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The Way We Live Now

  • Mini-série télévisée
  • 2001
  • TV-14
  • 1h 15min
NOTE IMDb
7,6/10
3,5 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
4 624
2 362
Shirley Henderson and Matthew Macfadyen in The Way We Live Now (2001)
Costume DramaPeriod DramaDramaRomance

Augustus Melmotte, un financier de la ville né en Europe, dont les origines sont aussi mystérieuses que ses affaires. Quelques semaines après son arrivée à Londres, il annonce une nouvelle e... Tout lireAugustus Melmotte, un financier de la ville né en Europe, dont les origines sont aussi mystérieuses que ses affaires. Quelques semaines après son arrivée à Londres, il annonce une nouvelle entreprise et promet une fortune instantanée.Augustus Melmotte, un financier de la ville né en Europe, dont les origines sont aussi mystérieuses que ses affaires. Quelques semaines après son arrivée à Londres, il annonce une nouvelle entreprise et promet une fortune instantanée.

  • Casting principal
    • David Suchet
    • Matthew Macfadyen
    • Cillian Murphy
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,6/10
    3,5 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    4 624
    2 362
    • Casting principal
      • David Suchet
      • Matthew Macfadyen
      • Cillian Murphy
    • 33avis d'utilisateurs
    • 3avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Victoire aux 3 BAFTA Awards
      • 7 victoires et 12 nominations au total

    Épisodes4

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux notés1 saison2001

    Photos17

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    Rôles principaux52

    Modifier
    David Suchet
    David Suchet
    • Augustus Melmotte
    • 2001
    Matthew Macfadyen
    Matthew Macfadyen
    • Sir Felix Carbury
    • 2001
    Cillian Murphy
    Cillian Murphy
    • Paul Montague
    • 2001
    Paloma Baeza
    Paloma Baeza
    • Hetta Carbury
    • 2001
    Cheryl Campbell
    Cheryl Campbell
    • Lady Carbury
    • 2001
    Richard Cant
    Richard Cant
    • Dolly Longestaffe
    • 2001
    Shirley Henderson
    Shirley Henderson
    • Marie Melmotte
    • 2001
    Tom Fahy
    • Butler - Grosvenor Square
    • 2001
    Allan Corduner
    Allan Corduner
    • Croll
    • 2001
    Angus Wright
    Angus Wright
    • Miles Grendall
    • 2001
    Miranda Otto
    Miranda Otto
    • Mrs Hurtle
    • 2001
    Stuart McQuarrie
    Stuart McQuarrie
    • Lord Nidderdale
    • 2001
    Tony Britton
    Tony Britton
    • Lord Alfred Grendall
    • 2001
    Oliver Ford Davies
    Oliver Ford Davies
    • Mr Longestaffe
    • 2001
    Helen Schlesinger
    • Madame Melmotte
    • 2001
    Douglas Hodge
    Douglas Hodge
    • Roger Carbury
    • 2001
    Maxine Peake
    Maxine Peake
    • Ruby Ruggles
    • 2001
    Graham Crowden
    Graham Crowden
    • Marquis of Auld Reekie
    • 2001
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs33

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    Avis à la une

    9Red-125

    The Way We Live Now is about greed (Victorian style)

    "The Way We Live Now" (2001) is a four-episode BBC miniseries directed by David Yates. The book is based on a novel written by Anthony Trollope (1815 - 1882). Trollope was a brilliant Victorian novelist, but, unlike his contemporary Charles Dickens, Trollope's name is not nearly as well known in the 21st Century. However, the BBC has produced several of his works, and they are worth seeing.

    This novel is Trollope's longest, and possibly his most complex. Someone has estimated that there are over 100 named characters, and subplots abound. However, all the plots and subplots involve Augustus Melmotte, a shady character with grandiose schemes. Melmotte has the uncanny ability to make people want to give him money. He wants the money because his goal in life is to be an English gentleman.

    If there had been a weak actor playing Augustus Melmotte, the whole movie would have fallen apart. This movie hung together because David Suchet played Melmotte so well. You'll have to see the film to know just how completely Suchet takes over the role of Melmotte.

    Most of the supporting cast was at the usual high BBC level. Matthew Macfadyen plays Sir Felix Carbury, the cad, very well. Paloma Baeza plays Hetta Carbury, his lovely sister who is everything Sir Felix is not.

    I think that the two weakest actors were Cillian Murphy as Paul Montague, and Miranda Otto as Mrs. Hurtle. Paul Montague is supposed to be the perfect Victorian hero. He's an engineer, and he isn't driven by greed. He's driven by the goal of designing and building the Mexican railroad. (The Mexican railroad is the starting point of Melmotte's rise to financial power.) The problem is that Murphy doesn't look or act the part. His character is not that different--in appearance or manner--from Sir Felix Carbury. They are supposed to be at opposite poles, but they aren't.

    Miranda Otto is an Australian actor who has been given the role of an American from Oregon. Otto has a strong Southern US accent, which doesn't work. It's certainly possible that Mrs. Hurtle was originally from the U.S. South, and moved to Oregon. However, her Southern accent doesn't sound right, and it's clear that she is struggling with it whenever she's on screen.

    As an interesting side note, Mr. Brehgert, a Jewish banker, is acted by Jim Carter, who plays Carson the butler on Downton Abbey. He's in love with an elegant Englishwoman, and his religion stands in the way of their marriage. His bank lends money to Melmotte. That's another subplot that revolves around the mysterious Augustus Melmotte.

    I enjoyed this miniseries, and I recommend it highly. Without Suchet it could have been a failure. With Suchet, it's a triumph. We saw it on the small screen at home, and it worked very well. (There are a few outdoor scenes that would work better in a theater, but most of them are fillers put into the movie to "open it up." The real plots take place indoors, and they work well on DVD.) Seek out this movie and watch it! You'll be glad you did.
    8=G=

    The usual high quality BBC Victorian novel knock-off

    "The Way We Live Now", like most Victorian period satire, looks into the lives of numerous characters sorting through the intrigues and foibles of romance, wickedness, power, and the pursuit of peerage and property. A lightly perfumed costume flick which tilts unabashedly between comedy and drama, this story centers on a crude but rich businessman (Suchet) whose powerful performance is the backbone of the film. Side plots include an issue fraught romance, an attempt to marry into a fortune, a scheme to build a railroad from Utah to Mexico, cheating at love and cards, politics, a woman scorned, and much more. A four hour TV miniseries from the BBC, "The Way We Live Now" has plenty of time to sort through its many characters while tidying up at the end making it a busy and enjoyable Victorian period film. A should-see for anyone into BBC TV fare, Victorian period stories, and 19th century pulp fiction. (B+)
    10D.H.

    Unique

    A truly unique look at Trollope. The adaptation, direction and musical score are done with high style, wit and a decadent spirit that is rare in the more reserved British period pieces that one might expect from the BBC. It is immensely entertaining. I heartily recommend it.
    Philby-3

    An engrossing adaption from the Eng Lit specialists

    Another fine Sunday night filler from Andrew Davies and the BBC. Based on one of Anthony Trollope's later and less well known novels, this six -part story (300 minutes) covers the short but spectacular career in London of Augustus Melmott, financial fraudster extraordinaire. Melmott is a Victorian Robert Maxwell (the bouncing Czech), a promoter of huge ambitious business ventures with a flamboyant style that proves irresisitable even to the hard-nosed. Like Maxwell, he has a seat in the House of Commons. Some of the hard-nosed have their suspicions but go along for the ride anyway no doubt hoping to get something for themselves along the way.

    Trollope weaves the strands of the plot adroitly using the Carbury family as the central characters. Lady Carbury (Cheryl Campbell) is the widow of a baronet (minor aristocracy) and without the means to live in the appropriate style. Her son Felix (Matthew McFadyen) is a total waster, putting any money he gets on the card table, and losing it. Lady C is trying to palm her rather priggish daughter Hetta (Paloma Baeza) off onto her nephew Roger (Douglas Hogg), also a prig, who has inherited the family estates. Roger is interested but Hetta is not, as she fancies Paul Montague (Cillian Murphy), a railway engineer and friend of Roger's. Murphy works for Melmott's company (the board is stacked with peers and baronets, including Felix). The Central American railway is supposed to be building a railroad from the central west of the US to Mexico. The railroad route has been surveyed, but funnily enough construction keeps on being delayed even though enough money has been raised to at least start it. Where's the money Melmott? Some is syphoned into his daughter Marie's trust fund. Marie (Shirley Henderson) is courted by Felix, who is very interested in the money, though not so interested in Marie.

