28 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A MIND IS A TERRIBLE THING TO WASTE..., July 20, 2003
This international award winning adaptation of Catherine Cookson's best selling book of the same name should delight Ms. Cookson's devoted fans and anyone else who enjoys period pieces in which class conflicts are the central theme.
Set in England in the 1840s, a desperate widow with three children, two boys and a girl, takes the post of housekeeper to a crusty member of the gentry who lives in solitary shabby splendor in a home that has seen better days. Living in genteel poverty, he is intrigued by the fact that his housekeeper and her children are literate. Moved by this family who has infused some interest into his formerly desiccated life, he decides to dedicate some personal effort to educating the children.
Unfortunately, he has a dark side that causes a rift in the family he seems to have adopted as his own. Alienated from the oldest son who has little interest in learning, he continues to teach the other two children. The daughter, in particular, thirsts for knowledge and she takes to his tutoring as a duck takes to water. Consequently, she develops a deep affection for him, which he reciprocates. When he dies, he leaves her with an appreciation for education and books.
After his death, however, her mother, angered by the terms of her late employer's will, forces her daughter to go into service as a laundress in a wealthy household in order to earn an income. There, the daughter's intelligence, literacy, and education causes endless trouble, both upstairs and downstairs, and class conflicts begin to raise their ugly head. When certain events transpire in the household that cause her to escape her drudgery, her life takes an unexpected turn, and the world soon becomes her oyster.
This is a handsome production with wonderful performances by the entire cast. It is sure to delight those who enjoy period pieces, as well as those who enjoy the novels of the late Catherine Cookson.
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35 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A good historical drama with an uplifting message., February 28, 2000
By A Customer
I just saw this movie and it left a good impression on me. I enjoyed the movie although a few of the points were unclear to me because I have not read the book. This is the reason I did not rate it 5 stars. The story concerns a mother and her three children who become homeless at the beginning of the movie. She eventually finds a home doing work as a housekeeper for a crusty retired school teacher. The relationship between the teacher and the mother and her children is a major part of the first hour of the movie. There were some surprising twists to this part of the story. The second half concerns one of the children, Bridgette, who was taught reading, writing, Latin and French by the retired teacher. Her problems in finding employment in Victorian England as a lower class person with an education and all the problems this causes show how class conscious the people, upper and lower class, of that period were. This is also a romance story because Bridgette falls in love with one of the men of the manor where she is working. The resolution of the story was satisfying and I would like to read the book now to find out about the rest of the story.
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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Enjoyable, but.., March 4, 2004
By A Customer
I would have to say that to-date, this is my least favorite of the films made based on Catherine Cookson's books. I think this film would have been greatly improved if it were an hour or so longer. The film feels rushed. We are not given the opportunity to get to know the characters very well.
I much prefered The Dwelling Place and The Black Candle.
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