This captivating drama from the makers of Broadchurch and Apple Tree Yard explores forbidden wartime love vividly contrasted with a present-day romance nearly derailed by the consequences of the 1940s tale with which it is so intertwined. Written by best-selling author Patrick Gale, Man in an Orange Shirt features an exciting cast of outstanding young stars alongside Oscar winner Vanessa Redgrave.Southern Italy, 1944: As chaos reigns all around them, British Army Captain Michael Berryman meets war artist Thomas March. Despite having a young fiancée, Flora, straight-laced Michael finds himself falling for Thomas' bohemian charms; their relationship, however, is made impossible by societal pressures.2017: In a more accepting world, an ageing Flora looks on as her grandson Adam tentatively forms a relationship with his client Steve. But while the external obstacles have fallen away, a minefield of internalised issues and dangerous temptations still line the road to happiness...
M**Y
SUPERB FILM SADLY CUT BY PBS -- DETAILED INFO ON CUTS
Five stars for the film itself! 0 stars for PBS!This is a deeply haunting and exquisitely beautiful film, well cast, slickly produced, achingly moving, and far above the usual television fare. I saw the original British version and quite fell in love with it. It is, I believe, arguably, a better film than either CALL ME BY YOUR NAME or GOD'S OWN COUNTRY (although I do love those). In fact, I loved it so much that I bought the original British DVD since I have a multi region player. I've probably watched the original British cut at least 15 times. When it aired on PBS I knew the film so well that I noticed that some dialog was missing from PBS's version. Since other reviews have dealt with the plot and story, I will not go into that here but will give you the lowdown about the cuts in the PBS version presented on this blu-ray product.In order to compare the two versions, I set up two monitors and two players side by side. One ran the PBS version as aired, and the other monitor ran the original British DVD, both in sync so that I could spot EXACTLY what was missing. Below is a summary of my findings. I wish that I could list all 44 cuts with explanations of each, but I'm sure a review that lengthy is not allowed here, so I will summarize with selected examples. (Be aware of possible SPOILERS. Time numbers are approximate and are based on the British DVD running time-- your counter may not show the same).The BAD NEWS is that there are at least 44 cuts or alterations made by PBS (I counted 44, but some could be counted as two). This speaks horribly of PBS's respect for their audience. The film aired on PBS in a full two-hour time slot so *no edits were necessary due to time constraints* since the original full version of the film falls well short of two hours anyway. Thus, it was NOT necessary to cut the film for time.The GOOD NEWS is that most of the cuts, while maddening to say the least, are minor and are not substantive to character, story, or understanding/enjoyment of the film. So this blu-ray, although cut, is not necessarily a bad choice unless you are really a purist.[Note: The original British version contains several "rear" shots of bare behinds. PBS has cut these (or, in one case, darkened the picture so much that it cannot really be seen). Apparently PBS thinks adult Americans cannot handle a bare behind. ]Here are just a few selected examples of the more "minor" cuts:Cut #1 - (1:39) ) During the chaotic battle scene Michael shouts to another soldier, "Aim at the olive groves until the others get through to relieve us!" This line was cut by PBS (why?? what possible reason could there be to cut this?) CONCLUSION: a maddening cut, but NOT substantive to the scene or programCut #5 - (10:22) When Lucien steps out of his shop to meet Michael on the street, in the original Lucien says, "I'm Lucien-- landlord, watchdog, purveyor of shade to the gentry. Who are you?" PBS cut this so that Lucien merely says, "I'm Lucien. Who are you?" (does PBS think we don't know what "gentry" is? also lost is Lucien calling himself "watchdog" which he later proves as he looks out for Thomas in prison by meeting Michael at the pub and again when he picks up Thomas upon Thomas' release from prison. Also lost is the fact that Lucien is the landlord. Why cut this??). CONCLUSION: an amazingly stupid cut but NOT essential information.Cut#14. (42:15) Mrs. March (Thomas' mother) remarks to Michael about Thomas' beard: "His father did that [ie, grew a beard] once for