    To say more would spoil the story. The casting is splendid, except for Cillian Murphy as Paul whose pretty-boy looks are more appropriate for a Romeo than some who has been a civil engineer for some years and spent a lot of that time in the merciless Mexican sun. As his American mistress Mrs Hurtle, Miranda Otto, otherwise a capable actress, can't do the Deep South accent. It would have been better to re-write the part for an Australian. If it's any consolation, Meryl Streep can't do an Australian accent either – it comes out as cockney, as we saw in 'Evil Angels'.

    The star performance is without a doubt David Suchet's as Melmott. Though a small man, he dominates every scene he is in, with his deep loud voice and grand manner. Critics are silenced by a mixture of flattery, bluff and sometimes threat. In the finish we almost like him, despite the chaos he causes. It is truly the role David Suchet was born to play, one utterly different from his small fussy Belgian detective, Hercule Poirot. Shirley Henderson as Marie also stands out in this company of very accomplished acting.

    I haven't checked the novel, but there are one or two quite modern touches for which Trollope may have been responsible, such as Marie's (or was it Hetta's?) feminist speech towards the end. He may have got that from his mum, who had to support her family by novel-writing after her husband died, and did so quite successfully.

    In the 1870s we had railways, in the 2000s we had dot coms. The vehicles change but we still have fear and greed as dominant players in the markets. The title 'The Way We Live Now' is just as apt today, as we see the Enron, Arthur Andersen, Worldcom crashes in the US, and HIH, FAI and One-tel in Australia. It is interesting that this 1875 novel, with no high literary pretensions, pulp fiction in fact, should be so relevant today. A engrossing film adaption from the Eng Lit specialists.
    7missrljane

    Another triumph for Davies

    The man who wrote the 1995 mini series 'Pride and prejudice' (Andrew Davies) has adapted another (less well known) classic; Anthony Trollope's 'The way we live now'. Although this series is by no way in the same league as Pride and Prejudice it is still excellent. The plot certainly kept me enthralled over the four weeks it was shown, with character interaction completely gripping. I found the end a bit of a let down and rather rushed but it manages to whiz you through the many characters in a few minutes with great skill. A word of warning, be careful when you pick your favourite characters as what you want to happen probably won't. You truly do believe this is really happening, regardless it being set in 1870. The performances by David Suchet as devious Melmotte, Matthew Macfadyen as comic Felix and my favourite Douglas Hodge as the honest, moral Roger are unmissable. Even if, like me, you do not like the ending the rest of the programme makes it all well worth watching.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Mrs. Hurtle indicates that the year is 1870. Trollope did his homework creating the fictional railroad enterprise. In 1870 Salt Lake City had almost three times the population of either Los Angeles or Denver, benefiting from the post-Civil War expansion westward and the booming silver and copper mines in the Intermountain West. Also by 1870 Salt Lake City was connected by rail to the Union Pacific Railroad and other smaller regional lines connecting to the mines. Building a railroad to haul ore from the US Rockies to a Mexican seaport on the Gulf of Mexico and to return with goods, supplies, and homesteaders made commercial sense and could easily have been supported in principle by a US Congress governed by America's Manifest Destiny.
    • Citations

      Sir Felix Carbury: I may not be possessed of great wealth or property, but I am a baronet and a gentleman.

      Augustus Melmotte: And I'm not, you imply.

      Sir Felix Carbury: No! No, that's not what I meant at all!

      Augustus Melmotte: I think we understand each other very well. You're to provide the rank and position and I am to provide the money. That's the bargain. I buy my daughter a place in society by paying you to marry her.

    • Connexions
      Featured in The Two Loves of Anthony Trollope (2004)

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    FAQ18

    • How many seasons does The Way We Live Now have?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 11 novembre 2001 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Site officiel
      • PBS (United States)
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Дороги, які ми вибираємо
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Luton Hoo Estate, Luton, Bedfordshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
    • Sociétés de production
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • NOVA/WGBH Boston
      • Deep Indigo Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 15 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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