not to remind us of his dad in New Tricks, Toby Jones is Mr Bates, that metal detector guy and all his other roles rolled into one while Mark Stanley puts on a moustache and glasses trying to hope we don't remember him from Happy Valley while Julie Stevenson tries not to play the psychologist from Professor T.
Admittedly, Nigel Havers does a good job playing his grandad assuming his grandad was just like Nigel Havers.
All this window dressing, including great deal on 1950s cars and styles, doesn't hide the fact that in all modern dramas, men are portrayed as weak or evil even in true crime dramas set 70 years ago.
The swipe at the establishment of the day is understandable. Ellis is shown to be a common girl doing well for herself in business but she has no power of the establishment and the old school tie.
A fair watch but you don't put your best shows on tv in the spring. A modern feminist attack on an old story.
There is a top cast here but most of them do seem to be playing themselves. Lucy Boynton is just like the posh girl she played in Why Didn't They Ask Evans, Joe Armstrong does a poor job trying not to remind us of his dad in New Tricks, Toby Jones is Mr Bates, that metal detector guy and all his other roles rolled into one while Mark Stanley puts on a moustache and glasses trying to hope we don't remember him from Happy Valley while Julie Stevenson tries not to play the psychologist from Professor T.
Admittedly, Nigel Havers does a good job playing his grandad assuming his grandad was just like Nigel Havers.
All this window dressing, including great deal on 1950s cars and styles, doesn't hide the fact that in all modern dramas, men are portrayed as weak or evil even in true crime dramas set 70 years ago.
The swipe at the establishment of the day is understandable. Ellis is shown to be a common girl doing well for herself in business but she has no power of the establishment and the old school tie.
A fair watch but you don't put your best shows on tv in the spring. A modern feminist attack on an old story.
Lucy Boynton deserves more than a rating of 7 for her brave portrayal of Ruth Ellis, but "A Cruel Love" suffers from a shallow screenplay by Kelly Jones. The same few facts are told over and over: that she loved David Blakely (Laurie Davidson) to a fault, that she holds herself guilty and responsible for his murder. We learn little about Ruth's early life, or her marriage, and her children are reduced to props. She got solid help from the actors Toby Stephens and Toby Jones, though why Jones chose to whisper every single line of dialog was beyond me. As for Mark Stanley playing Desmond Cusson, the man devoted to her, he barely makes an impression.
The production design by Stephen Campbell is particularly commendable for its bold, dark colors and period sets. I didn't understand how Ruth could afford the array of dresses in her wardrobe, given that she wasn't even able to afford rent, but I took it for eye candy. The series could easily have been three episodes instead of four, except for one thing: when Boynton is on the screen, all you want is more.
The production design by Stephen Campbell is particularly commendable for its bold, dark colors and period sets. I didn't understand how Ruth could afford the array of dresses in her wardrobe, given that she wasn't even able to afford rent, but I took it for eye candy. The series could easily have been three episodes instead of four, except for one thing: when Boynton is on the screen, all you want is more.
STAR RATING: ***** Brilliant **** Very Good *** Okay ** Poor * Awful
On the 10th April 1955, Ruth Ellis (Lucy Boynton) fatally shot her former lover, racing car driver David Blakely (Laurie Davidson.) She freely admitted her crime, and seemed resigned to her punishment. Her lawyer, John Bickford (Toby Jones) desperately tried to get her to work the system, and evidence emerged of physical and psychological abuse at the hands of Blakely. There was also the involvement of her partner on the side, Desmond Cusson (Mark Stanley), who may have supplied her with the gun, but it all emerged to naught, and she became the last woman to be hanged in the UK on 13th July 1955.
The story of Ruth Ellis has been well documented, but on the seventieth anniversary of her crime and subsequent conviction and execution, ITV have delivered this four part dramatisation of her grim fate. It seems relevant on this anniversary, given how much more is understood about abusive relationships, and how power and control can exert their influence over actions, and as such, Ellis's case spearheaded public movement towards abolishing capital punishment.
Despite the case being well captured in the public domain, a TV drama still had the potential to deliver something worthwhile, but A Cruel Love fails to develop into anything with much depth and substance in regards the story. It unwisely plays in a reverse plotting style, beginning with Ruth's arrest, and then backtracking to her relationship with Blakely and Cusson. It's a shame, as the performances are decent, namely Boynton in the lead role, capturing Ruth's stubbornly determined acceptance of her actions, before the gravity of her fate dawns on her, with strong support from Jones as the lawyer who desperately tries to save her, but understands that the system is determined to crush her for being a free and independent young woman. Stanley is impassioned and intense as the man she loved on the side, while Nigel Havers makes a grimly pertinent appearance as the judge who sentences Ruth to death, given it was his grandfather who actually did the deed.
It plays out as it does, in its disjointed and clunky manner, but the tale still keeps your attention over its four part course, before drawing to its desperately sad conclusion. A story still worth telling, but it doesn't completely hit the mark here. ***
On the 10th April 1955, Ruth Ellis (Lucy Boynton) fatally shot her former lover, racing car driver David Blakely (Laurie Davidson.) She freely admitted her crime, and seemed resigned to her punishment. Her lawyer, John Bickford (Toby Jones) desperately tried to get her to work the system, and evidence emerged of physical and psychological abuse at the hands of Blakely. There was also the involvement of her partner on the side, Desmond Cusson (Mark Stanley), who may have supplied her with the gun, but it all emerged to naught, and she became the last woman to be hanged in the UK on 13th July 1955.
The story of Ruth Ellis has been well documented, but on the seventieth anniversary of her crime and subsequent conviction and execution, ITV have delivered this four part dramatisation of her grim fate. It seems relevant on this anniversary, given how much more is understood about abusive relationships, and how power and control can exert their influence over actions, and as such, Ellis's case spearheaded public movement towards abolishing capital punishment.
Despite the case being well captured in the public domain, a TV drama still had the potential to deliver something worthwhile, but A Cruel Love fails to develop into anything with much depth and substance in regards the story. It unwisely plays in a reverse plotting style, beginning with Ruth's arrest, and then backtracking to her relationship with Blakely and Cusson. It's a shame, as the performances are decent, namely Boynton in the lead role, capturing Ruth's stubbornly determined acceptance of her actions, before the gravity of her fate dawns on her, with strong support from Jones as the lawyer who desperately tries to save her, but understands that the system is determined to crush her for being a free and independent young woman. Stanley is impassioned and intense as the man she loved on the side, while Nigel Havers makes a grimly pertinent appearance as the judge who sentences Ruth to death, given it was his grandfather who actually did the deed.
It plays out as it does, in its disjointed and clunky manner, but the tale still keeps your attention over its four part course, before drawing to its desperately sad conclusion. A story still worth telling, but it doesn't completely hit the mark here. ***
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaNigel Havers plays his grandfather Lord Havers, the high court Judge in this case.
- ErroresWhen Desmond teaches Ruth how to use his revolver, he instructs her using a two handed technique. This is good practice by modern standards. However, Desmond learned to shoot in the RAF during World War II, and at this time all pistol shooting was taught using one hand only. The modern two handed technique only began to be developed in the 1950s, and did not become common until later.
- ConexionesReferenced in The One Show: Episode dated 27 February 2025 (2025)
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
- How many seasons does A Cruel Love: The Ruth Ellis Story have?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- El caso de Ruth Ellis
- Locaciones de filmación
- Dorchester Prison, Dorchester, Dorset, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(As Holloway Prison, London.)
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Color
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta