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Daniel Deronda

  • TV Mini Series
  • 2002
  • 53m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
5.4K
YOUR RATING
Hugh Bonneville, Hugh Dancy, and Romola Garai in Daniel Deronda (2002)
Period DramaDramaRomance

Set in Victorian London, Gwendolen Harleth is drawn to Daniel Deronda, a selfless and intelligent gentleman of unknown parentage, but her own desperate need for financial security may destro... Read allSet in Victorian London, Gwendolen Harleth is drawn to Daniel Deronda, a selfless and intelligent gentleman of unknown parentage, but her own desperate need for financial security may destroy her chance at happiness.Set in Victorian London, Gwendolen Harleth is drawn to Daniel Deronda, a selfless and intelligent gentleman of unknown parentage, but her own desperate need for financial security may destroy her chance at happiness.

  • Stars
    • Jodhi May
    • Edward Fox
    • Amanda Root
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    5.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Jodhi May
      • Edward Fox
      • Amanda Root
    • 32User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 3 BAFTA Awards
      • 5 wins & 4 nominations total

    Episodes4

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    TopTop-rated1 season2002

    Photos28

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    Top cast57

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    Jodhi May
    Jodhi May
    • Mirah Lapidoth
    • 2002
    Edward Fox
    Edward Fox
    • Sir Hugo Mallinger
    • 2002
    Amanda Root
    Amanda Root
    • Mrs. Davilow
    • 2002
    David Bamber
    David Bamber
    • Lush
    • 2002
    Celia Imrie
    Celia Imrie
    • Mrs. Meyrick
    • 2002
    Jamie Bamber
    Jamie Bamber
    • Hans Meyrick
    • 2002
    Georgie Glen
    Georgie Glen
    • Lady Mallinger
    • 2002
    Hugh Dancy
    Hugh Dancy
    • Daniel Deronda
    • 2002
    Romola Garai
    Romola Garai
    • Gwendolen Harleth
    • 2002
    Hugh Bonneville
    Hugh Bonneville
    • Henleigh Grandcourt
    • 2002
    Allan Corduner
    Allan Corduner
    • Herr Klesmer
    • 2002
    Anna Steel
    • Catherine Arrowpoint
    • 2002
    Greta Scacchi
    Greta Scacchi
    • Lydia Glasher
    • 2002
    Nicholas Day
    Nicholas Day
    • Lord Brackenshaw
    • 2002
    Michael Elwyn
    Michael Elwyn
    • Mr. Arrowpoint
    • 2002
    Delia Lindsay
    Delia Lindsay
    • Mrs. Arrowpoint
    • 2002
    Kate Maberly
    Kate Maberly
    • Kate Meyrick
    • 2002
    Lisa Jackson
    • Mab Meyrick
    • 2002
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews32

    7.25.4K
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    Featured reviews

    10KatharineFanatic

    "I don't love her any more than she loves me. That's not the point."

    Having never read George Eliot's novel, I came into the film with only what I know based on the information friends have given me. The film is utterly exquisite. The costuming alone will have Anglophiles like myself crying from sheer envy, and there's enough archery, riding, and balls to weigh out the seriousness of the film, which is essentially two plots woven into one. An utterly heartless and wretched marriage for a spoiled young Gwendolyn in the form of the evil Grandcourt, a landowner whose sole pleasure lies in torment. Be it his wife or dogs, our heartless villain never takes greater pleasure than in dangling something before them and tearing it away again, only to feed it to someone else. We see a kind of barbarism in this act, be it with the family spaniel or his impoverished, abandoned mistress.

    The second plot line, which I found slightly less interesting, was about the film's lead, Daniel Deronda, a presumed illigitimate boy who has been raised a country gentleman. One day while out boating he saves a Jewish singer from drowning herself, and sets out to discover his own true identity through finding her family. I don't know why, but I found myself itching through these scenes to get back to Gwendolyn and her pathetic plight of enslavement to her husband. A second viewing, once I knew the course of the characters, settled me a bit.

    The acting is very stellar. There's not a weak link in the cast, although I have to say seeing Barbara Hershey seemed a little out of place in this Victorian paradox. The film makes numerous contrasts between good and evil, selfishness and humility, lies and deception. It's actually quite an achievement, and I was pleased at the amount of restraint showed by the filmmakers. The sexual tension between man and wife will go over most younger viewer's heads, something for which I'm grateful. It's rare we get a wonderful Victorian bodice ripper where the bodice stays on.
    7=G=

    A slice of Victorian life

    "Daniel Deronda" is a worthy knock-off of George Eliot's novel of the same name which tells of a young Englishman's search for meaning and purpose while enjoying a life of property and leisure. As with most Victorian period costume dramas out of the UK, this film is sumptuously appointed and well represented by the players and places as it meanders through the usual multiplicity of relationships from aristocrat to pauper with a Jewish thread for distinction. "Daniel Deronda" conjures a range of characters from a stoic martinet to a spoiled beauty to an attractive Jewess and beyond with love, greed, envy, guile, and death all swirling around the Deronda character as it manages to sort itself out with a coherent story arc and a more or less happy ending. A "should see" for anyone into Victorian flicks. (B)
    9sydneypatrick

    Exquisite Adaptation

    This was one of the more exquisite costume drama adaptations I have seen, with attention to detail absolutely striking in an archery scene that sets the bar for the entire series. Like the novel, it is polarizing in its two stories in one - people seem to either love/hate Daniel's plight or love/hate Gwendolyn's.

