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The Thirteenth Tale

  • TV Movie
  • 2013
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
Vanessa Redgrave, Olivia Colman, and Sophie Turner in The Thirteenth Tale (2013)
DramaMystery

Follows aging novelist Vida Winter, who enlists a young writer to finally tell the story of her life including her mysterious childhood spent in Angelfield House, which burned to the ground ... Read allFollows aging novelist Vida Winter, who enlists a young writer to finally tell the story of her life including her mysterious childhood spent in Angelfield House, which burned to the ground when she was a teenager.Follows aging novelist Vida Winter, who enlists a young writer to finally tell the story of her life including her mysterious childhood spent in Angelfield House, which burned to the ground when she was a teenager.

  • Director
    • James Kent
  • Writers
    • Christopher Hampton
    • Diane Setterfield
  • Stars
    • Janet Amsden
    • Alice Barlow
    • Isabel Barlow
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    3.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • James Kent
    • Writers
      • Christopher Hampton
      • Diane Setterfield
    • Stars
      • Janet Amsden
      • Alice Barlow
      • Isabel Barlow
    • 26User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos179

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    Top cast22

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    Janet Amsden
    • The Missus
    Alice Barlow
    • Moira
    Isabel Barlow
    • Young Margaret
    Emily Beecham
    Emily Beecham
    • Isabelle March
    Antonia Clarke
    Antonia Clarke
    • Young Emmeline
    Olivia Colman
    Olivia Colman
    • Margaret Lea
    Jacqueline Davis
    Jacqueline Davis
    • Judith
    Tom Goodman-Hill
    Tom Goodman-Hill
    • Dr. Mawsley
    Lizzie Hopley
    Lizzie Hopley
    • Theodora Mawsley
    Michael Jibson
    Michael Jibson
    • Charlie Angelfield
    Adam Long
    Adam Long
    • Ambrose Proctor
    Steven Mackintosh
    Steven Mackintosh
    • Dr. Clifton
    Madeleine Power
    Madeleine Power
    • Emmeline & Adeline, age 9
    Robert Pugh
    Robert Pugh
    • John The Dig
    Vanessa Redgrave
    Vanessa Redgrave
    • Vida Winter
    Alexandra Roach
    Alexandra Roach
    • Hester Barrow
    Sophie Turner
    Sophie Turner
    • Young Adeline & Vida
    Martin Wimbush
    • Mr. Peter Lomax
    • Director
      • James Kent
    • Writers
      • Christopher Hampton
      • Diane Setterfield
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews26

    6.73.2K
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    Featured reviews

    jillian-horberry

    A real flashback down memory lane!

    ...not generally a fan of 'ghostly' stories but was curious to see the fine cast of The 13th Tale. It was gripping from the beginning, superb acting, stunningly pretty and horrid little girls, sensational sets and music which really helped keep the concentration - a marvellous production and of course original story. Having been drawn in, I was soon to be flabbergasted when I realised some of it was shot at Duncombe Park where I was at prep. school in the 60's - a first shot of the entrance gates, the drive and steps to the front door I knew at once! - a much loved place by most of us who were lucky enough then to have assembly and put on the Nativity Play in the main Saloon,walk through the doors onto the terrace, build dens around the Yew Walk and around the Temples, play on the same swing and around Father Time, admire the mahogany staircase only for the staff to use, peer down into the Main Hall with its chequerboard floor waiting for parents to arrive, have story time each evening with the Head whilst sitting round her on the floor of her Study, the Library... I was transfixed and quite horrified to see the house as burnt out shell!! How did you do that? overall a magnificent and moving production, just a perfect setting for the story... thank you to Heyman Productions and the BBC
    bob the moo

    Well crafted tale but lacking in real suspense or chills

    This film got positive reviews when it was screened around the Christmas period last year, however I sat on it for ages since I was conscious that being a good drama around that time of year doesn't always translate into it being a good drama in and of itself. The ghostly tale of death and mystery is told by an older woman approaching her own death to a younger woman commissioned to write her story – it is a standard setup and from here the story is told across many years in a patient and reasonably engaging manner. Indeed, the telling of the tale is where the film's strengths lie because it is undeniably a well crafted affair. The casting, the locations, the production values and the general maturity of the whole film are all such that it feels much better than it actually is. Suffice to say I can understand why it went down quite well at the end of the festive period, because it does stand out as a classy and adult affair, in contrast to the lighter entertainment fare that would have dominated the previous week or so.