Ibsen. Does it suit him?" PBS cut the Ibsen line, which told us that Thomas' father was evidently an actor. CONCLUSION: not crucial information, so NOT substantive to the overall understanding of the scene (yet why oh WHY cut this??)Cuts #18 & 19 (54:00-55:06) PBS cut several shots of the department store employee looking across the room at Michael and making flirtatious eye contact. This is not substantive to the overall scene, as we still understand what is happening, yet it is maddening to think that PBS thinks that a bit of understated same-sex flirting is too much for adult American audiences to handle. (!!) And, yes I have to say it in this instance--- one cannot help but wonder if these cuts would have been made had the participants been male and female.And here are some examples of the more IMPORTANT things which PBS cut:Cut #4 (9:35) - After the war, when Michael gets off the bus in London, cut by PBS was a significant approx. 5 second shot of postwar heterosexual couples on the street openly hugging and kissing as they are reunited (as Michael steps down from the bus and studies his street directions for a moment). CONCLUSION: THIS IS A substantive change because the idea behind this shot is that post-war HETEROsexual public displays of affection were permitted, encouraged, and condoned--right on the sidewalk. In contrast, Michael has to reunite with Thomas in a dingy, dark upstairs storage room (Lucien's upstairs) and then flee to the country in order to express affection.Cut#15 - (49:04) After Flora's sister tells her that she saw Michael with a suitcase and Flora calls his work and says "Oh, his wretched teeth. How stupid of me to have forgotten", PBS cut the rest of this scene, almost 30 seconds (!!) in which baby Robert continues to scream in his playpen and Flora screams back at him angrily and goes over and shakes the playpen up and down violently with Robert in it. Then, realizing what she's done, she picks Robert up in her arms and sobs, "I'm sorry, I'm sorry". CONCLUSION: This is substantive for several reasons, not the least of which is that it links importantly with a scene in part two when, at the dinner table, Flora implies to Adam that she was a bad mother to his father (Robert), but got a second chance with him (Adam).Cut#16 - (51:30) PBS cut an approximately 20 second scene in which Michael comes home (after failing to meet Thomas upon his release from prison) and Michael tenderly and lovingly greets baby Robert, squatting down to Robert's playpen level and gently caressing his head. CONCLUSION: THIS IS SUBSTANTIVE for it answers Flora's previous angry question "Are you even safe around children?" and it is ALSO important as Michael's loving way with the baby contrasts sharply with Flora's angry and abusive shaking of the playpen (see 15. above), also cut by PBS.Cut#25 - (12:06) Cut was this important dialog relative to character: Adam (showing nude phone photo to Claudia): "Is that the [...] of a serial killer?" Claudia: "This is so not okay. You're leaving a table of friends just to [...] a complete stranger!" This is a SIGNIFICANT cut as this is a major thesis statement of Adam's character!Cut #39 - PBS Cut Adam saying to Steve: "Flora's SO not a granny". This is important for us to see how adam views Flora, especially in light of their violent words in a later sceneCut#44 - Cut 25 second conversation between Adam and Steve. Adam asks: "Could you ever imagine having kids with me?" and they discuss it. This is important as it shows that Adam has been thinking about settling down from his hook-up lifestyle and it is this thinking that makes his ending resolution with Steve plausible.Those are just a few selected examples. So, yes, there were some important things cut, but nothing that was absolutely crucial to one's understanding of the program as a whole. If you have a multi-region DVD player, I would encourage you to just buy the DVD from Amazon in Britian in order to get the uncut version, unless you have a large screen and really need the increased resolution of blu-ray (unfortunately, at this writing, there is no British blu-ray) . If you need the resolution of blu-ray go ahead and buy this version. The cuts are absolutely maddening, and are a real insult to PBS's audience; but they are mostly snippy, and are overall not significant enough to impede your enjoyment or understanding of this beautiful film. Yet, finally, one must still exclaim, "Shame, shame on PBS!" They could at least have released the original version on the blu-ray, if not on-air!
