LouHomey
From my favorite movies..
Dorathen
Better Late Then Never
Neive Bellamy
Excellent and certainly provocative... If nothing else, the film is a real conversation starter.
Marva-nova
Amazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.
lawnmorgan
The Village is an emotional workout. The British create period dramas and produce actors that paint pictures of period life. In modern day America, we have no clue of the hardships of WW I and II Europe. Dramas such as this gives us a glimpse.
stsassociates
This biographical drama unfolds through the eyes of Bert Middleton (a centurion survivor of World War 1). The series starts just prior to the war when he was a child in a small English town and portrays a very clear insight to that life and then beyond from the perspective of both rich and poor. It is honest to the point of soul destroying yet so real, humorous, empathetic and horrific that I cannot wait for the next showing. I predictably cry and smile in every show it is such an emotional drama, the best of BBC acting I have seen and most particularly Grace (Maxine Peake), I love her to bits and she is the woman and mother I would aspire to be. Suzie
tomgould749
This is undeniably excellent, even I cried at the end because it was so poignant although I won't give the plot away. What makes this so good is that unlike a lot of normal period dramas that depict the mainly upper classes classes of this period, this looks at almost every aspect of life in the village during this period despite primarily focusing on one particular family. I had the pleasure of visiting Derbyshire during the summer and was moved at how well it was depicted in this. The entire drama itself actually moved me to the point that it was something that I immediately wanted to see again. It shows that unlike the gloss of Downton Abbey, despite the fact that I do like that, life was actually very brutal for a large majority of people at the time. What makes this equally so moving is the fact that it left me with a certain numbness at the end and moved me to tears as though it reminded me of how precious life is and the beauty of England in equal measure.
Rosie Waine
I have just sat through the entire series in one evening. It was far from 'boring', in fact i found it to be one of the best things I've seen on the BBC all year. I have seen some comments on other sites which quibble over small inaccurate historical details - such as the Midlands bus in episode 1 - but I find that sort of critque nit-picky, especially if you take into account the FEEL of the show, in the way it is both acted and shot. I found myself loving and hating all the characters, trying to figure out what they'd do next, how they would cope with this or that. As for the show being 'depressing', well, quite honestly - what did someone watching a show about WW1 expect? You get what you sign up for. Yes, it is depressing, but its the kind of sad that makes your heart swell and your mind race, waiting impatiently for the next episode to start loading to see where they'll take us on this highly emotional journey. It felt dirty, beautiful and very real indeed. High props. Lovers of period drama, a MUST SEE.