    I did find it pretty good thanks to this, with a steady approach and decent tone, but yet I never really got drawn into it in the way I would have liked for a serious drama and well-told story. There are a few moments of suspense and chills here, but generally it doesn't build into anything bigger or more dramatic – the same steady approach that helps to found it, also undoes it in this regard. It has its merits and there is a certain satisfaction to it but it never really gets beyond the quality of its build to become something where you don't see the craftsmanship because of how strong the actual story is.

    The cast is part of that quality build and I did enjoy both Colman and Redgrave; the rest of the cast also has good quality turns – although Game of Thrones fans may find some of the casting a bit distracting! Direction and design of the film is of a high quality as I say – it looks good and feels weighty throughout. Shame that the delivery of the material didn't build better and didn't provide more in the way of chills and emotions. Perhaps it was too much going on in the small space available (with a couple of stories here) but it does feel lacking as a whole, even if the quality of the build is enjoyable to see.
    8adrianovasconcelos

    A gothic, sensitive tale - superb Redgrave, Amsden

    Director James Kent has a sensitive touch that deserves recognition and praise in this age of formulaic CGI films where character is more often than not ignored, or simply mass-produced to wooden specifications.

    The film's curious title, THE THIRTEEN TALE, refers to a book of just 12 tales. The 13th tale amounts to the narrative that its dying author - superbly portrayed by Vanessa Redgrave - is conveying to a contracted biographer, intelligently played by Janet Amsden. The author's name I could not narrow down to Adeline or Emmeline because of the strange, almost transmutable relation between the twin sisters. However, one can reasonably assume that the 13th and final is the tale written by Amsden, who reveals that she too had a twin sister who died knocked down by a car, a death for which she blames herself. Thus, Redgrave and Amsden in a sense become spiritual twins, too, and that final tale is the result of their collaboration which starts edgily but ends on a tender, friendly note.

    This TV film largely shot in a decaying manor house that still reflects past grandeur has the quality of Gothic vision and contained horror interlaced with credible, if deliberately evasive, characterization. Bedridden Redgrave, taking liquid morphine to relieve constant physical pain - to add to the pain of losing her sister(s) - narrates in a rather dettached manner, admitting that she physically beat up her sister but could not tell why.

    Thus, she leaves her biographer with some interpretative loose ends that the latter supposedly weaves together into THE THIRTEENTH TALE.

    Exquisite cinematography by Jean-Philippe Gossart, fittingly restrained musical score, sharp yet touching screenplay by Diane Setterfield off the novel by Christopher Hampton.

    Definite must-see. 8/10.
    7Prismark10

    A Tale of family woe

    The film was pushed as a spooky, supernatural story when it is more of a thriller.

    Vanessa Redgrave is the dying writer. Olivia Coleman is the biographer called in to write a story of her youth in a large house with a dysfunctional family.

    A mother who went mad. A father on the verge of madness plus uncontrollable sisters who are a burden to the housekeepers.

    The film takes a while to get going but the book has been adapted for the screen by Oscar winner Christopher Hampton.

    As the film develops, secrets are revealed about the twin sisters and their effect of the people around them.

    The film is well acted and the story gradually draws you in and surprises you as it does not go the way you think it will.

    Of course I have never read the book so no comparison is made with the novel. It's a drama that stands in its own merits.
    9lisletbear

    Soaks into the bones of you

    I love Gothic. I have been steadily reading my way through the back-catalogue of greats from Le Fanu through Poe, M R James to Will Self. I like not just to read and enjoy, but to carry a story with me forever. For that to happen the story has to get inside of me; it has to creep in slowly under my skin, and then shake me up from the inside. The Thirteenth tale does just that. From the off, the makers employ all the best Gothic themes in order to summon feeling; the grand but degenerate house,wildly baroque gardens,sense-memory flashbacks, costume, unheimlich twins. It adds to the tension with filmic techniques- the pared down narrative,filters, uncanny usage of colour,slow close-ups and misty long-shots. The result is pure feeling. For me, the feeling begins as mystery and a slow sense of disorientation and unreality, but develops through anxiety, into something unnameable strange and completely absorbing. This film is pure Gothic. I feel alarmed, I feel shaky. This film will live with me for a while yet.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Vanessa Redgrave portrays Vida Winter in this film, and her sister, Lynn Redgrave, portrays the part of Vida Winter in the audiobook by Diane Setterfield, on which this film is based.
    • Quotes

      Vida Winter: Feeling guilty doesn't do anybody any good.

    • Soundtracks
      Ring Around the Rosie
      Traditional

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 30, 2013 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • MovieScore Media (Sweden)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Тринадцята казка
    • Filming locations
      • Duncombe Park, Helmsley, North Yorkshire, England, UK(Angelfield House exterior)
    • Production company
      • Heyday Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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