Q**T
UK versus PBS
From reading the previous customers’ comments, I saw that one person believed the PBS version to be sanitized while another customer said the UK version and the PBS blu-ray was exactly the same. I decided to do a comparison and viewed the UK version, the PBS DVD, AND the PBS Blu-ray.The PBS DVD and PBS Blu-ray were one and the same inspite of the NC-17 rating that accompanied the Blu-ray. They were indeed cleaned up when it came to nudities and profanities that were in the original UK version. The nude scenes were either edited or the frame cropped so that only the upper body was in view. In one scene, it was darkened so that it appeared as if the character was wearing something.But what seemed baffling is that certain minor scenes were also edited out of the PBS version. For example, there was a scene that showed Michael bringing Thomas’s painting back to the cottage. From the PBS version, we know that Flora took the painting down in their flat and forced Michael to get rid of it. Part 2 showed Adam finding the painting in the cottage but it wasn’t clear how it got there. This little scene linked everything together.The scene where Michael comes back to his flat and breaks down on The stairs, the next scene you see in the PBS version is Michael going back into his flat with his bowler on his head and Flora was folding some laundry. Michael starts speaking to Flora but his bowler mysteriously disappeared showing a break in continuity. In the UK version, Michael goes back into his flat, takes his bowler off and bends down to play with his son by the playpen. Flora stops folding her laundry and walks out to pick up Michael’s suitcase and walks into the bedroom to unpack his clothes. Michael then realizes that Flora knew about his plan to leave her. He walks to the bedroom door and starts speaking. The PBS version got away with the cut because Flora’s folding laundry and her putting clothes away from the suitcase looks very similar so most viewers will not realize that in actuality she was doing so in two different rooms.In Part 2, there was a scene when Steve brought his sketches to the veterinary office to see Adam. Adam asked Steve to meet him at the cafe down the street. In the PBS version, the next scene was Adam flipping through the sketches in the cafe saying “ they’re beautiful “. In the UK version, it actually shows Adam going into the cafe and Steve saying “I thought you weren’t going to come” before flipping through the sketches.These are just a few examples of the cut but it doesn’t take away from the power of the overall story. Personally I like originals so if I had the choice, I would choose the UK version.
D**R
A Masterpiece with a social message
I loved this two part series.Primarily, the theme of Man in the Orange Shirt is expression of love between two men. There are two generations, the first in the 1940s and the second in current time. Society pressures were such in the 1940s that a man simply did not/could not have an open romantic relationship with another man. So the two main characters have a brief intense affair--and then part.Fast forward two generations--and we meet the grandson of the one man in the 1940s relationship. Times have changed--gay relationships are no longer criminalized. However, there is a tinge of shame that some men feel--so when we meet the grandson we realize that while he acknowledges his sexual identity, he misconstrues how to relate. He engages in frenzied hasty sex. Until he meets a man to whom he is attracted.The connection between the two parts of the story is the wife of one man in the 1940s (he had married one of the men in the initial story without knowing he was gay) and now grandmother to the younger generation. When the wife learned her husband was gay, she made a pact to remain married on the condition her husband NEVER reveal his sexual preference. The view of homosexuality in the first generation is a strong tinge of shame for both of them--husband and wife.The second generation is the grandson, who lives with his grandmother--the wife of the man in the first generation. The grandson conceals his sexuality from his grandmother (not because he knows his father's history) thinking she will not understand. Eventually, the grandson learns of his grandfather's sexual identity. The revelation that draws these stories together is a wonderful affirming message.Love is love.Well-acted, beautifully portrayed setting, compelling story line--what's not to like?
J**N
Heart touching
A very well done dvd. Heart touching and sad but gives you hope.
H**R
A great love story
A love story that transcends time.
T**5
Amours contrariées
Belle série américaine dans laquelle 2 hommes tombent amoureux l’un de l’autre. L’un des deux est marié pour sauver les apparences et sa femme ne sait rien, jusqu’à ce qu’elle se doute qu’il y a "quelque chose" entre son mari et son ami. Après quelques péripéties, l’histoire se finit bien et les deux hommes se retrouvent ensemble dans un appartement assez modeste mais où ils sont heureux.
M**O
Emozionante
Una mini serie tv assolutamente fantasticaUna storia ben scritta: una rievocazione romantica di un amore proibito è il parallelismo con la nascita di un sentimento nei giorni odierniAttori molto braviVanessa Redgrave magnificaDa vedere assolutamente
S**R
Orange Shirt DVD.
Great film.
Trustpilot
5 days ago
2 weeks ago