|
Sign In | Register | |
||
![]() ![]() ![]() |
||
|
Loading
Search our database of more than 4,500 film reviews. We have been discovering spiritual meanings in movies for nearly four decades. |
10 Spiritual Takes on Downton AbbeyBy Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat
We enrich our own lives when we look into the lives of others as they move through the different seasons of life; try to make sense of change; deal with success and failure, love and loss; and seek new pathways for their own personal expression. A good drama becomes a mirror of our everyday concerns and often our spiritual quests for healing and wholeness. The enthralling BBC series Downton Abbey is one such drama. There have been two seasons of this popular miniseries, running on ITV in the United Kingdom and PBS's Masterpiece Classic in the United States. The first season is available on DVD and Netflix instant streaming; the second season was released on DVD in early Febraury. The eighteen main characters include a wealthy family and their servants. Julian Fellowes, the creator and writer of the series, has fashioned good and bad, selfish and generous, tradition-bound and rebellious individuals both upstairs and downstairs. The rich are not protected from error, prejudice, or suffering, and the poor are not stopped by lack of money, limited possibilities for advancement, or their invisibility at the social engagements of the lords and the ladies. In Season I, we are transported back to England in 1912 and find ourselves impressed by the attention given to the clothing, the architecture, the politics and customs of the day, the luxuriousness estates, and the gap that yawns between the rich and the poor. In Season 2, World War I is raging and new challenges face these British men and women. Downton Abbey has swept us away with its astonishing quality in all departments of filmmaking. But, not surprisingly, what we are most attracted to are the elements of this drama that reveal us to ourselves, one mark of a "spiritual" experience. 1. We cherish the slow and unhurried emphasis on character development, a single-minded focus that encourages the viewer to pay attention to nuances of behavior.
|
• See our review of Season 1. • See our review of Season 2. • Visit the official U.S. site • Read Behind the Scenes with the Creator of Downton Abbey, Julian Fellowes |