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Parade's End

  • TV Mini Series
  • 2012
  • TV-MA
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
11K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,700
528
Rebecca Hall, Benedict Cumberbatch, and Adelaide Clemens in Parade's End (2012)
Revolves around a love triangle between a conservative English aristocrat, his mean socialite wife and a young suffragette.
Play trailer1:31
1 Video
19 Photos
Period DramaActionDramaRomanceWar

Revolves around a love triangle between a conservative English aristocrat, his mean socialite wife and a young suffragette.Revolves around a love triangle between a conservative English aristocrat, his mean socialite wife and a young suffragette.Revolves around a love triangle between a conservative English aristocrat, his mean socialite wife and a young suffragette.

  • Stars
    • Benedict Cumberbatch
    • Rebecca Hall
    • Roger Allam
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,700
    528
    • Stars
      • Benedict Cumberbatch
      • Rebecca Hall
      • Roger Allam
    • 51User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 5 Primetime Emmys
      • 8 wins & 36 nominations total

    Episodes5

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season2013

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:31
    Official Trailer

    Photos19

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    Top cast91

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    Benedict Cumberbatch
    Benedict Cumberbatch
    • Christopher Tietjens
    • 2012
    Rebecca Hall
    Rebecca Hall
    • Sylvia Tietjens
    • 2012
    Roger Allam
    Roger Allam
    • General Campion
    • 2012
    Adelaide Clemens
    Adelaide Clemens
    • Valentine Wannop
    • 2012
    Rupert Everett
    Rupert Everett
    • Mark Tietjens
    • 2012
    Miranda Richardson
    Miranda Richardson
    • Mrs. Wannop
    • 2012
    Sasha Waddell
    • Glorvina
    • 2012
    Janet McTeer
    Janet McTeer
    • Mrs. Satterthwaite
    • 2012
    Clare Higgins
    Clare Higgins
    • Lady Claudine
    • 2012
    Tom Mison
    Tom Mison
    • Potty Perowne
    • 2012
    Stephen Graham
    Stephen Graham
    • Vincent Macmaster
    • 2012
    Malcolm Sinclair
    Malcolm Sinclair
    • Sandbach
    • 2012
    Anne-Marie Duff
    Anne-Marie Duff
    • Edith Duchemin
    • 2012
    Ned Dennehy
    Ned Dennehy
    • Father Consett
    • 2012
    Anna Skellern
    Anna Skellern
    • Bobbie Pelham
    • 2012
    Lucinda Raikes
    Lucinda Raikes
    • Hullo Central - Evie
    • 2012
    Sylvestra Le Touzel
    Sylvestra Le Touzel
    • Marchant
    • 2012
    Alan Howard
    Alan Howard
    • Tietjens Senior
    • 2012
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews51

    7.411K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7blanche-2

    Tom Stoppard adaptation of Ford Maddox Ford novel

    "Parade's End" is a five-part miniseries from England starring Benedict Cumberbatch, Rebecca Hall, Rupert Everett, Miranda Richardson, and Janet McTeer. Based on the novel by Ford Maddox Ford, the script was written by Tom Stoppard.

    The story is about the British upper class pre- and during World War I, focusing on Christopher Tietjens (Cumberbatch) and his wife Sylvia (Rebecca Hall). Christopher is an honorable man and extremely repressed, it seems - he won't sleep with the woman he loves (Adelaide Clemens) because he's married, but then he's not sleeping with his wife, who has been unfaithful to him and may or may not have given birth to their son.

    Tietjens eventually joins the war office rather than staying in safety because he considers it more honest than what he's being asked to do at his job as a government statistician.

    I didn't read the book -- according to the reviews, the role of Sylvia is not supposed to be sympathetic, and Rebecca Hall has been criticized for this. I would submit it's not her fault, it's the director's - I'm sure she could have acted the role any way she was requested to do it.

    The director cast young Adelaide Clemens as Tietjens' would-be mistress, though their relationship isn't consummated before or during the war. I have to agree with reviews, for a suffragette, she's pretty vapid.

