Rupert Campbell-Black et Tony Baddingham sont les protagonistes d'une rivalité de longue date qui en arrive à son paroxysme.Rupert Campbell-Black et Tony Baddingham sont les protagonistes d'une rivalité de longue date qui en arrive à son paroxysme.Rupert Campbell-Black et Tony Baddingham sont les protagonistes d'une rivalité de longue date qui en arrive à son paroxysme.
- Victoire aux 2 BAFTA Awards
- 5 victoires et 11 nominations au total
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I was 19 in 1980, so I reached manhood in the "decade of greed", but American, not British. However, this struck me as very true to the 80s. The characters were larger than life, the excess was correct (can't tell you how many times I went to a party and got coked up and watched the sun come up) and the narcissism is spot on. The casual sex is also on par with the 80s. Enjoying thios series and hoping there is more. And yes, I did think this is very much like "Dallas" by the 3rd episode. Thing is: I liked Dallas.
Why do I need six hundred characters to post a review? It seems absurd. Am I right, or is this review not good enough to print? What do you think? Do we expect more? Getting penalized for brevity seems silly. Yet still I need more characters. WHY? WHY? WHY?
Why do I need six hundred characters to post a review? It seems absurd. Am I right, or is this review not good enough to print? What do you think? Do we expect more? Getting penalized for brevity seems silly. Yet still I need more characters. WHY? WHY? WHY?
Perfect autumn viewing. 80's Jilly Cooper novels were passed around until pages fell out, so I was curious about the idea of bringing one to life on TV in 2024. It's perfectly done. The show is able to make well placed acknowledgements to life 40 years ago; and while it is amusing, it is never comic. It is also blunt about the era's inequities. The story is great, a proper romp but not sordid, with twists & turns you'd expect from a JC book and a Disney + show. The styling is spot on. The casting + characters are brilliant. Bit of a Danny Dyer crush now actually! A must watch. Season 2 please!
So obvs read the book an aeon ago (it was like a coming of age ritual in a certain time and place) and TBH remembered very little aside from the odd name (coz some Jilly created were soooo de rigeur - Rupert Campbell Black says it all - and have somewhat passed into the lexicon) but almost immediately I started to, if not remember the plot wholesale, get a synaptic snap with the heady scent of YSL Opium from watching The Rivals.
This adaptation (one ep in) is seeming to get it just right. Its silly giggles rather than laugh out loud and saucy not salacious. It quickly built the world - the 80s, greedy Thatcherite old boys and yuppies, bored wives and fearsome warrior women all treated like meat whatever they do, concord, cigars and the birdie song, the English class strata, the UK in a globalising world tryna dig nails in at the top... and the socio-political commentary, whilst not being shoved in your face, is much more clear than when reading the books. It might be coz I'm older and have met more people that Cooper's critique of British culture is more obvious, but I think its also the casting, the accents, the costumes - drawing out each character's habitus (to cite Bordeau) and presenting it to the audience for consideration, admiration, denigration and/or titillation.
Okay its a little bit of a panty, pantie panto but FFS why not?!
This adaptation (one ep in) is seeming to get it just right. Its silly giggles rather than laugh out loud and saucy not salacious. It quickly built the world - the 80s, greedy Thatcherite old boys and yuppies, bored wives and fearsome warrior women all treated like meat whatever they do, concord, cigars and the birdie song, the English class strata, the UK in a globalising world tryna dig nails in at the top... and the socio-political commentary, whilst not being shoved in your face, is much more clear than when reading the books. It might be coz I'm older and have met more people that Cooper's critique of British culture is more obvious, but I think its also the casting, the accents, the costumes - drawing out each character's habitus (to cite Bordeau) and presenting it to the audience for consideration, admiration, denigration and/or titillation.
Okay its a little bit of a panty, pantie panto but FFS why not?!
I am laughing at some of the reviews, clearly by readers who take themselves far too seriously.
This is a Jilly Cooper adaption.
It's not a series to be intellectualised or morally judged.
It's so much fun.
Superbly cast.
Yes, RCB's hair and eyes are the wrong colour. As is Taggies hair. But they work. Somehow.
RCB will disappoint some for this reason. But Alex Hassell is captures everything else about him.
Danny Dyer is perfect. David Tennant is EXCELLENT as always. And Aidan Turner is just gorgeous, if slightly young to play Declan.
Falters slightly in the final third. But yes. It's fabulous fun.
Watched it all in 1 go.
This is a Jilly Cooper adaption.
It's not a series to be intellectualised or morally judged.
It's so much fun.
Superbly cast.
Yes, RCB's hair and eyes are the wrong colour. As is Taggies hair. But they work. Somehow.
RCB will disappoint some for this reason. But Alex Hassell is captures everything else about him.
Danny Dyer is perfect. David Tennant is EXCELLENT as always. And Aidan Turner is just gorgeous, if slightly young to play Declan.
Falters slightly in the final third. But yes. It's fabulous fun.
Watched it all in 1 go.
This series is hilarious it's kind of is like a mixture of League of Gentlemen, Pride and Prejudice, Alan Patridge and maybe a bit of Industry !!
So much British talent keep this engaging and compelling so that you just have to keep on watching. Anyone who grew up watching British ITV (channel 3) in the 80s can relate to almost every character. Still strange to think we only had 4 TV channels during this decade so each channel commanded huge viewing figures. Each character reminds me of someone on TV during that era or who they may have been slightly modelled on.
Definitely worth watching just to see who is going to do what next. Even if you didn't grow up watching British television definitely recommend.
So much British talent keep this engaging and compelling so that you just have to keep on watching. Anyone who grew up watching British ITV (channel 3) in the 80s can relate to almost every character. Still strange to think we only had 4 TV channels during this decade so each channel commanded huge viewing figures. Each character reminds me of someone on TV during that era or who they may have been slightly modelled on.
Definitely worth watching just to see who is going to do what next. Even if you didn't grow up watching British television definitely recommend.
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- AnecdotesCoincidentally, Aidan Turner has previously filmed at Chavenage House (The Priory in Rivals). The same filming location was also used to portray Trenwith House in the 2015 BBC TV adaptation of Poldark.
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- How many seasons does Rivals have?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Конкуренти
- Lieux de tournage
- Tetbury, Gloucestershire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Cotchester village)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 55min
- Couleur
- Mixage
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