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Mary & George

  • Mini-série télévisée
  • 2024
  • 1h
NOTE IMDb
6,8/10
7,8 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
1 610
364
Julianne Moore and Nicholas Galitzine in Mary & George (2024)
Follow the story of the Countess of Buckingham who molded her son to seduce King James I and become his all-powerful lover, through intrigue, becoming richer, more titled and influential than England has ever seen.
Lire trailer1:59
13 Videos
66 photos
Period DramaDramaHistory

Suivez l'histoire de la comtesse de Buckingham qui a façonné son fils pour qu'il séduise le roi Jacques Ier et devienne son amant tout-puissant, par le biais d'intrigues.Suivez l'histoire de la comtesse de Buckingham qui a façonné son fils pour qu'il séduise le roi Jacques Ier et devienne son amant tout-puissant, par le biais d'intrigues.Suivez l'histoire de la comtesse de Buckingham qui a façonné son fils pour qu'il séduise le roi Jacques Ier et devienne son amant tout-puissant, par le biais d'intrigues.

  • Création
    • D.C. Moore
  • Casting principal
    • Julianne Moore
    • Nicholas Galitzine
    • Tony Curran
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,8/10
    7,8 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    1 610
    364
    • Création
      • D.C. Moore
    • Casting principal
      • Julianne Moore
      • Nicholas Galitzine
      • Tony Curran
    • 47avis d'utilisateurs
    • 20avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 11 nominations au total

    Épisodes7

    Parcourir les épisodes
    HautLes mieux notés1 saison2024

    Vidéos13

    Mary & George: An Awkward Dinner Party (UK)
    Clip 1:25
    Mary & George: An Awkward Dinner Party (UK)
    Mary & George: Mary Confronts George (UK)
    Clip 1:04
    Mary & George: Mary Confronts George (UK)
    Mary & George: Mary Confronts George (UK)
    Clip 1:04
    Mary & George: Mary Confronts George (UK)
    Redband Trailer
    Trailer 1:44
    Redband Trailer
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:59
    Official Trailer
    Official Teaser
    Trailer 1:21
    Official Teaser
    Mary & George: Red Band Trailer
    Trailer 1:35
    Mary & George: Red Band Trailer

    Photos66

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 59
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    Rôles principaux86

    Modifier
    Julianne Moore
    Julianne Moore
    • Mary Villiers
    • 2024
    Nicholas Galitzine
    Nicholas Galitzine
    • George Villiers
    • 2024
    Tony Curran
    Tony Curran
    • King James I
    • 2024
    Mark O'Halloran
    Mark O'Halloran
    • Sir Francis Bacon
    • 2024
    Niamh Algar
    Niamh Algar
    • Sandie
    • 2024
    Adrian Rawlins
    Adrian Rawlins
    • Sir Edward Coke
    • 2024
    Jacob McCarthy
    Jacob McCarthy
    • Kit Villiers
    • 2024
    Rina Mahoney
    Rina Mahoney
    • Laura Ashcattle
    • 2024
    Emily Fairn
    Emily Fairn
    • Jenny
    • 2024
    Amelia Gething
    Amelia Gething
    • Frances Coke
    • 2024
    Trine Dyrholm
    Trine Dyrholm
    • Queen Anne
    • 2024
    Tom Victor
    Tom Victor
    • John Villiers
    • 2024
    Alice Grant
    Alice Grant
    • Susan Villiers
    • 2024
    Sean Gilder
    Sean Gilder
    • Sir Thomas Compton
    • 2024
    Samuel Blenkin
    Samuel Blenkin
    • Prince Charles
    • 2024
    Laurie Davidson
    Laurie Davidson
    • Earl of Somerset
    • 2024
    Pearl Chanda
    Pearl Chanda
    • Countess Somerset
    • 2024
    Mirren Mack
    Mirren Mack
    • Katherine Manners
    • 2024
    • Création
      • D.C. Moore
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs47

    6,87.8K
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    Avis à la une

    5pfgpowell-1

    Unconvincing, cod-historical drama that is often quite silly

    This tale of England and Scotland's homosexual king James I and his favourite and lover, George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, might look the part but there are too many aspects to it which can only deserve the well-known observation 'nice try, but no cigar'.

    This series is like those tomatoes we are offered these days in the vegetable section of too many superstores: they look the part and are certainly pretty, but all too often they taste of very little but water, and mot certainly not of tomatoes.

    That analogy is not as silly as it sounds: shop for tomatoes in a Southern European small-town market and you will be offered horribly misshapen specimens, but by God they taste great and do taste of tomato.

    We spoiled shoppers, however, are put off aesthetically by such misshapen fruit and lazily settle for tasteless specimens which, however, look fantastic.