    Benedict Cumberbatch is one of the greatest actors today, and again, as reviews have pointed out, he has now achieved matinée idol status. Originally HBO did not want him in this series because they didn't know who he was; by the time the series was ready to be filmed, they said it had to be with Benedict or they wouldn't do it! Christopher isn't supposed to be a matinée idol - he's described as bulky and unattractive. Cumberbatch gained weight for the role to make himself look a little bigger, though by no means bulky, and he wore inserts in his face to kill those incredibly high cheekbones. He also does something with the jaw area - he had jowls and an unusual way of using his mouth, which has been compared to Edward Fox's and Jeremy Irons' jaw movements. It's part of his characterization, so he actually doesn't look like the dashing Sherlock, between that, his weight, and his lighter hair. He's also lowered his voice, which was pretty low to begin with.

    All in all, it's a brilliant performance. He really is a true chameleon. Christopher, however, to Americans anyway, is difficult to understand with his uptightness and his honor, just like one lost patience with Ashley Wilkes and his mixed messages to Scarlett.

    And since Cumberbatch is now a matinée idol and if you're a woman, what you're waiting for is some sex and boy, there wasn't much of that, though we did get to see his bare chest when his shirt was open. Wow. We who have seen him do love scenes, such as in The Last Enemy, were left pretty much like Sylvia -- frustrated.

    There are some beautiful scenes and some very gritty war scenes, plus lots of symbolism to be had. This series has been compared to Downton Abbey but it is in no way a soap opera. It's much more subtle; it moves slowly, as that way of life did, with everything looking good on the surface but bubbling with scandal and problems underneath.

    A great effort that succeeds in part, with some wonderful acting.
    9The_late_Buddy_Ryan

    One of the best TV adaptations of a literary classic, ever!

    I'm sure that HBO marketing execs were relieved that, if they were going to get behind a 5-part series based on Ford Madox Ford's complex and not terribly well known 20th-century masterpiece, at least some of it would be set in a stately home in the north of England, like that other show about the downtown abbey.

    Ford's a great one for interior monologue and multiple points of view and such, but Tom Stoppard's masterly adaptation channels the great muddy river of his prose into a lively, involving narrative—though there's still enough time-shifting and flashbacking, even some Eisenstein-style montage, to do honor to Ford's avant-garde intentions. Considering what difficult material he's dealing with, it's one of the best TV adaptations ever!

    Benedict Cumberbatch has always done well in period films, and he seems like the only possible choice for Christopher Tietjens, a self-styled 18th-century gentleman (the time period of the series is roughly 1908-19) and omniscient civil servant, but obstinate, brusque and arrogant as well (maybe even a little like Sherlock?). Rebecca Hall is riveting and surprisingly sympathetic as Tietjens's deceitful wife, Sylvia, and Aussie actress Adelaide Clemens is a revelation as Valentine, the virginal suffragette he meets and falls in love with in two of the series's most powerful scenes. (Tietjens and Sylvia, though usually at cross-purposes, are determined not to divorce—it's complicated….)

    Tietjens is described by one of his wife's admirers as a "bloody great bolster" of a man—BC didn't have time to bulk up for the part, obviously—but he emerges as a poignant, even romantic, figure, with only the memory of the night he falls in love with Valentine to sustain him through six years of frustration, disappointment and danger. Perhaps it's easy to see why some viewers didn't find this storyline or this character very "relatable."

