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6.8/10
851
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Drama miniseries about the friendship between Judith Dunbar and Loveday Carey-Lewis, before, during and after WW2.Drama miniseries about the friendship between Judith Dunbar and Loveday Carey-Lewis, before, during and after WW2.Drama miniseries about the friendship between Judith Dunbar and Loveday Carey-Lewis, before, during and after WW2.
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"Coming Home" could make a very engrossing 6-8 hour mini-series; unfortunately this production is all surface fairy-tale gloss with none of the depth and intent of the book. Vast and important chunks of the original story are missing; most of the remnants are turned upside-down and inside-out, and given a relentlessly sentimental greeting-card treatment. The author's serious attempt to portray life as she knew it as a young woman before, during, and after WWII is almost completely lost. A group of very interesting and capable actors is pretty much wasted. Its difficult to understand why the producers took the approach they did; one gets the impression that they must not have liked the original book much.
British to its backbone this mini is entertaining even if the goings on are a bit cliché. The settings are the beautiful especially the main house of Nancherrow. Chock full of extraordinary actors, Peter O'Toole, Joanna Lumley and Susan Hampshire just for starters, in support where this suffers is in the main roles. The actress playing Loveday is unmemorable but that can be ignored. The real problem is Emily Mortimer, it isn't even all her fault for she is a decent actress but having someone with as much charisma as Keira Knightley play the character as a young girl and than switching to someone who doesn't hold the screen in the same way for the bulk of the story is bound to cause a something of a letdown.
A large portion of the novel was based in the Far East. Probably for financial reasons this was erased from the movie, which was unfortunate as it added colour to the story. There were other changes too! However my husband who had never read the novel enjoyed the series.
Great cast and love the war setting as we have so much to be thankful for in peace time. However, this show is quite hypocritical over sexualising women - one character is clearly portrayed as bad for being a creep but all the topless scenes throughout the three hours undermine this message.
With Knightly and O'Tool as the leads, this film had good possibilities, and with McCallum as the bad guy after Knightly, maybe some tension. But they threw it all away on silly evening frill and then later on with maudlin war remnants. It was of course totally superficial, beautiful English country and seaside or not.The number one mistake was dumping Knightly so early on in the film, when she could easily have played someone a couple of years older, instead of choosing someone ten years older to play the part. They missed all the chances to have great conflict among the cast, and instead stupidly pulled at the easy and low-cost heartstring elements.
Did you know
- TriviaDrama miniseries based on a fiction book about the Dunbar and Carey-Lewis families, set before, during and after WW2.
- Quotes
Loveday Carey-Lewis: Her house is called Farty Edge.
[suppresses a laugh]
Judith Dunbar: Actually, it's called Windy Ridge.
- ConnectionsFollowed by La dynastie des Carey-Lewis (1999)
- How many seasons does Coming Home have?Powered by Alexa
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By what name was La dynastie des Carey-Lewis (1998) officially released in India in English?
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