sea_changed: Close-up of the face of Anne Bonny from Black Sails (black sails; anne)
[personal profile] sea_changed posting in [community profile] historium
There was discussion about making a post where people could share their favorite historical TV shows, so I thought I would go ahead and do that: I'd love to hear people's favorites, and I'm always looking for recs.

A few of my own favorites, to start us off--I'm undoubtedly forgetting many, but here are a few off the top of my head that I love:

Black Sails - Early 18th century pirates. The first season starts out somewhat trashy, but the show quickly matures into a fascinating and beautifully-done meditation on the stories we tell--about history, about others, about ourselves--and what stories get preserved and remembered and what stories are forgotten or destroyed. Excellent LGBT rep. Four seasons.

The Hour - 1950s BBC news reporters. The cast here is stellar--Ben Whishaw, Romola Garai, Dominic West--and the production and writing utterly stunning. This isn't an era or a subject I would be naturally drawn to, but everything about this show is just so extraordinarily well done. Two very short (six-episode) seasons.

Deadwood - 1870s gold-mining town in South Dakota. The one, the only. A cult show for a reason--you either love it or you, well, don't--this show is incredibly well-acted and written like nothing you're likely to hear on television before or since. Three seasons.

North and South - Victorian England. The most goddamn romantic thing you'll ever see in your life. Based on the Elizabeth Gaskell novel, this follows a woman from the south of England and a man from the north, and deals with social and class issues in the mid-Victorian era while telling a nuanced and compelling love story. Also contains the best refusal of a marriage proposal scene ever. Miniseries.

ETA: I knew I was forgetting something important--the HBO John Adams miniseries. It's absolutely wonderful--the acting is incredible (almost everyone's perfect, but their Jefferson is especially perfect), the production is stellar, and it's for the most part quite remarkably historically accurate. A definite recommendation.

Date: 2018-12-21 11:01 pm (UTC)
sailorkitty: (Default)
From: [personal profile] sailorkitty
The recent Brideshead revisited film is not very good. It is an abomination set to film. It manages to be less romantic than the TV series, despite the boys actually kissing. Further, it misses the point of the novel, and makes it look as if the story is a love triangle.

In the TV-series, Irons and Andrews have amazing chemistry. The two are always touching or looking into each other's eyes, and Julia is left out of the picture until it is her turn to shine. And shine, she does- The story goes on, and it is heartbreaking. If you like tragic love affairs and slow-burn, individual-focused drama, the TV-series is highly recommended. The story is very catholic, but catholic in a way that even non-catholics can appreciate, if that makes sense. Faith is a running theme in the book, but it doesn't seem to be making anyone happy.

(The book is also absolutely lovely.)

Profile

historium: (Default)
A central community for all historical fandoms

May 2025

S M T W T F S
     123
456 78910
11121314 1516 17
18192021222324
25262728293031

Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 25th, 2025 11:24 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios