IMDb > "In a Land of Plenty" (2001)

"In a Land of Plenty" (2001) More at IMDbPro »TV series


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Overview

User Rating:
8.8/10   12 votes
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Writers:

Kevin Hood (writer)
Tim Pears (novel)

Contact:

View company contact information for In a Land of Plenty on IMDbPro.

Seasons:

1 full episode list

Release Date:

10 January 2001 (UK) more

Genre:

Drama more

Plot:

Period drama showing the life of the Freeman family through 40 years, starting in 1952. full summary

Plot Keywords:

Awards:

1 nomination more

User Comments:

Plenty of visuals, ample emotion from the declining middle class more (2 total)


Cast

 (Series Cast Summary - 24 of 33)

Robert Pugh ... Charles Freeman (9 episodes, 2001)

Shaun Dingwall ... James Freeman (9 episodes, 2001)
Hazel Monaghan ... Mina (9 episodes, 2001)
Kaye Wragg ... Laura (9 episodes, 2001)

Garry Cooper ... Stanley (6 episodes, 2001)
Stuart Laing ... Robert Freeman (6 episodes, 2001)

Tony Maudsley ... Simon Freeman (6 episodes, 2001)
Sian Reeves ... Zoe Freeman (6 episodes, 2001)

Andrew Tiernan ... Gary (6 episodes, 2001)

Susannah Wise ... Alice Freeman (6 episodes, 2001)
Lorraine Ashbourne ... Edna (5 episodes, 2001)
Joseph Alessi ... Keith (5 episodes, 2001)
Elizabeth Estensen ... Rachel (5 episodes, 2001)
Julia Ford ... Sonia (5 episodes, 2001)
Ravi Kapoor ... Harry Ganatra (5 episodes, 2001)

Simon Slater ... Tinniswood (4 episodes, 2001)
Indira Varma ... Sonali Ganatra (4 episodes, 2001)

Helen McCrory ... Mary Freeman (3 episodes, 2001)
Kathleen Byron ... Agatha (3 episodes, 2001)
Caroline Carver ... Zoe (3 episodes, 2001)
John Cater ... Alfred (3 episodes, 2001)
Joseph Cole ... Lewis (2 episodes, 2001)

Charlotte Salt ... Teenage Laura (2 episodes, 2001)
June Watson ... Robbie (2 episodes, 2001)
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Additional Details

Runtime:

50 min (10 episodes)

Country:

UK

Language:

English

Color:

Color

Sound Mix:

Stereo


Fun Stuff

Trivia:

700 hopefuls appeared at an open audition for the show in Stoke-On-Trent. more


FAQ

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6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful.
Plenty of visuals, ample emotion from the declining middle class, 25 March 2002
Author: Philby-3 from Sydney, Australia

A 10 part adaptation is pretty rare these days, and this one certainly does justice to Tim Pears' book. The story of the Freeman family over 40 years is a sort of latter-day Forsyte saga, but a good deal rawer and less genteel; more like Thomas Manns' Buddenbrooks, perhaps. The film medium is exploited to the full and the literary origins well hidden. There is some wonderful photography, especially at night in and around the Freeman's ornate mansion. Seen mostly through the eyes of middle son James (Shaun Dingwall), whose solace is photography, the story is told in a very visual way, despite the occasional voice-over. Most of the acting is totally convincing, Robert Pugh's overbearing father, the doomed mother (Helen McCroy), screwed up kids each carrying psychic wounds despite the affluence and big Sunday dinners, and the servants, who play a crucial role in the family history.

Behind the family story is the historical background, particularly the social and economic changes in Britain since the Second World War. We go from the Macmillan Era ('you never had it so good') to the industrial conflict of the Thatcher years ('there is no such thing as society'), and we see the migrant influx and its effects and the decline (or at least loosening up) of the class system. But the family story is central here; a number of things contribute to the unhappiness but identifying them is not always easy. Simon (Tony Maudsley, brilliant), the oldest, being both gay and not suited for business is obviously going to have trouble with his father, who sees him in dynastic terms, and Simon, with artistic rather than practical abilities is not going to get on with him either. But it is not easy to explain Robert (Stuart Laing), the wildest and most destructive brother. He just seems bad from the beginning, and grows up worse. The daughters, for some reason, are less troubled.

Just why family relationships grow or wither is one of life's eternal mysteries, but it's certain they are not static, a point dynasts like Charles Freeman cannot grasp. They see families as extensions of themselves when in fact the members, like all of us, are water boatmen in the river of life. The emotions generated in this series ring very true, and remind us how little of our destiny we really control.

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