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Il gioiello della corona

Titolo originale: The Jewel in the Crown
  • Mini serie TV
  • 1984
  • TV-14
  • 56min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
8,3/10
2545
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Il gioiello della corona (1984)
The Jewel In The Crown
Riproduci trailer0: 30
6 video
29 foto
Period DramaDramaHistoryRomanceWar

L'ampio dramma sulle classi dominanti e governate dell'India della Seconda Guerra Mondiale, che cercano di venire a patti con i drastici cambiamenti che avvengono intorno a loro, sapendo che... Leggi tuttoL'ampio dramma sulle classi dominanti e governate dell'India della Seconda Guerra Mondiale, che cercano di venire a patti con i drastici cambiamenti che avvengono intorno a loro, sapendo che le loro vite non saranno mai più le stesse.L'ampio dramma sulle classi dominanti e governate dell'India della Seconda Guerra Mondiale, che cercano di venire a patti con i drastici cambiamenti che avvengono intorno a loro, sapendo che le loro vite non saranno mai più le stesse.

  • Star
    • Tim Pigott-Smith
    • Geraldine James
    • Wendy Morgan
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    8,3/10
    2545
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Star
      • Tim Pigott-Smith
      • Geraldine James
      • Wendy Morgan
    • 43Recensioni degli utenti
    • 3Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Vincitore di 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 11 vittorie e 18 candidature totali

    Episodi14

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    Video6

    The Jewel In The Crown: one of those things
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    The Jewel In The Crown: one of those things
    The Jewel In The Crown: Vol 3
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    The Jewel In The Crown: Vol 3
    The Jewel In The Crown: Vol 3
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    The Jewel In The Crown: Vol 3
    The Jewel In The Crown: Vol 2
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    The Jewel In The Crown: Vol 2
    The Jewel In The Crown: Vol 4
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    The Jewel In The Crown: Vol 4
    The Jewel In The Crown
    Trailer 0:30
    The Jewel In The Crown
    The Jewel In The Crown
    Trailer 1:01
    The Jewel In The Crown

    Foto29

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    Interpreti principali99+

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    Tim Pigott-Smith
    Tim Pigott-Smith
    • Ronald Merrick
    • 1984
    Geraldine James
    Geraldine James
    • Sarah Layton
    • 1984
    Wendy Morgan
    Wendy Morgan
    • Susan Layton
    • 1984
    Judy Parfitt
    Judy Parfitt
    • Mildred Layton
    • 1984
    Rosemary Leach
    Rosemary Leach
    • Aunt Fenny
    • 1984
    Peggy Ashcroft
    Peggy Ashcroft
    • Barbie Batchelor
    • 1984
    Geoffrey Beevers
    Geoffrey Beevers
    • Kevin Coley
    • 1984
    Eric Porter
    Eric Porter
    • Dimitri Bronowsky
    • 1984
    Nicholas Le Prevost
    Nicholas Le Prevost
    • Nigel Rowan
    • 1984
    Art Malik
    Art Malik
    • Hari Kumar
    • 1984
    Derrick Branche
    Derrick Branche
    • Ahmed Kasim
    • 1984
    Charles Dance
    Charles Dance
    • Guy Perron
    • 1984
    Rachel Kempson
    Rachel Kempson
    • Lady Manners
    • 1984
    Anna Cropper
    Anna Cropper
    • Nicky Paynton
    • 1984
    Antony Brown
    Antony Brown
    • Arthur Peplow
    • 1984
    Shreela Ghosh
    Shreela Ghosh
    • Minnie
    • 1984
    Nicholas Farrell
    Nicholas Farrell
    • Teddy Bingham
    • 1984
    Frederick Treves
    Frederick Treves
    • Col. John Layton
    • 1984
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti43

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    Recensioni in evidenza

    8pekinman

    A super soap

    It was brave of Yorkshire Television to take on a filmed adaptation of Paul Scott's massive novel 'The Jewel in the Crown'. All-in-all they did a good job of it. Wisely the script focuses in on the personal relationships within the context of a changing India. The jarring complexities of "old" India rubbing up against the modernizing influences of the British Raj is vividly conveyed, mostly in the smaller, quieter moments, as when Harry Kumar takes Daphne Manners to visit his aunt and the behavior of the servants and the Rajput princess with whom Daphne is living.

