Bleak House with Gillian Anderson: DVD Cover
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Bleak House Director: Justin Chadwick, Susanna White Cast: Gillian Anderson, Patrick Kennedy, Carey Mulligan, Nathaniel Parker

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  • DVD Release Date: 02/28/2006
  • Original Release: 2005
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 3,409

Viewer Rating: (11 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Stylish" See All

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  • Editorial Reviews
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Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Bleak House
1. Jarndyce & Jarndyce [7:03]
2. The Heart of the Case [6:33]
3. Lodgings [4:36]
4. Judgement Day [8:42]
5. Whose Hand? [2:56]
6. A Perfect Child [5:53]
7. The Growlery [6:52]
8. Gallant Conduct [11:56]
1. Fortune Telling [5:39]
2. Inquest [8:31]
3. Lady's Maid [7:15]
4. Mr Bayham Badger [7:30]
1. An Engagement [6:54]
2. No Further Interest [6:13]
3. Jealousy [6:56]
4. Help for Lady Dedlock [8:36]
1. Lincolnshire [7:47]
2. Church [7:54]
3. Evidence [5:15]
4. A Present for Krook [7:57]
1. Discretion [7:49]
2. Gridley Needs Help [5:02]
3. Esther Gets a Maid [7:20]
4. Peace Warrant [8:42]
Disc #2 -- Bleak House
1. Mr George's Debts [7:15]
2. Miss Barbary [6:16]
3. News of Richard [5:37]
4. Private & Confidential [9:46]
1. Smallpox [6:56]
2. Worries [4:34]
3. Mr Krook's Inquest [7:21]
4. No Letters [10:04]
1. Duty to the Living [6:17]
2. Jarndyce Struggles With His Feelings [6:59]
3. The Ghost Walker [6:53]
4. Esther Learns the Truth [8:44]
1. Secrets [9:44]
2. The Letters Are Found [4:56]
3. Not at Libety to Say [5:41]
4. Consent Is Given [8:23]
1. Beware [7:25]
2. Guppy's Change of Heart [7:36]
3. Esther Refuses to Go [6:04]
4. So Many Expenses [7:49]
Disc #3 -- Bleak House
1. Esther & Ada Have Words [7:25]
2. Woodcourt Returns [7:36]
3. Jo Is Ill [6:04]
4. The Agreement Is Broken [7:47]
1. Clamb's Discovery [6:06]
2. Esther Visits Caddy [8:05]
3. Happy Birthday [6:04]
4. Savage Amusements [8:31]
1. Boiling Up Nicely [6:18]
2. A Letter [6:44]
3. Ada Has a Secret [6:27]
4. Hortense Has Evidence [9:25]
1. No Harm Done [6:10]
2. Fifty Fifty [8:40]
3. Lovey Dovey [5:46]
4. Find Her [8:17]
1. Resting Place [6:13]
2. Woodcourt Proposes [6:21]
3. A Good & True Will [7:37]
4. Everything's All Clear [8:48]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

A seemingly interminable lawsuit has mid-19th-century English high society all a-twitter, and its labyrinthine complications envelop a good many people. Among them is a brittle beauty, Lady Dedlock (Gillian Anderson), who guards a dark secret that makes her vulnerable to Tulkinghorn (Charles Dance), an unscrupulous, scheming lawyer. In recent decades Charles Dickens's Bleak House has become recognized as the true progenitor of the classic detective novel (an honor previously bestowed upon Wilkie Collins's The Moonstone), and in every way this marvelous BBC drama does justice to the original story. To begin with, it's been structured like an old-fashioned movie serial: 15 episodes, all but one a half hour in length. The novel's enormous "cast" has been retained, and the screenwriters have done an admirable job of giving the various characters their proper prominence in the narrative -- something that could never have been done in a two-hour feature film. The acting is beyond reproach; even the smallest part is played with perfect pitch, with Anderson (almost unrecognizable to fans as The X-Files' Dana Scully) and Dance being particularly effective among the principal players. Period décor has been perfectly captured, and careful lighting enhances the vaguely gothic atmosphere that makes the story nice and creepy. Telecast in the U.S. in early 2006 on PBS's Masterpiece Theatre, this elaborate production is a triumph from beginning to end. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

OUTSTANDING!by Anonymous

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February 14, 2009: I couldn't stop watching. Beautifully filmed, very true to the novel with a superb cast. Gillian Anderson was so immersed in the role, I didn't know it was her for the first half hour.

Reluctant Reviewerby nazareth62

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February 09, 2009: I review this film reluctantly because I know that with the exception of Scrooge quite of bit of Dickens work involves the darker side of things. With that said this adaptation or any other probably has an audience that's already built in. It's the kind of story that one is either interested in or isn't. This particular version for those who are interested is absolutely magnificent! Some may even like it for it's soap opera qualities. Must possess the ability to focus on the film-not the kind of story you can run out on every 5 minutes!


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