Bleak House

2005

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1
8.3| NA| en| More Info
Released: 27 October 2005 Ended
Producted By: BBC
Country: United Kingdom
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007z7jx
Info

The generous John Jarndyce, struggling with his own past, and his two young wards Richard and Ada, are all caught up, like Lady Dedlock, in the infamous case of Jarndyce vs. Jarndyce, which will make one of them rich beyond imagination if it can ever be brought to a conclusion. As Tulkinghorn digs deeper into Lady Dedlock's past, he unearths a secret that will change their lives forever, and which is almost as astounding as the final outcome of the Jarndyce case.

Genre

Drama

Watch Online

Bleak House (2005) is now streaming with subscription on Prime Video

Director

Production Companies

BBC

AD
AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime.
Watch Now
Bleak House Videos and Images
View All

Bleak House Audience Reviews

Alicia I love this movie so much
Reptileenbu Did you people see the same film I saw?
Crwthod A lot more amusing than I thought it would be.
Bergorks If you like to be scared, if you like to laugh, and if you like to learn a thing or two at the movies, this absolutely cannot be missed.
chengiz This felt like a low budget adaptation. The sets and production values were not very good. The music was awful. Dull camerawork too and what's with the closeups? Is that to hide the poor production? Some good acting (Timothy West as Sir Leicester, Burn Gorman as Guppy, Charles Dance as Tulkinghorn, Denis Lawson as John Jarndyce) saved the series. Anna Maxwell Martin as Esther Summerson initially gives the vibe of Jennifer Ehle in the excellent Pride and Prejudice, but pretty soon it's evident she's not quite in that league. The worst acting in the miniseries is by Gillian Anderson. She must have read somewhere that a stiff neck and sideways glance and slightly open mouth makes you a lady. By the end I wanted to forward every scene she was in because I couldnt take it anymore.
johannes2000-1 Well, I don't say this often, but in this BBC-series I have met with sheer perfection! Everything - direction, script, dialogues, actors, photography, settings, costumes - is of the highest quality, better than this seems not possible. The BBC has a long-standing tradition of high standard renditions of classic British literature to television, but this production proves that such a tradition does not necessarily mean a stand-still, in many aspects it's quite modern. The editing is sharp and fast-paced, and they cut the whole production in short episodes of just a half hour with a cliff-hanger at every closure, which enhances the pulse of the story and suits the suspense and who-done-it-aspects very fine. Of course they are greatly helped by the novel of Dickens itself, which is in my opinion one of his best and most compelling. Bleak House has everything that a Dickens-novel should have: an involving story, great characterizations, an abundance of figures who are either hilarious (young Guppy and his mother, Mr. Turveydrop), extremely sinister (attorney Tulkinghorn, old Smallweed, slimy Skimpole) or endearing (Mrs. Flite, little Jo), and a very outspoken criticism on the abominable situation of the poor underclass of London. But Bleak House gives you even more: a story of crime and deceit with many intricate layers; a poignant story of class differences and the tangled ways in which the protagonists deal with these; and last but not least a story of love and sacrifice.The novel has some 1000 pages and even in a series of more than 7 hours it's impossible to do it all justice, so the makers had to make choices. Some of the secondary stories were minimized and I can understand that this hurts the scrupulous Dickens-lover. The Turveydrops for instance, or the relation between sergeant George and his friend Phil Squod are hardly touched-at. But you have to give the makers credit for trying to fit it all in anyway, albeit at times a tiny bit too cramped. As to the acting, I don't even know where to begin my praise. You keep wondering how the BBC does it: they seem to have picked the ideal actor for every character! Of course the central characters of the story stand out the most. Anna Maxwell Martin is perfect as the intelligent and civilized Esther, who always keeps her chin up, in spite of all the physical (smallpox!) and personal drama's the befall her. Denis Lawson is her wise and fatherly guardian who secretly hopes for more and has to maneuver delicately to not frighten her away and who in the end sacrifices his personal happiness for that of Esther. And Carey Mulligan and Patrick Kennedy do a fine job as the ill-fated Jarndyce-wardens; especially Kennedy convincingly plays a charming but slightly whimsical airhead who lets himself, through ill advice, be dragged into the mud of a (literally) life-consuming law-suit. Charles Dance is hair-raisingly sinister as the devious and machiavelistic attorney Tulkinghorn: ice-cold, unrelenting, full of ambition and fueled by hatred and envy of the upper-class, that he outwardly serves but in fact controls. What a marvelous actor Dance is, he has this enormous screen-presence and in whatever part you see him (like now in Game of Thrones) he always excels and fills-up every scene with his personality. But greatest surprise to me was Gillian Anderson as lady Lockwood. Every time she stepped (or better: floated) into the scene it made you sit on the edge of your chair. Her timeless and classical beauty, her majestic stature, her aloof expression, while in her eyes her fear of being found-out as a fraud and a start-up shone through, everything about her was