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Return to Cranford (2009): A Sequel with Hiddleston Appeal

TV Series Review: Return to Cranford (2009)

Return to Cranford is a two-part miniseries from the BBC, a continuation of the popular miniseries Cranford from 2007. Again, the series is based upon and inspired by various Elizabeth Gaskell stories. And many of the same beloved characters from the first series have reprised their roles, not to mention the addition of some handsome and talented new faces.

Return to Cranford (2009): A Sequel with Hiddleston Appeal

Judi Dench, Imelda Staunton, Julia McKenzie, Francesca Annis, Jonathan Pryce, Celia Imrie, Alex Etel, Barbara Flynn, Tim Curry, Tom Hiddleston, Jim Carter, Michelle Dockery, and on and on it goes. A truly stellar cast.

As with the first series, there is romance and tragedy, deaths and births, reconciliations and fissures, jealousies and heartaches, new ways and old ways. Yes, a half-year in the life of the village of Cranford in the year 1844.

RELATED: CRANFORD (2007): A GEM OF A PERIOD PIECE ON COMMUNITY

Cranford Anno 1844

The railway is coming to Cranford. Captain Brown (Jim Carter) and Sir Charles Maulver (Greg Wise) are ensuring the train’s arrival, while desperately trying to convince Lady Ludlow (Francesca Annis) to part with some of her lands, so that the railway can come right into Cranford itself. Lady Ludlow refuses to sell, but she is ailing, and when her ne’er-do-well heir Septimus (Rory Kinnear) arrives, well, he has his own designs.

Matty Jenkyns (Judi Dench) has a full house. Her brother Peter (Nicholas Le Prevost) is home from India at long last, the maid Martha (Claudie Blakley), her carpenter husband Jem (Andrew Buchan) and their daughter Tilly also live there.  Not to mention, Mary Smith (Lisa Dillon) arrives as well for a visit.

The formidable ladies of the town – Miss Pole (Imelda Staunton), Mrs. Forrester (Julie McKenzie), Miss Tomkinson (Deborah Findlay) and the Honourable Mrs. Jamieson (Barbara Flynn), with Matty Jenkyns as their lead – still act as Cranford’s moral guardians/gossipmongers. They are all eagerly anticipating the arrival of Mrs. Jamieson’s relative, Lady Glenmire (Celia Imrie), but some pretentious aristocratic airs complicate that visit.

Young Harry Gregson (Alex Etel) is taking an education, but his impoverished roots make him the brunt of much hostility and ridicule. And the new railway means the eviction of his impoverished family from their little rowhouse.

RELATED: Cranford Book Review: An Enjoyable Classic

A wealthy widower Mr. Buxton (Jonathan Pryce) has returned to Cranford with his beautiful ward Erminia (Michelle Dockery) and his handsome, Eton-educated son William (Tom Hiddleston) in tow. This is duly noticed by the community at large, and soon the Buxtons are being introduced to the Bells. Peggy Bell (Jodie Whittaker) is the longsuffering and dutiful daughter to her woe-is-me, widowed mother (Lesley Sharp) and sister to her arrogant and ambitious brother Edward (Matthew McNulty). William and Erminia take a shine to Peggy and she to them. But Mr. Buxton enjoys the flattering of Edward Bell and offers him a job, insisting that any romantic entanglements between his son William and Peggy Bell are decidedly inappropriate and ill-advised.

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Yes, and on it goes. We’ve got forbidden love, raw ambitions, deceptions, embezzlement, births, deaths, marriages, accidents, family schisms, inaugural train rides. It’s a very eventful six months in Cranford. And it all ends up nicely wrapped in a big Christmas party.

A Tad Flat but Perked Up with Hiddleston Appeal

Return to Cranford is no Cranford. Despite the fantastic cast and the wonderful cinematography and costuming, well, it just lacks something. It feels forced somehow as if they’ve tried too hard to cram so much into this two-part miniseries, that it just feels too much – too maudlin, too melodramatic, just too, too much.

Yes, I still enjoyed it, and, yes, it’s still worth seeing. You’ll still laugh and cry and sigh. But it’s just not quite up there with its predecessor. Although Tom Hiddleston in period garb does boost its appeal (-:

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Content Note: Rated PG.

Where to Watch: BritBox, DVD and Amazon Video.

You can buy and/or rent on Amazon.


Photo Credits: BBC.

OVERALL RATING

Four corset rating

“Hello, Gorgeous.”

ROMANCE RATING

four heart rating

“In vain have I struggled. It will not do. My

feelings will not be repressed. You must allow me

to tell you how ardently I admire and love you.”

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By on November 30th, 2017

About Jessica Jørgensen

A lover of words, stories and storytellers since her youth and just plain curious by nature, Jessica embarked on a very long academic journey that took her across a continent (from Canada's west coast to its east) and even to the other side of the globe, where she currently lives an expat existence in Denmark. She now trails many fancy initials behind her name, if she ever cares to use them, and continues to be ever so curious. She's a folklorist, a mother, a wife, a middle child, a small town girl, a beekeeper, an occasional quilter, a jam-maker. She curates museum exhibits, gets involved in many cultural projects for this and that, collects oral histories when she can find the time and continues to love stories in all their many and varied forms. The local librarians all know her by name.

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