    Personally, I found Gwendolyn equally annoying in both novel and film. Hugh Darcy, as the eponymous hero, was pretty to look at and delivers a fine, if unremarkable, performance.

    But it is Hugh Bonneville as the dastardly Henleigh Grandcourt who took my breath away! He is flawlessly reprehensible, stealing every scene he was in and when he wasn't in a scene, I couldn't wait to see him again! It was terrific seeing Hugh Bonneville in such a role, as he's usually cast in the "very nice guy" roles (Bridget Jones Diary, Iris, Tipping the Velvet, etc). Although he's fine in such roles, as Grandcourt he made my skin crawl with his morally bankrupt, wealthy and pugnacious swagger. LOVED him!

    What this series could have used more of was Jodhi May and Greta Scacchi. In difficult supporting roles, both women shine as, respectively, a searching, haunted Jewess and a scorned, bitter mistress. Barbara Hershey makes an appearance late in the series in a pivotal plot device that I won't reveal lest some unsuspecting viewer be bitter with me, and in a limited role gives a performance that reminds us why she became famous in the first place (and at least for this viewer, made me forgive her 'Beaches').

    Overall, this adaptation is very enjoyable and recommended viewing for fans of the genre.
    9SimonJack

    Excellent production of Evans' last Victorian novel

    Mary Anne Evans finished writing "Daniel Deronda" in 1876. It was the last of several novels she wrote under the pen name, George Eliot. She was 57 at the time and would live but four more years. Among more than 40 fiction writers of the period, Eliot was one of the great chroniclers of 19th century English society (Georgian-Victorian).

    "Deronda" is also the last of Eliot's books to be scripted for a movie. This rendition by the BBC in three parts is excellent. For the fairly recent filming - 2002, the film makers were able to capture the England of the 1870s very well. The cinematography was excellent, as were the script and direction. The acting was first-rate by the entire cast. As some others have mentioned, Hugh Bonneville excelled in his role of a shrewd, mean, heartless "villain," under the guise of a calm, but indifferent gentleman. Romola Garai and Jodhi May were perfect in their roles, and Hugh Dancy was superb in his slight reserve and humility, matching the character in the book. Edward Fox was on the mark in his supporting role, and all the rest of the cast were terrific.

    My rating is down one point from a 10 only because of the slight disjointedness in the film. Others have commented on the appearance of two films together, and the difficulty of interweaving them. It wasn't a distraction, but it was noticeable - as though the script should have given us smoother connections between stories. But this is a tremendous film and most enjoyable foray into Victorian England.

    I have to give Eliot kudos for one more thing that no one else seemed to comment on. That was the dialog around the table during the Jewish meal. Mordecai said that the Jews would not reach an end to their low esteem until they had a land of their own - in the eastern Mediterranean. What great foresight by a writer 75 years before the worldwide emigration of Jews to the Holy Land after World War II, and the establishment of modern Israel in the late 1940s.

    I compliment the BBC for putting Eliot's great books on film, starting in the 1990s. Anglophiles and all of us who enjoy great movies and stories, will cherish these films for years to come. They are a great way to expose the young generation of today with some of the great literature and history of 19th century England.

    The world would indeed have loved to have more of Eliot, Charles Dickens, Charlotte Bronte, Jane Austen, Anthony Trollope and Lewis Carroll (Charles Dodgson). Most of them lived a little to a lot longer than the average age of life expectancy at the time. In 1850, that was 40 for males and 42 for females. Trollope (1815-1882) lived to be 67. Eliot (1819-1880) lived to be 61. And Carroll (1822-1898) was 66 when he died. Dickens also beat the average age of death, living to 58 from 1812-1870. But Austen (1775-1817) and Bronte (1816-1855), lived to only 42 and 39, respectively.
    10hfk

    Don't Judge "Deronda" Based on the First 15 Minutes

    The first time 'round, when PBS initially offered up "Deronda", I watched the first 15 minutes or so and was so disgusted with Gwendolynn that I changed channels and didn't think twice. Second time 'round, based on reviews here at IMDB, I gave it a bit more time and I'm certainly glad that I did. "Deronda" is a powerfull, beautiful, bit of television. I'm a conservative by nature and, on a regular basis, I'm sickened by the politically correct preaching that's often pushed by PBS and Network television. Daniel Deronda like, say "Prime Suspect", is story-telling with a liberal slant that is both legitimate and thought-provoking. I thoroughly enjoyed the story, and the lush production. I'm surprised by the nit-picking about "wooden" acting: I found the acting excellent, particularly compared to the endless trash television that's pumped into the idiot box these days. perhaps this is trite, but "Deronda" actually inspired me, uplifted me and, at least as far as I'm concerned, that's one of the most significant hallmarks of great art. Don't miss it.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The novel is set in the early 1860s, whereas the adaptation moves the action ahead to 1874, the year that George Eliot began writing the novel.
    • Goofs
      At Ezra Cohen's store, the baby's left shoe and sock disappear then reappear.
    • Connections
      Featured in George Eliot: A Scandalous Life (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      Cavatina (from The Marriage of Figaro)
      By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

      Vocalist Jeni Bern

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 23, 2002 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • BBC (United Kingdom)
      • PBS Masterpiece Theatre - production notes, Who's Who, etc
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • 丹尼爾的半生緣
    • Filming locations
      • Edinburgh, Scotland, UK(Jewish market scenes)
    • Production companies
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • WGBH
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 53m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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