breathtaking. I don't know what made them turn to her: an American actress with at that time (as far as I can see) no comparable productions in her résumé, but it was a choice made in heaven!Virtually all the smaller parts deserve equal praise, so it seems almost like an injustice to point-out only some of them. Alun Armstrong is absolutely great as the Columbo-like inspector Bucket, over-polite but very steadfast; Armstrong makes his character more than just comically annoying, this really is an inspector that one cannot trifle with. Philip Davis plays the dreadful and perfidious Mr. Smallweed to perfection, every scene with him ("Shake me up, Judy!!") oozes greed, evil and an almost tangible foul smell. And last but by no means least: Burn Gorman as Mr. Guppy. Gorman very believably makes Guppy hilarious, endearing and a brave warrior for justice all in one, Gorman's Guppy really is the comical backbone of this series, I was every episode hoping and waiting for Mr. Guppy to pop-up and to make me laugh out loud again. All the nervous tics and twinges, his pompous way of speaking, his love-sick wooing of Esther, his frustration with his giggling mother, it was all done by Gorman (I have to use the phrase yet again) to perfection! Oh, just let me name yet another one: Timothy West as sir Leicester Deadlock. His part was maybe small, but he was totally convincing as the old-school aristocrat who is at first just exasperated by all the trifles and sordid affairs of the common people, but later on breaks your heart as the forlorn husband who desperately longs to be reunited again with his beloved wife. West was equally great in both capacities, but his portrayal of the latter was deeply moving. In short, greatly, greatly recommended!!
marspeach I was wary about watching this because I find Dickens so hard to read. I'm still trying to make my way through this book but he is so wordy that it seems to take me forever and I usually end up giving up. Don't worry about any of that with this miniseries, though. It is EXCELLENT. It was long but it held my interest the entire time with suspense, drama, romance, and comedy. There's really something for everyone. The acting was also excellent. My one complaint, though it may just be due to my TV, was that some scenes were shot a bit too dark so it was hard for me to see what was going on.
pekinman 450+ minutes of a film is a long time to have your breath taken away but that's what happened when I first watched this magnificent adaptation of my favorite Dickens novel 'Bleak House.'I always liked the earlier version starring Denham Elliot, Diana Rigg and Peter Vaughan, but this new version, adapted by Andrew Davies is superlative to the former in every way. For one thing it is more complete. The earlier version left out several characters altogether and glossed over most of the high emotion. I'm not always a fan of Davie's work but Bleak House is a masterpiece of screen adaptation, even better than his Moll Flanders, which has long been one of my old standbys for a rainy evening or two.Anna Maxwell Martin looks unprepossessing with her whey-face and funny lisp, but quickly her strength and intelligence waylay any doubts as to her being nigh-perfect as Esther Sommerson.The only minor quibble with her in this role is that she looks nothing like Gillian Anderson's Lady Dedlock or John Lynch's Captain Hawdon, Esther's parents. This hardly matters in the face of some of the greatest acting I've seen come out of England on film over many years, and that is saying something.As an Illinoisian I am proud to claim the beautiful and brilliant Gillian Anderson as a fellow traveler, she is from Chicago. Her Lady Dedlock is fascinating and goddess-like yet possessing a deeply human spark that she has buried under years of keeping her dark secret.Bleak House is about secrets. It is a deep story, full of tragedy and human comedy at once. The villains are vile, notably Charles Dance's Mr Tulkinghorn. It isn't that Mr Tulkinghorn is evil, we create evil or reject it, but that he is just a cold cold human being who lives solely by the law, the ever-increasing book of the law that weighs down the human spirit and kills in the end. This is the best thing Charles Dance has done. The entire cast is beyond reproach, and with two classic performances by Burn Gorman, the very embodiment of Mr Guppy, and Pauline Collins' bird-like Miss Flyte, I can't imagine Bleak House ever being more perfectly cast.Even the cat playing Mr Krook's Lady Jane is a brilliant actor. I love cats but this is the most butt-ugly feline I have ever laid eyes upon. She looks like a cross between a bulldog and a toilet bowl brush, hisses on cue, flops over and groans, all with perfect timing. She glares malevolently with great meaning and comprehension and appears in almost every episode. A great performance. There are some powerfully emotional scenes, not in a manipulative sense but in a deep, spontaneous sense. Anna Maxwell Martin and Gillian Anderson are dynamite, and their one and only scene together is second only to Jo's Death in impact.Being Dickens there is also some fine humor along the way. Alas, some villains are allowed to get away with their wickedness, like the vile Mr Smallweed (Phil Davis is horribly fabulous as the seedy old money-grubber) and the good suffer horribly. It's hard-hitting stuff, Bleak House, and very pertinent to our times.The cinematography, music, costumes, everything are great.I can't think of a greater Dickens film adaptation. If you love his books you will want this set. If you don't know Dickens but like A Christmas Carol with Alastair Sim then this Bleak House may be the entryway to the deeper worlds of Charles Dickens.