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Brideshead Revisited
 
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Brideshead Revisited (1981)

Starring: Jeremy Irons, Diana Quick Rating: NR (Not Rated) Format: DVD
4.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (114 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Actors: Jeremy Irons, Diana Quick, Roger Milner, Phoebe Nicholls, Simon Jones
  • Writers: Charles Sturridge, Derek Granger
  • Format: Box set, Color, DVD, NTSC
  • Language: English
  • Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
  • Number of discs: 3
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Studio: Acorn Media
  • DVD Release Date: June 25, 2002
  • Run Time: 660 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (114 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00005JLG2
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #60,711 in Movies & TV (See Bestsellers in Movies & TV)

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    #88 in  Movies & TV > Military & War > International
  • For more information about "Brideshead Revisited" visit the Internet Movie Database (IMDb)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Fill a bowl with alpine strawberries, break out the Château Lafite (1899, of course), and bask in this benchmark 1981 British miniseries based on Evelyn Waugh's classic novel. Adapted for the screen by John Mortimer (Rumpole of the Bailey), this impeccable, nearly 11-hour production mesmerized American viewers during the course of its PBS run in 1982. In his breakthrough role, Jeremy Irons stars as Charles Ryder, a disillusioned Army captain who is moved to reflect on his "languid days" in the "enchanted castle" that was Brideshead, home of the aristocratic Marchmain family, whose acquaintance Charles made in the company of an Oxford classmate, the charming wild child Sebastian. Anthony Andrews costars as the doomed Sebastian, whose beauty is "arresting" and "whose eccentricities and behavior seemed to know no bounds." The "entitled and enchanted" Sebastian takes Charles under his wing ("Charles, what a lot you have to learn"), but vows early on that he is "not going to let [Charles] get mixed up with [his] family." But mixed up Charles gets. He becomes a friend and confidante, not to mention a lover, to Sebastian's sister Julia (Diana Quick). Meanwhile, the self-destructive Sebastian's life spirals out of control. Brideshead Revisited boasts a distinguished ensemble, including Laurence Olivier in his Emmy Award-winning role as the exiled Lord Marchmain, Claire Bloom as Lady Marchmain, and the magnificent John Gielgud as Charles's estranged father. Grand locations and a haunting musical score make this a memorable revisit of an irretrievable bygone era. For those who scheduled their weeks around the original Monday-night broadcasts or those visiting Brideshead for the first time, this boxed set release will be, as Charles rhapsodizes at one point while strolling the castle grounds, "very near to heaven." --Donald Liebenson

Product Description
Evelyn Waugh's classic novel of romantic yearning and loss became the universally acclaimed television serios that viewers on both sides of the Atlantic wished would never end. Set between the wars amid the fading glory of British Empire and great family fortunes, Brideshead is a story of youthful illusions, of exquisite earthly beauty and of divine grace. Starring Jeremy Irons and Anthony Andrews and featuring Diana Quick, Sir John Gielgud, Claire Bloom and the incomparable Laurence Olivier in an Emmy Award-winning performance.

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Customer Reviews

114 Reviews
5 star:
 (98)
4 star:
 (8)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (4)
1 star:
 (2)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (114 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
205 of 219 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The finest film made for television that I have ever seen., November 17, 2001
By Russell Fanelli (Longmeadow, MA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
Brideshead Revisited is the finest film made for television that I have ever seen. It is true to Evelyn Waugh's great novel. After watching this movie I bought the book and liked it as much as the videos. For those viewers who like to read, if you enjoyed the film you are almost certain to love the book.

After reading the novel, I viewed the tapes a second time and discovered that the movie was even better than I first thought.

What makes this video series great? The performances by a top flight cast are superb and the story is compelling. Jeremy Irons plays the part of Charles Ryder, an artist in search of his soul. His paintings are technially brilliant, but something is missing from them. An eccentric friend characterizes Ryder's work as full of "charm," and this evaluation is true -- the paintings are stylish, but soulless.

