Not gonna lie, we like us some high-class British historical drama. Yeah, they’re generally soap operas, but everybody dresses so nice and talks so fancy.
And so it is with CRANFORD, made by the BBC in 2007 and based on a series of
novels by Elizabeth Gaskell. Technically, it has two seasons, but the first has
only five episodes and the second consists of two movie-length episodes. So,
seven episodes overall that cover a couple of years’ time in the 1840s in the
small English village of Cranford, located in Cheshire. (I’d have to look that
up to know where in England that is, and I’m not that ambitious.)
This is definitely a soap opera. We’ve got unrequited love, doomed love,
disease, death, ambition, rotters, noble doctors, a heroine who wants to be a
writer, scandal, and the inexorable changes wrought by time. It’s very
well-made and well-acted, with scripts (all by Heidi Thomas, the main writer on
CALL THE MIDWIFE, another show we like) that range from pretty darned funny to
really sad. Everything that happens is pretty predictable, and I was extremely
annoyed when the show came to an end and left a major plotline unresolved. All
I can think is that they planned to address that in the next season and didn’t
know the show was coming to an end.
Mostly, though, CRANFORD is a series where you spend a lot of time going, “Hey,
it’s that guy from DOWNTON ABBEY!” (Jim Carter, who played Carson the butler on
that show and is Captain Brown, a retired military man in charge of building a railroad
here. Carter is one of those guys who has a great voice and I like just
listening to him talk) and “Hey, it’s Lady Mary from DOWNTON ABBEY!” (Michelle
Dockery, who also has a great voice) and “Hey, it’s Loki from the Marvel
movies!” (Tom Hiddleston, who’s a very good guy here) and “Hey, it’s Doctor
Who!” (Jodie Whittaker, whose run as the Doctor I’ve never seen and never will)
and “Hey, it’s Doc Martin’s aunt!” (Eileen Atkins from one of our favorite British
series, DOC MARTIN) and “Hey, it’s Judi Dench!” (too many things to list).
Despite what you might think from my sarcasm, I really enjoyed CRANFORD. I wish
they had made more seasons. I’m not going to read the books, mind you, but I’d
have been happy to watch more of the TV version.
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