La vita privilegiata della moglie di un potente politico si sgretola quando emergono segreti scandalosi e il marito è accusato di un crimine scioccante.La vita privilegiata della moglie di un potente politico si sgretola quando emergono segreti scandalosi e il marito è accusato di un crimine scioccante.La vita privilegiata della moglie di un potente politico si sgretola quando emergono segreti scandalosi e il marito è accusato di un crimine scioccante.
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It's a legal drama set in modern London, England, following the charge of rape against a senior government minister who is also the best friend of the Prime Minister.
James Whitehouse (Ben Radcliffe/Rupert Friend) is the senior minister and close friend from Oxford University days with Prime Minister Tom Southern (Jake Simmance/Geoffrey Streatfeild). James is married to Sophie (Hannah Dodd/Sienna Miller); they have three children. Olivia Lytton (Naomi Scott) is a researcher on Whitehouse's staff and a person with whom he had an affair for five months. A week after he broke off the affair, they had a sexual encounter, after which she charged him with rape. Kate Woodcroft (Nancy Farino/Michelle Dockery) is the prosecution counsel arguing the charges against Woodhouse.
The six-part series begins with the widely publicized scandal of the affair, followed by the rape charge and the subsequent trial. Throughout, there are flashbacks to the Oxford University days when Whitehouse and Southern were members of a wild partying group called the Libertines. We gradually learn that a death occurred at the Libertines' last party for which no one has been held accountable. Sophie was already Whitehouse's girlfriend at the time. Kate's relationship to it all is initially unclear but becomes apparent as the series continues.
This is a series with strong, well-developed characters, and the quality of the acting is high. The story raises good questions about the nature of consent in sexual relations. For me, the problem is the plot is fatally flawed because it's not believable. It forced me too often to not roll my eyes. This is unfortunate because the actors and the core issue deserved better.
James Whitehouse (Ben Radcliffe/Rupert Friend) is the senior minister and close friend from Oxford University days with Prime Minister Tom Southern (Jake Simmance/Geoffrey Streatfeild). James is married to Sophie (Hannah Dodd/Sienna Miller); they have three children. Olivia Lytton (Naomi Scott) is a researcher on Whitehouse's staff and a person with whom he had an affair for five months. A week after he broke off the affair, they had a sexual encounter, after which she charged him with rape. Kate Woodcroft (Nancy Farino/Michelle Dockery) is the prosecution counsel arguing the charges against Woodhouse.
The six-part series begins with the widely publicized scandal of the affair, followed by the rape charge and the subsequent trial. Throughout, there are flashbacks to the Oxford University days when Whitehouse and Southern were members of a wild partying group called the Libertines. We gradually learn that a death occurred at the Libertines' last party for which no one has been held accountable. Sophie was already Whitehouse's girlfriend at the time. Kate's relationship to it all is initially unclear but becomes apparent as the series continues.
This is a series with strong, well-developed characters, and the quality of the acting is high. The story raises good questions about the nature of consent in sexual relations. For me, the problem is the plot is fatally flawed because it's not believable. It forced me too often to not roll my eyes. This is unfortunate because the actors and the core issue deserved better.
...but ended badly. I'd rate the first few episodes a '9' for production values and staying away from some easy (and overdone) tropes. But the last few sunk it to a 6.
6fh_3
Good writing. Good acting. Good story. Great sets and costumes. Some awkward directing and acting at times but not distracting. Then there was the final episode. No spoilers but it really unraveled for me. Not what you would expect but a bit absurd.
A plot that was going well, discussing the gray area that was established in the first episodes, and then suddenly devolves into a puerile and ridiculous ending!
I'll feel like this short drama was intended to spark debate but ended like some scooby doo episode. It's such a shame because the pertinent issue got totally lost.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe fictitious "Libertines Club" to which James Whitehouse belonged whilst an Oxford student was based on the real Oxford "Bullingdon Club," a drinking and dining club originally founded at Oxford as a hunting and cricket club in 1780.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Jeremy Vine: Episodio #5.80 (2022)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Anatomy of a Scandal
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Manchester Town Hall, Inghilterra, Regno Unito(Parliament scenes)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione45 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 16:9 HD
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