Anthony Andrews brings to life Ryder's Oxford college friend, Lord Sebastian Flyte, a spoiled royal trying to break free from the influence of his disfuntional family. Claire Bloom is his mother, Lady Marchmain, separated from his father, Sir Lawrence Olivier, Lord Marchmain. Bloom is cool and calculating and she drives young Sebastian to drink. He becomes an embarassing drunk which she seems pleased to attempt to reclaim from social and spiritual destruction.

Unlike his friend, Charles Ryder, Sebastian does have a soul which his mother seems detemined to destroy. It is only late in the film that Ryder realizes the machiavellian nature of Lady Marchmain, unlike Sebastian, who has understood his mother's nature all along. Ryder subverts her wishes by giving Sebastian money for alcohol and then Ryder makes a break with the family when his gift of money to Sebastian is discovered by her and she confronts Ryder with her muted, yet terrible anger.

Sir John Gielgud is brilliant as Ryder's disinterested father and we come to understand why Ryder lacks Sebastian's heart. Ryder grew up unloved and uncared for and he spends the rest of his life attempting to overcome his disabilty. His marriage to his first wife ends in divorce and he then falls in love with Lady Julia, Sebastian's sister. In the end Ryder's coldness, aloofness, and disdain for religion, something Julia and Sebastian hold dear, cause their breakup.

Last, but not least, the filmmakers have lavished great expense on all aspects of this production. The sets are superbly created to give us a true feel for the time and place in England at the time between the great wars. The music also deserves special mention. It beautifully supports the story and is worth listening to on its own merits. It stays in the listener's mind long after the drama is finished.

Can film ever stand comparison with great literaure? The Brideshead Revisited video series answers this question with a resounding "yes"!

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216 of 237 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Brideshead DVD Box Set is Excellent..., May 31, 2002
By A Customer
Through my own connections, I was able to obtain this item a month before its street date so you all get to know what you're getting.

The Brideshead DVD Box Set, while not perfect, is indeed excellent and I'll explain why.

As is increasingly the case, the actual disc carriages are part of a three leaved slide-out assemblage which folds up and then is stored in a case, just like with the Godfather DVD Box Set.

These case formats are an excellent way to fight piracy and look great but are not the best in in terms of long term box preservation as cardboard and photo-printed cardboard will degrade.

This release of Brideshead is the 660 minute version of the mini-series and I believe this is the longest and most complete version ever released!

The episode menus and scene selection are pretty, functional and fairly rudimentary, nothing exceptional here.

A little booklet with some director's commentary and info on Evelyn Waugh and the episodes is included.

There are no real DVD Special Edition type extras save for a brief but comprehensive written film/DVD production summary, info on Castle Howard, a cast/production team bio (Aloysius has his own entry and a hysterically funny news interview with the director about him), and some photography taken while shooting.

There are regrettably no interviews with the cast or production team, no director's commentary, and no deleted/extended scenes, though since we've all been forced to endure the butchered Home Video verson this as full as full can be version is in a sense full of them. There are no theatrical trailers or television spots.

Image quality is good and one thing that's mentioned in the production report is just how painstaking the video/audio restoration really was and how VERY lucky they -- and we -- were to be able to find the original film master in England and then clean it up.

Once again, and this is becoming a great joke in the film community, a US company picks up the distribution/restoration rights to a foreign country's film treasures and then releases the best version ever made outside the market it originated in. We did it to the Japanese with Macross and we did it to England with Brideshead Revisited.

This version of Brideshead looks better then the original did when it first came out for reasons explained on the DVD.

The video and audio restoration was very good given the age and condition of the original film master. It's a little grainy here and there but that would have been tough to avoid. They should have spread this out over more discs for the most optimal compression ratios and resulting images but you'll not be disappointed with the results.

If this title sells as well as it should, perhaps the American company that obtained and restored it can do a Special Edition version. For now, after all these years, Brideshead is where it belongs, on DVD and in my collection.