    It's true that there is a great deal of dialog, in a soap opera-ish sense. There are times in some of the later episodes when I thought I was watching some bit of trash on TV on a Wednesday afternoon, but then I'd focus in on what the characters were saying and realize that it was deep and important stuff. You have to pay attention to 'The Jewel in the Crown' or it does indeed become a muddle and a bore. If you lose the train of thought you will not be rescued by brilliant cinematography or sound-track because both are inferior, which is a big shame. Perhaps it is the awful A&E dvds that are the problem, something that could be rectified with a remastering of the original films and sound- track. As it stands the sound is execrable, oftentimes the music and background rumble drowning out the speaking voices of the main characters. The musical score itself is wonderful and the actual camera-work is very good, which makes the loss of a good picture and decent sound-track all the more frustrating.

    As for the acting, the thing is chocked-full of fine performances. Some of the characters are indeed a little too clichéd and, in the case of Ronald Merrick, completely over the top, but Merrick's character works, as a dramatic contrivance, to add to the melodrama of the story... something which may or may not have been the purpose of Scott's creation in the first place. But that's entertainment!

    My favorite performances were Eric Portman's crafty old Russian emigré, Count Bronowsky. Porter was a great actor and is greatly missed. I savor his every appearance in 'The Jewel in the Crown' because he evokes the old Northern world of honor and good breeding, now extinct. His character makes me wish for a great film of the true story of the White Russians who had to flee the Bolsheviks in the first two decades of the 20th century, for such disparate places as India, Paris and Manchuria.

    Susan Wooldridge is superb as Daphne Manners, ditto Art Malik as Harry Kumar. I enjoyed Charles Dance's upper-crust but manly Sergeant and found Derrick Branche's Ahmed Kasim a fascinating and seductive person. Peggy Ashcroft's old missionary lady is heart-breaking in the loss of her simple faith in God, conveying, in the end, a powerful and sibylline persona. It is good to see Rachel Kempson (Mrs Michael Redgrave) in one of her last roles on film. Tim Pigot-Smith manages to make an unbelievable character, Ronald Merrick, human, well, almost. He's a monster of bigotry, jealousy and class envy, and Pigot-Smith plays him so convincingly that it is difficult to imagine a more effective portrayal of pure evil by anyone else. Pigot-Smith steals the show, on the whole.

    This TV series is definitely worth owning on DVD; if only A&E hadn't tossed it off in such a haphazard manner. Still, it's better 'n nuttin'.
    m_white

    Not a soap opera after all

    The person who wrote the other review here dismays me. I loved The Jewel In The Crown and highly recommend it! I think it's a very skillful and successful adaptation for TV from fiction.

    My own views about this series have changed -- from good to better. A few years ago, I rented it and watched it over a couple days. I thought it was very good, a haunting, tragic story very well done. I realize now that I watched it then very literally, very matter-of-fact, and saw it mostly as a straightforward series of events in the lives of these people trying to cope with the turmoil of the last days of the British in India. I viewed it mostly as a sort of soap opera.

    Recently I read all four of the books from which this story was taken, and what an illumination! These novels are brilliant, and I'm stunned with admiration for the talent of the writer, Paul Scott. So after turning the last page, I hot-footed it down to my local video store and rented the whole shebang AGAIN -- and this time saw it as a giant allegory, laden with symbolism, foreshadowing, and irony. The acting is top notch across the board -- you won't find better -- and it's visually striking. There are scenes in this movie that I'll never forget, in the same way the characters are haunted by them.

    Instead of a meandering and random soap opera, I saw how event built upon event, how characters affected one another, how chance meetings changed lives, how it all slouched inexorably towards the climax -- or anticlimax -- of the devastating conclusion.

    I am amazed at the skillfulness of the screenplay -- to compress those four novels and all their layers of complexity into this TV series. It really is astonishing how the *intent* and *spirit* of the story is communicated... it's not bashing you over the head, but it's *implied*.