    Long story short, '"Parade's End" isn't as accessible as an original costume drama devised for a contemporary audience, like "Downton," but it's decidedly worth watching. We didn't have a problem with BC's enunciation, but some of the dialogue, especially in the scenes with excited Welsh soldiers in the trenches, is admittedly not so easy to follow. (Next time we'll try the subtitles.) Great cinematography; kudos to the first-rate British cast, with special mention to Stephen Graham as Tietjens's fair-weather friend Macmasters and Rufus Sewell in a Pythonesque turn as a sex-crazed clergyman. An interview with Stoppard on disc two sheds some light on his process.
    10sridhar-e

    Subtle Brilliance

    I don't like watching series or movies based on the wars but I watched this because of Benedict Cumberbatch and I have fallen in love with this series. I have not read the novels or have any idea about the writer but if the books are even half as good as the TV adaptation, they must be a must- read. Christopher Teijens is a brilliant, very committed and decent gentleman. He has a wife who cheats on him and he is love with a girl. At the backdrop is the world war 1. If you are looking for a story, there is not much of it but the true star of the show is the direction, cinematography, amazingly poetic dialogues and unblemished acting by the whole cast. The music compliments the settings and the backdrop very well. Benedict Cumberbatch has shown the world how talented he is. Flawless acting, deep emotions and superb voice modulations. Rebecca Hall and Adelaide Clemens have made the characters of Sylvia and valentine unforgettable.

    Don't watch this if you are a fan of fast paced action. This is for patient, connoisseurs of literature and romantics. Watch it for intelligent viewership.
    10literacy2007

    Riveting performances by leads Rebecca Hall and Benedict Cumberbatch

    Before "Parade's End," Rebecca Hall and Benedict Cumberbatch were last paired professionally in an unassuming romantic comedy called "Starter for 10," a film anchored by their friend James McAvoy. All three played university students. Although each turned in a good performance, the roles were not ones that required much acting range. In Parade's End, however, the roles of Sylvia and Christopher Tietjens allow both Hall and Cumberbatch to flex their considerable acting muscles. When both are in a scene, the scene is so riveting that it is hard to know which actor to watch.

    Over the years, the 36-year-old Cumberbatch has built an impressive portfolio of work. He has been accurately described as a chameleon. He so completely invests himself in a role that it is sometimes hard to recognize the actor behind the character.

    As Sylvia Tietjens, wife of wealthy landowner Christopher Tietjens, Hall holds her own against Cumberbatch. Her Sylvia is smart, narcissistic, beautiful, lusty, manipulative, and utterly fascinating. Her rival, suffragette Valentine Wannop, pales in comparison. While the younger Valentine is sweet, loyal, and plucky, she doesn't have Sylvia's fire.

    Which woman will Christopher choose? You'll have to watch the series to find out. Along the way, you'll enjoy not only the performances of the three principal actors, but also the performances of a wonderful ensemble of able actors, including Rupert Everett, Anne-Marie Duff (coincidentally, the wife of James McAvoy, who joined Hall and Cumberbatch in "Starter for 10"), and others.
    7prashant-63677

    Patience will be rewarded.

    The show was a very intelligent yet slow paced adaptation of very high quality source material. Sometimes I got impatient in certain episodes, but am glad that I stayed the course. Benedict cumberbatch was OUTSTANDING in the role. Just brilliant. His expressions, that quiver of emotion...it said much more than words. There were some deep moments, very poignant as well. Some witty ones also. I would have rated it 7.5 if option was there. Just stay with this show, it will be a rewarding experience.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Benedict Cumberbatch claimed that his character of Christopher Tietjen was one of the more admirable he has ever played. He claimed "[Christopher] has many admirable qualities I'd like to siphon off into my life."
    • Goofs
      Sylvia and Bobbie smoke cigarettes, but several others certainly would have been smokers, including the Ladies Macmaster, Wonnop, Satterthwaite, Marie-Leonie, and Claudine.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Wright Stuff: Episode #17.165 (2012)

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    FAQ

    • How many seasons does Parade's End have?
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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 7, 2013 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Belgium
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Geçit Töreni Sonu
    • Filming locations
      • Duncombe Park, Helmsley, York, North Yorkshire, England, UK(Groby Hall: Tietjens family's country estate)
    • Production companies
      • Mammoth Screen
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • Home Box Office (HBO)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
      • Dolby SR
    • Aspect ratio
      • 16:9 HD

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    Rebecca Hall, Benedict Cumberbatch, and Adelaide Clemens in Parade's End (2012)
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