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46 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars No Improvement Over 2002 Acorn DVD Release, October 30, 2006
The only difference between this set and the original Acorn DVD release of 2002 (which was beautifully done) is the addition of the "Revisiting Brideshead" documentary and outtakes. The documentary is awful; the kind of thing that trivializes the work by superficial, self-inflated explanation from literary and media "experts" of things perfectly obvious to anyone who watches the series. I don't need a media critique telling me how perfect Anthony Andrews' performance was--I watched the series and saw so myself. I don't need to be instructed about the religious and sexual tension in the story--its there if you watch it. I was hoping the documentary would be conversation from the actors and crew about the filming, but I guess that would have been too simple. In fact, the several screens of text in the original DVD release that tell the story of the filming are much more interesting. This documentary is depressing, condescending and just stupid--I would skip it altogether.

As for the outtakes, not much there. The only real outtakes are Phoebe Nichols (Cordelia) dropping a couple of "f" bombs over missed cues, Anthony Andrews flubbing a line here and there and grainy footage of the cast and crew at horseplay. Again, not worth the purchase, but certainly more engaging than the documentary.

I see no reason for this anniversary edition--stick to the original Acorn release if you can find it. Much nicer packaging too.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Yearning For An England That Is No More
I did a revisit of 'Brideshead Revisited', the BBC 11 episode film that made television history. How many of us on Sunday evening sat mesmerized by Masterpiece Theatre of this... Read more
Published 6 days ago by prisrob

5.0 out of 5 stars the wounded, searching for love and finding it for a moment
This is an absolutely first rate version of a complex novel. It evokes an entire historical period, the last gasp of the British aristocracy before the Second World War. Read more
Published 17 days ago by Robert J. Crawford

5.0 out of 5 stars Bloody flawless
I watched this when it was first broadcast on PBS, taped it, and kept it for ages -- and bless my dear friend who gave me this wonderful 25th anniversary boxed set. Read more
Published 3 months ago by M. Elizabeth Wilson

5.0 out of 5 stars Five stars just does not cut it for this MASTERPIECE!
This is my review of the 2008 theatrical version;
Stick with the 1981 Granada television version. Yes, it's 13 episodes. Read more
Published 4 months ago by moviemusicman

5.0 out of 5 stars brilliant series-however the version I rented did NOT have one of the most entertaining lines in the entire series
Does anyone know where I can obtain a NO-DELETED-SCENES version ? One of my favorite lines from Anthony Blanche was OMITTTED on the DVD I rented yesterday. I am desole!! Read more
Published 5 months ago by W. graham

5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best literature-to-film adaptations ever
It would be easy to dismiss Brideshead Revisited as an escapist fantasy for those fascinated by an upper-class British life now gone forever, but this would be a mistake; this is... Read more
Published 5 months ago by A Reader

5.0 out of 5 stars BRIDESHEAD REVISITED: so good you'll revisit this set over and over and over
This 11-episode mini series is a must as the core portion of any British drama DVD collection. It shines on a level with "The Grand", "Monarch of the Glen", and "The Pallisers. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Harold Wolf

1.0 out of 5 stars bad merchandise
I RECEIVED THIS ITEM AND DISC TWO WAS BRROKEN!

IT WAS QUITE DISAPOINTING!
Published 7 months ago by Edward T. Curran

1.0 out of 5 stars ALTERNATIVE EVELYN WAUGH
I didn't see that TV show and I don't find any interest in the principle
of the thing. As british TV shows are usually first released as DVDs in
America, I wish for... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Olivier Comte

5.0 out of 5 stars Brideshead Revisited
Excellent addition to any DVD library. Evelyn Waugh is a brilliant writer. This series is true to his book.
Published 8 months ago by Sheila W. Hartwell

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Is this new version worth buying? 11 April 2009
does it has English subtitle? 5 March 2009
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