La vie de la pionnière LGBTQ + Anne Lister, journaliste mystérieuse et avide de savoir, qui retourne à Halifax, dans le West Yorkshire en 1832, bien déterminée à transformer le destin de son... Tout lireLa vie de la pionnière LGBTQ + Anne Lister, journaliste mystérieuse et avide de savoir, qui retourne à Halifax, dans le West Yorkshire en 1832, bien déterminée à transformer le destin de son foyer ancestral disparu, Shibden Hall.La vie de la pionnière LGBTQ + Anne Lister, journaliste mystérieuse et avide de savoir, qui retourne à Halifax, dans le West Yorkshire en 1832, bien déterminée à transformer le destin de son foyer ancestral disparu, Shibden Hall.
- Nominé pour le prix 2 BAFTA Awards
- 3 victoires et 13 nominations au total
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Gentleman Jack have a superb casting all over. However. Suranne Jones is in a league of her own, as always. Why she is not up there, among the great Hollywood stars, is probably because she is best known as a tv-actor. Put her in a drama next to anyone and Suranne will overshine anyone. Best actor ever!
I've been looking forward to this series. A story about strong confident women during a time when it wasn't fashionable to be so. I love the clever dialogue and how Ms Lister breaks the 4th wall and looks into the camera, as though you and she share a mutual amusement or secret. And best of all it's based on a real person from history.
HBO hit it out of the park with this. Stellar cast, stellar script & story based on the real Anne Lister who refused to be left behind in her time nor conform to what proper society thought a lady should be or do.
Leaves one to wonder how many other brave women stepped up like she did, but didn't leave a diary behind or no one cared enough to save it for prosperitys sake, sadly. I'd hate to think she's the only one.
Thank you HBO & BBC for bringing this to life. It's by far the best of period pieces we've had to choose from in a while...I applaude BBC for always getting behind great period pieces and HBO for supporting BBC this time round for bringing this wonderful series to fruition.
10novaleo
This series moves very quickly amidst the lush northern part of England. Ann Lister is a woman way ahead of her time, who gets what she wants. The characters are realistic and her personality is stunning, as portrayed by Suranne Jones. What a refreshing offering from HBO!
Season 2: 8/10. Season 2: 5/10
Gentleman Jack is based on the diaries of Anne Lister, an upper-class lesbian whose mannish clothes and manner perplexed the locals. Season one follows her wooing of the pretty, high-strung Ann Walker as well as her attempts to get into the coal mining business.
With its mines and good and bad nobles and soap operish love story, GJ is reminiscent of Poldark. Both series have a likable but sometimes horribly flawed lead and a bunch of really nice scenery.
Anne Lister is a rather unusual hero because in some ways she's terrible. She admirably flouts societal conventions, but only when it suits her. She doesn't believe in the rules if she doesn't like them, but she's a huge fan of the rules that make her part of the gentry, and while she has sympathy for the lower classes she clearly doesn't feel they should have much in the way of human rights beyond those she gifts them. She is a non-intersectional lesbian, and at times it is hard to like her. But brilliantly played by Suranne Jones, it's equally hard not to be fascinated by her.
Season 1 was well worth watching, but then came season 2.
While the first season had driving momentum, the second season seemed to wander about in aimless confusion. The whole season was basically devoted to an estate division, and when there were lengthy discussions of dividing plots of land it felt like some sort of land surveyor fan service. Plot lines started up and then the writers seemed to just forget about them. The series continued with the parallel lower-class story but at a certain point it just sort of drizzled out and disappeared (not that it was too interesting this season anyway).
It did have its moments. It was interesting to see Ann Walker slowly come into her own, and the final 10 minutes of the final episode was genuinely satisfying, even if it followed the unconvincing, contrived end of the estate nonsense. But I'm honestly not sad at all that it's been cancelled.
Still, great first season.
With its mines and good and bad nobles and soap operish love story, GJ is reminiscent of Poldark. Both series have a likable but sometimes horribly flawed lead and a bunch of really nice scenery.
Anne Lister is a rather unusual hero because in some ways she's terrible. She admirably flouts societal conventions, but only when it suits her. She doesn't believe in the rules if she doesn't like them, but she's a huge fan of the rules that make her part of the gentry, and while she has sympathy for the lower classes she clearly doesn't feel they should have much in the way of human rights beyond those she gifts them. She is a non-intersectional lesbian, and at times it is hard to like her. But brilliantly played by Suranne Jones, it's equally hard not to be fascinated by her.
Season 1 was well worth watching, but then came season 2.
While the first season had driving momentum, the second season seemed to wander about in aimless confusion. The whole season was basically devoted to an estate division, and when there were lengthy discussions of dividing plots of land it felt like some sort of land surveyor fan service. Plot lines started up and then the writers seemed to just forget about them. The series continued with the parallel lower-class story but at a certain point it just sort of drizzled out and disappeared (not that it was too interesting this season anyway).
It did have its moments. It was interesting to see Ann Walker slowly come into her own, and the final 10 minutes of the final episode was genuinely satisfying, even if it followed the unconvincing, contrived end of the estate nonsense. But I'm honestly not sad at all that it's been cancelled.
Still, great first season.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIn November 2016, screenwriter Sally Wainwright was awarded the £30,000 screenwriting fellowship grant from the charitable organisation the Wellcome Trust, in partnership with Film4 and the British Film Institute. Wainwright disclosed to the media that she was writing a drama series about the landowner, industrialist, and intellectual Anne Lister and would use the grant to further her research.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Granada Reports: 28 January 2020: Evening Bulletin (2020)
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