    I love how the story does not spoon-feed you. I love how the characters don't make sense and we must puzzle them out for ourselves. We're left with a hundred questions about why they did what they did, and I will enjoy speculating about that for years to come. (If you like pat answers, steer clear of this one.)

    I loved this series, I intend to buy the videos, and I highly recommend it.
    alfa-16

    Crowning Glory

    There's a small scene in the first 2 hour episode of Jewel in the Crown about 80 minutes in. Susan Wooldridge, a gangly maladroit, clearly not cut out for India, is sleeping. The long awaited rain wakes her and she gets up and walks out onto the balcony. The obsessional loving care and artistry that is evident in just this single minute tell you everything you need to know about the quality of Jewel in the Crown. The set and the lighting on the sleeping figure momentarily transforms the character who will later be known, pejoratively as "that Manners girl" into the Diana-like beauty she always imagined she would become. Wooldridge is convincingly asleep and wakes naturally, and surprise, delight and relief register on her face as she revels in the feel of rain on her face. Nothing is out the book. It's all fresh, original, new. A great piece of acting by Wooldridge, never surpassed or even approached by all the other actors and actresses who have had to play this popular little scene, present in so many other movies. A great piece of directing, lighting, scene setting and costume design.

    Aside from this one, there are 649 other minutes and the same care and devotion is taken with all of them. In the episode "The Mughal Room", Sara Layton and Guy Perron spend Guy's last afternoon exploring the Governor's Summer residence at Pankot. 7 minutes go by without any dialogue in this little elegy for the cobwebbed glory of the Raj before they settle down in one of the bedrooms to make love. You won't find anything else like it in mainstream television. Very hard to do but very beautiful.

    But then the whole story is excellent, beautifully paced, tragic, funny, pathetic, illuminating and exciting by turns. I've watched it a number of times and I never want it to end.

    It really is the best drama series ever made.
    arshadrahimtulla

    Fine viewing. Definitely recommended.

    I can't understand why there are so many negative comments on 'The Jewel in the Crown'. What a well-made series with great performances. Yes, it does tend to drag during the first three or four episodes but anyone who's read 'The Raj Quartet' would realize that the book is just so - several seemingly unrelated events taking place in a larger political context. The series was definitely better than the books and effectively recreated the political milieu of the time. I could read the quartet only after having seen the mini. Kudos to Ken Taylor for his adaptation of a convoluted epic. Definitely a Herculean task. And kudos to the directors (Christopher Morahan & Jim O'Brien) who despite the mammoth task of filming a period piece did it with panache. Anyone who has worked in India (especially a foreign crew) would know just how frustrating an experience it can be. Yet, they've come out with a magnificent product. Truly a classic. Fine viewing. Definitely recommended.
    Kathryn-3

    Complex and moving

    I really loved this series. I think I've seen the whole series about 7 or 8 times, and I see something new each time.

    The Jewel in the Crown tells the story of individual people trying to live their lives in a world in the process of changing beyond recognition. The acting quality and execution of the entire production has never been equaled. You really believe that these people lived in this extraordinary time, the beginning of the end of the British Empire. Some are able to move forward into the new world, some are destroyed, and all are changed forever.

    I actually think that the series is better than the sum of the books, but nothing beats the first book in the series (The Jewel in the Crown) as a stand-alone novel. It's all about human perspective. Similar to the film Rashomon (or Courage Under Fire), the novel Jewel in the Crown tells a story from every point of view except one. You have to think about what that means. The series captures this effect differently, but it does so beautifully.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      All the exteriors of India were shot on location in India, but all the interiors of the Indian buildings were shot some six months later and 5000 miles away in the studios of Granada TV in Manchester, causing continuity problems because some of the cast had put on or lost weight in the meantime.
    • Citazioni

      Capt. Ronald Merrick: Are you one of those people who think that if you teach an Indian the rules of cricket he'll become an English gentleman?

      Guy Perron: Hardly sir. I know quite a few English gentlemen who play cricket brilliantly but are absolute shits.

    • Connessioni
      Edited into Masterpiece: The Jewel in the Crown: Part 1 (1984)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 11 luglio 2002 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Regno Unito
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Jewel in the Crown
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Kashmir, India
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Granada Television
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      56 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.33 : 1

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