Sorry about there not being a lot of detail in this review, but what's the point if you can't have the joyous experience of watching this show.Early on in her career, beloved children’s author Beatrix Potter (1866-1943) paid several visits to the local museum in her native South Kensington, London. So if you are a fan of sophisticated dramatic television with a sense of history, write to the BBC and help get these titles released. The BBC has been pretty good about releasing there television series but there are a few they have totally LOST! "The Tale of Beatrix Potter" and "The Voyage of Charles Darwin" are two that come to mind. Like so many of these BBC productions it is simple, well made, well written, well acted, and an enjoyable way to spend an evening or two relaxing and watching a wonderful story unfold. Nope - Not it! The BBC miniseries that ran on Masterpiece Theater is a well made and acted biography of Beatrix Potter. Then Amazon link takes to to a list of animated videos of Beatrix Potter stories. It is not animated, and the profile image is of some animated version of the Tales of Beatrix Potter. They are so good! In conclusion, if you know anyone who owns a copy of this film beg them to watch it with you or loan it to you, or if you're ambitious try writing the BBC and DEMANDING that they release a pack of lawyers to hunt down and issue this lost treasure on DVD, so that more people can see this wonderful rendering of the life of a great modern artist and benefactress of the people of Britain and lovers of the natural world.įirst let me say that the IMDb page for this title is a mess. After watching THE TALE OF BEATRIX POTTER, I sometimes like to watch my copy of Hordern as King Lear, from the the BBC Shakespeare Plays produced in the 80s, to see Penelope Wilton as Regan opposite his Lear. Next to Wilton, perhaps the most important actor in the film is the narrator, the late, great, Sir Michael Hordern, whose voice is the perfect framing device for this "Tale." He is well known to fans of British film, from such works as A FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM, SCROOGE (A Christmas CAROL), Zeffirelli's TAMING OF THE SHREW, LOVEJOY, and as the narrator in Stanley Kubrick's BARRY LYNDON. Millais, it is John Everett Millais, the Pre-Raphaelite painter Canon Rawnsley, the enthusiastic Victorian country preservationist is fleshed out in limited screen time. He knows the details here, for set dressing and costume, language and manners when young Beatrix mentions that her father takes photos for Mr. He became infatuated with Potter because of her marvelous watercolor technique, being himself a watercolorist and student of Picasso. WHAT'S WRONG WITH YOU, BBC?! DIG THIS OUT AND PUT IT ON DVD! YOU'LL MAKE MONEY! THE TALE OF BEATRIX POTTER is based on the book by Margaret Lane, a very good, straightforward biography, which has here been well dramatized by John Hawkesworth, who brought us UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS, and THE DUCHESS OF DUKE STREET (shows he was familiar with the era!). You understand that from seeing this film you do not from seeing the lackluster presentation starring Ms. She changed the world, quite literally, with her actions. Not only did she help save the Lake District from becoming a car park or a strip mall, but her "little books" have touched the hearts and minds of millions, perhaps billions of children and adults ALL OVER THE WORLD, for generations. Beatrix Potter was not a flibbertigibbet who baby-talked to her drawings, she was a SCIENTIST, for God's sake, a mycologist who developed a theory regarding lichen that was decades ahead of its time! THIS film, with the wonderful and under-appreciated Penelope Wilton, makes clear Potter's sufferings and restrictions, and her great talents and achievements: a great watercolorist, artist, scientist, naturalist, writer, creator of a secret code that was unbroken until the 1950s, land developer and preservationist, environmentalist.I can't even go on writing this list because I get all weepy-peepy thinking of what a great, generous spirit she was. I am too big a fan of Beatrix Potter to completely trash that film, but I take umbrage with the ridiculous way they made her look, and how they glossed over her parents behavior, which was in fact strict even by Victorian standards. This film is far superior to the quaint (that is the nicest word I can use) work which stars Renee Zellweger. It is a masterful treatment of the life of an extraordinary woman, anchored by a great performance from Penelope Wilton. It is to the BBC's shame that they have buried or lost this excellent film, and have NEVER released it to home video.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |