Notes:
"Masterpiece Classic"--Container
Originally produced as a British television series in 2011
Contents:
Disc one, Part one: Prologue
Keeping up standards
Returning to Downton
Starting fresh
Mr. and Mrs. Bates
Revelations
The things that matter / director, Ashley Pearce (67 min.); Part two: Some perks
Never a dull moment
Modern values
A strong proposal
Mustering grace / director, Ashley Pearce (53 min.); Part three: Establishing a chain of command
The invasion
At the Red Lion Pub
The hero of the Somme
Saying goodbye / director, Andy Goddard (53 min.)
Disc Two: Part four: Choosing sides
Looking for Bates
Homecoming
Patience
At the amateur concert / director, Brian Kelly (53 min.); Part five: Daisy's grave
Mary's risk
A hard sacrifice
A somber wedding
The opposite of nothing / director, Brian Kelly (53 min.); Part six: Plans for Hacksby Park
The heir
An odd situation
Ruin
November 11 / director, Andy Goddard (53 min.); Part seven: Anna's choice
Thomas' venture
A surprise
The choices made
Paying the price / director, James Strong (53 min.)
Disc Three: Part eight: Sybil's announcement
An uncomfortable dinner
Over a cliff
The Spanish flu
A house in mourning
Cursed / director, James Strong (68 min.); Christmas at Downton Abbey
Playing the game
The first drive
In hell
The end of a story
A message from beyond
Sir Richard's promise
At the servant's ball / director, Brian Percival (93 min. ; director, )
; Special features: Fashion & uniforms (11 min.); Romance in a time of war (13 min.); Great House to hospital (8 min.); About VisitBritain (1 min.); PBS.org [text feature]
Credits:
Director of photography, Gavin Struthers, David Marsh, Nigel Willoughby ; editors, John Wilson, Steve Singleton, Mike Jones ; production designer, Donal Woods ; music, John Lunn ; costume designer, Susannah Buxton, Rosalind Ebbutt ; make up and hair designer, Anne 'Nosh' Oldham ; historical advisor, Alastair Bruce ; military advisor, Taff Gillingham ; medical advisor, Peter Starling.
Performers:
Hugh Bonneville, Jessica Brown Findlay, Laura Carmichael, Jim Carter, Brendan Coyle, Michelle Dockery, Siobhan Finneran, Joanne Froggatt, Thomas Howes, Rob James-Collier, Phyllis Logan, Elizabeth McGovern, Sophie McShera, Lesley Nicol, Amy Nuttall, Maggie Smith, Dan Stevens, Penelope Wilton.
Summary:
The Great War rages across Europe, and not even the serene Yorkshire countryside is free from its effects. The men and women of Downton are doing their part: heir Matthew Crawley and footman Thomas Barrow are off fighting, while Lady Grantham and Isobel Crawley are squabbling over whether Downton should be used as a hospital. Lady Mary is seeing a wealthy newspaper magnate while Lady Edith becomes much warmer and Lady Sybil seeks to ingratiate herself with the staff. Below stairs, as his former wife bedevils John and Anna, Mr. Carson and Mrs. Hughes struggle to keep the house running smoothly.
Audience:
MPAA rating Not rated
System Details:
DVD; Region 1, NTSC; stereo; widescreen presentation
DVD; Region 1, NTSC; stereo; widescreen presentation
DVD ; widescreen presentation ; stereo
DVD ; widescreen presentation ; stereo
Other Language:
In English with optional subtitles in English SDH (subtitles for the deaf and hard-of-hearing)
Awards & Distinctions:
Winner, Most Popular Drama Series (Julian Fellowes), 2012 National Television Awards, UK ; Winner, Best Mini-series or Motion Picture Made for Television, 2012 Golden Globes, USA
Winner, Most Popular Drama Series (Julian Fellowes), 2012 National Television Awards, UK ; Winner, Best Mini-series or Motion Picture Made for Television, 2012 Golden Globes, USA
Subject Headings:
Country life Great Britain Drama
Families Great Britain Drama
Household employees Great Britain Drama
World War, 1914-1918 Great Britain Drama
Social classes Great Britain Drama
Great Britain Social conditions 20th century Drama
Great Britain Drama
Man-woman relationships Great Britain Drama
Genre/Form:
Television series-lcgft
Historical television programs-lcgft
Fiction television programs-lcgft
Television melodramas-lcgft
Video recordings for the hearing impaired-lcgft
Topical Term:
Country life
Families
Household employees
World War, 1914-1918
Social classes
Man-woman relationships
Additional Contributors:
Neame, Gareth
- Producer
Eaton, Rebecca
- Producer
Fellowes, Julian
Trubridge, Liz
- Producer
Pearce, Ashley
- Director
Goddard, Andy
- Director
Kelly, Brian
- Director
Strong, James
- Director
Percival, Brian
- Director
Bonneville, Hugh
- Actor
Findlay, Jessica Brown
- 1989-
- Actor
Carmichael, Laura
- Actor
Carter, Jim
- 1948-
- Actor
Coyle, Brendan
- Actor
Dockery, Michelle
- 1981-
- Actor
Finneran, Siobhan
- 1967-
- Actor
Frogatt, Joanne
- 1979-
- Actor
Howes, Thomas
- 1986-
James-Collier, Rob
- Actor
Logan, Phyllis
- Actor
McGovern, Elizabeth
- 1961-
- Actor
McShera, Sophie
- Actor
Nicol, Lesley
- 1953-
- Actor
Nuttall, Amy
- 1982-
- Actor
Smith, Maggie
- 1934-
- Actor
Stevens, Dan
- 1982-
- Actor
Wilton, Penelope
- 1946-
- Actor
Lunn, John
- 1956-
- Composer
Publisher No:
MST64200
ISBN:
9781608836055
Comment
Add a CommentLoved this season... season 3 is just depressing at the end... Cant wait for season 4!!
If you managed to get through season one, this one is your reward, I guess. The family/servants plots carry forward for the better with the aid of having WWI as the backdrop.
Started watching this series when my mom brought it home from the library when I was home for Thanksgiving break (I'm 20). I was a little hesitant, at first- I love period pieces but some of the ones on PBS aren't always good. After the first episode, I was addicted. Love this show so much, made time for it even though I am busy at college. It's so refreshingly different than anything else on TV and totally captivating. I cried when Lavinia died. Love, love, love it. Anybody who doubts should give it a chance.
2nd season is so much better than first! moved quickly. interesting. visually such a treat. love the evil characters stirring the pot. these rich folks are pretty useless but fun to watch.
On the whole this is an interesting soap opera. Some of the characters are not particularly likeable, and some of the modern language is not really "of the time", but the acting and plot lines lift one above the minor flaws. As to the comment about rigid servants, that was exactly how they would have been in real life. 21st century liberals might find the whole master & servant thing objectionable, but Downton Abbey is about the British aristocracy a century ago.
The classiest soap opera around. FIVE STARS.
Not quite as good as Season 1, most likely due to my realization about two episodes in that I no longer like any of the characters. Highly unlikeable, entitled fancyfolk AND highly unlikeable, painfully rigid servantfolk. I still like the costumes though.
Very strong 2nd season of Downton Abbey. Amazing acting, costumes, music, settings, etc. Overall not as good as the 1st season. Got a little sick of the whole ex-wife murder storyline which just went nowhere all season. The WWI setting was an interesting time in Britain to set the show in too. Should be lots of interesting sub-plots to continue in season 3 (the ireland ties now will be cool).
Loved season I. Love season II. Can’t wait for season III. Downton Abbey is a nice change from the hypo-sexed, ultra-leftwing politically motivated, blood-soaked, amoral movies and TV series nowadays. Huge Bonneville plays a man of high principles and honor, the archetype English gentleman. (Contrast this performance with his Henleigh Grandcourt in Daniel Deronda!) Maggie Smith is absolutely fabulous as Grandmamma, the Dowager Countess; her repartees were priceless and her icy expressions, with that fabulous demi-smile, inimitable! And I actually enjoyed the commie chauffeur, when he read the news of the brutal murder of the Tzar family by his comrades in Russia and he states something to the effect that it was, er, necessary... It was surprising to see a commie exposed by the BBC! I sometimes wanted to punch Lady Mary or Matthew on the nose, but, hey, without their hesitation there would be no movie, right? The music is impeccable, the clothes absolutely stunning and quite accurate, and Downton Abbey—well, what more can one say about Highclere Castle? (If you like cooking, be sure to check "The Unofficial Downton Abbey Cookbook.")
Despite liking this a lot, I did not like this quite as much as season one because their were too many soap opera plot twists that felt like predictable soap operatics, but the WW 1 setting and all the changes in Downton Abbey were fun. Definitely worth watching and I will be watching season 3 with great pleasure, I hope.