    That pretty much sums up Mary & George: with its authentic looking sets (filmed in various Jacobean manor houses in England), sumptuous costumes and its cod-Shakespearean dialogue, many might feel Mary & George is the real deal.

    But it is nothing of the kind: essentially it is bog-standard soap opera drama portentously puffed up to seem profound, whereas for too many reasons it is nothing but an expensively produced soap opera with pretensions it never lives up to.

    The first, and perhaps most important, point to make is that it is fiction. This is not history. Other reviewers have warned that many watching this will imagine it is 'history' and I shall repeat that warning: this is pure fiction involving real historical characters.

    Yes, James I was homosexual, and although he fathered eight children by his wife Anne of Denmark (of whom four died in infancy and his eldest son and heir died at 18) and thus might be classed as bisexual, he and Anne lived separate lives and his main inclination was gay.

    He was quite open about his sexuality and did not stint himself in public with his gay courtiers. Modern apologists, in a curious form of homophobia, like to argue along the lines that 'we don't understand the kind of male friendships in the 16th and 17th centuries' and that his kind of behaviour was not necessarily gay.

    Yes, it was, and James was often the butt of ribald jokes and ballads by what are often condescendingly called 'the lower orders', but he didn't care one jot.

    However, the kind of rampant sexual behaviour depicted in Mary & George is fictional: James was very conscious of his 'royal status' - he 'was the king' and people had better believe it - and he would not have jeopardised his role in such a blatant public way.

    It is also very probable that George Villiers was mainly gay, and he and James were known to have been very close, with a discrete passageway connecting his rooms to Villiers'. But the arrangement and goings-on set out in the TV series are occasionally ludicrous.

    The novel upon which the series is based suggests that Villiers mother Mary patiently schemed to get her son, metaphorically, into James's bed. That scheming is demonstrated in the series, but all the machinations we are asked to believe are never convincing.

    The evolution of George from something of a wimp into one of if not the most powerful man in England for a while is portrayed in such a cack-handed fashion that we can't quite bring ourselves to believe it (and thus as drama the piece falls at the first hurdle).

    Other aspects of the series are also fatally flawed: we are presented with characters who speak, both in content and manner, in a pseudo-Jacobean fashion, but the writers also have them incessantly effing and blinding and using the C word like dockworkers. And it is incessant and even Mary does it.

    It's as though the producers wanted 'an historical piece', but also wanted 'to make it modern'. That's about the only explanation I can give. It ends up being simply silly.

    OK, this is fiction, but Francis Bacon would certainly not had wandered around the streets of London (though the same street is put to work several times as it happens) alone as he is shown to do.

    Mary might well have had a lesbian relationship - why not, many women do. But it is a cliche too far to have her striking up such a relationship with a woman who was either a brothel madam or even just a simple prostitute. Mary was far too conscious of her status and she would not have ventured into a brothel on her own in the first place.

    The vicissitudes of her rise to power are also so convoluted as at times to be more than a little incomprehensible. And would she really have, after being a scorned woman, so miraculously become such a power at court? Don't think so.

    As for her supposed gay relationship (which is somewhat gratuitous as it serves no dramatic function at all), it is doubly unlikely in that in the Jacobean era and for the next two hundred years at least the class distinctions were not only vast but important to those at the top. There was no mingling 'with the plebs' by 'nobility'.

    If a gay noble wanted a quick spot of how's our father, there were plenty of other gay nobles or palace staff to have it on with without trawling the streets. And it would not have taken place in one of the palace corridors.

    It occurs to me that in the muddled thinking of the producers, what with rather a lot of flash-forwards and flash-backs and folk suddenly appearing, Mary & George was perhaps intended as some kind of 'art piece'. Well, it that was the case they get nul points.

    At the end of the day one might argue that my gripes are irrelevant because, after all, this is 'only fiction'. To that I would respond 'fine, but overall what with this flaw and that anachronism - the constant use of the F and C words - it is rather badly made fiction.

    It might look the part, but it does not convince.
    6antony-1

    How did it go wrong, so quickly?

    The first two episodes I loved. Cutting dialogue, smart humour, silly sexiness... it reminded me of why I used to love shows on Starz like Spartacus.

    Escapism, basically.

    The production values are top notch, through location shooting and costuming it felt realistic. But measured by that humour that I mentioned, I know not to take it too seriously as a documentary. Just go along for the ride.

    In terms of casting I want to particularly note Julianne Moore is amazing and Nicola Walker as Lady Hatton proves she is one of our top talents.

    But the weird thing is... it got boring, and serious. It did a bait and switch. It started off as a dark comedy then turned into a rather sober and serious take on history.

    Julianne Moore - the initial anchor, so funny - just becomes an extra almost in the later episodes. And they create a plot for her that feels a step too far even within the silliness of the plot.

    And the show stumbles on them goes out on a daf whimper.

    I think the hardest thing for me is the change in tone. Witty dialogue/humour of the first few episodes gives way to melodrama. It's like they started with one show, and changed their minds halfway through. For a show of only six episodes is jarring. This isn't a show that has seasons to build motivations and change characters.

    It's not a terrible show by any means. And as I said production value wise it's very good. It's just a shame it couldn't make out what it is in such a short span of episodes.
    8DukeEman

    A perculiar mother and son relationship...

    Julianne Moore is wickedly delicious as Mary Villiers, a somewhat noble mother of four who had her sights set on rising above the ranks of nobility with the help of her son, George (cheeky performance from Nicholas Galitzine, who at last sinks his teeth into a real role).

    Together, mother and son plot and weave their way through the depraved King Charles' court (Tony Curran effective as the king). What unveils before ones very eyes will fascinate those who seek not to judge, but watch in a perverse sense of wonderment how this all took place in the 17th century.

    Creator and writer, D. C. Moore, has crafted a telling tale of what could have occurred behind the King's golden secret doors, delivering treachery of the highest order and other wild shenanigans one has to endure in order to climb that royal social ladder.
    8acmur

    A headlong rush to tragedy.

    Just finished ep7. An unrelenting rush to destruction. Not even the winners could be envied. This play is about animals rutting in a political trough.

    Nicholas Galitzine plays the ingenu no longer. Within the ensemble, he's a beautiful, weak, psychopathic puppet, who fails because he thinks he's cleverer than the puppet master, his mother. This is his 14th film/tv role and his grittiest. He has the range, the charisma, the acting chops to climb to the top perch. I hope he soon gets the role that will push him from 'wow' to 'superstar'.

    Julianne Moore plays a woman who doesn't need to quibble about pronouns to rule. Rule? She rocks.

    Tony Curran gives a sly performance, allowing a brilliant humanity to peep though cracks in the orgy.

    All of the cast deserve mention, it was a flawless ensemble.

    Would you enjoy a sexy romp on the Titanic as it was cracking apart and sliding under? This show was a bit like that, the atmosphere was so fraught it overpowered any loveliness in the frequent coupling.
    7TaylorYee94

    "Before I cut you free, what should I call you?"

    Sky & STARZ are good at making historical dramas, not the great ones, though. Especially when STARZ writes works based on what really happened in history, the storyline is linear and one-dimensional. It never challenges itself to be something great. There are some good sides. Thanks to the effort from STARZ, I actually researched actual historical materials to delve deeper and to know in detail what really happened (The White Princess, Becoming Elizabeth, Gaslit, and etc.). The funny thing is that research and reading books are way much more interesting and exciting than watching the series made by STARZ.

    'Mary & George' is the trendiest of all (maybe because it's produced the latest). Editing is straightforward and fashionable. Scenes cut to unexpected but real moments rather than explaining everything in between. My favorite scene is the very first scene of the first episode. Mary, who is still connected to George by umbilical cord says "Before I cut you free, what should I call you?". It gives me chills and sums up the whole seven episodes of the relationship between Mary and George. She never lets him free till everything including George is ruined. Iconic scene.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Even given the taboos both of the historical period and of the next several centuries of research into and writing about history, there is a fair amount of historical documentation of contemporary rumors and reports that King James I (played in this series by Tony Curran) was gay, or perhaps bisexual, giving a historical basis to this aspect of his depiction in "Mary & George." His close relationships with a series of male courtiers were often remarked-upon in letters and other documents of the day. Two of the men whom many historians agree were likely his lovers are depicted in this series: Robert Carr, 1st Earl of Somerset (Laurie Davidson) and George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham (Nicholas Galitzine); Sir John Oglander, a contemporary politician and diarist, wrote that James "is the chastest prince for women that ever was, for he would often swear that he never kissed any other woman than his own queen. I never yet saw any fond husband make so much or so great dalliance over his beautiful spouse as I have seen King James over his favourites, especially the Duke of Buckingham," and a Royal Navy officer, Edward Peyton, observed James "tumble and kiss [George] as a mistress" in view of the court. James I was the same King James who sponsored the translation of the Bible that is still known today as "the King James Bible," which is another reason that religious interests may have been eager to deny or expunge from history the possibility that James was gay or bisexual.
    • Gaffes
      Lord and Lady Somerset have Scottish accents when in reality the real life couple and the actors that play them were and are English.
    • Connexions
      Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 TV Shows of 2024 (So Far) (2024)

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    FAQ16

    • How many seasons does Mary & George have?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 5 avril 2024 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Site officiel
      • Official page for Sky
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Мэри и Джордж
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Knole House, Knole Park, Sevenoaks, Kent, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
    • Sociétés de production
      • Hera Pictures
      • SKY Studios
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

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    • Durée
      1 heure
    • Couleur
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