North & South
Front Cover
Rating:
25.025.025.025.025.0
Medium:
DVD
Release Date:
11/15/2005
Theatrical Date:
7/2/2005
Date Imported:
9/24/2009
List Price:
$29.98
Genre:
Romance
Studio:
BBC Warner
Cast:
Denby-Ashe, Daniela / Armitage, Richard / Pigott-Smith, Tim / Cusack, Sinéad / Coyle, Brendan
Audience Rating:
NR (Not Rated)
Aspect Ratio:
1.33:1
DVD Region:
1
Running Time:
233
Format:
Closed-captioned / Color / DVD / NTSC
Language:
English (Original Language) / English (Subtitled)
EAN:
9781419821004
ISBN:
1419821008
UPC:
794051245328
Description:

Description DVD Features:
Audio Commentary:Commentary on Episodes 1 and 4 by producer Kate Bartlett, director Brian Percival and writer Sandy Welch
Biographies:Cast bios
Deleted Scenes
Interviews:Specially recorded interview with Richard Armitage
Production Notes

Amazon.com North & South is a splendid, four-hour adaptation of Elizabeth Gaskell's 19th century novel about an unlikely, and somewhat star-crossed, love between a middle-class young woman from England's cultivated south and an intemperate if misunderstood industrialist in a hardscrabble, northern city. Daniela Denby-Ashe plays Margaret Hale, forthright and strong-willed daughter of a former vicar (Tim Pigott-Smith) who relocates his family from a pastoral village outside London to unforgiving, largely illiterate Milton, a factory town where John Thornton (Richard Armitage) and his mother (Sinead Cusack), survivors of poverty, rule their cotton mill with an iron hand. Thornton befriends Margaret's father but incurs her wrath for his severity with his workers. What she doesn't notice is Thornton's core sense of responsibility for his employees' welfare. On the other hand, he misinterprets some of Margaret's own actions and intentions. Equally stubborn, the two drag out their obvious attraction over many painful months and events.

North & South's two leads are both very good, though Armitage's brooding, penetrating performance may very well be considered a classic one day. There are other wonders in the cast: Cusack and Pigott-Smith are superb, and Brendan Coyle is memorable as a firebrand union organizer who ultimately becomes an ally to a softening Thornton. The miniseries script by Sandy Welch is a persuasive mix of historical context and character study. Brian Percival's direction is full of moments that linger in the imagination, such as the winter-dream look of a busy cotton mill, with thousands of snowy fibers floating in the air. --Tom Keogh

Average Customer Rating:
5.0
Notes:
[10/1/2009] Flag changed to “1-month loan to Ann beginning 10/1/2009”