Splendour and romance, desire and heartbreak, scandal and rumours Spanning the idyllic pre-war era through the storms of The Great War and beyond to the roaring 1920s, Downton Abbey tells the story of a complicated community. Home to the Crawley family for generations, it is also where their servants live, plan and dream and they are as fiercely jealous of their rank as anyone. Some of them are loyal to the family and committed to Downton as a way of life, others are moving through on the lookout for betterment or love or just adventure. The difference is that they know so many of the secrets of the family, while the family know so few of theirs. But for all the passions that rage beneath the surface, this is a secure and ordered world and, at first glance, it seems it will last forever. Little do they know, family or staff, that the tides of change will not leave Downton unscathed. SERIES ONE BONUS DELETED SCENES HOUSE IN HISTORY DOWNTON ABBEY THE MAKING OF DOWNTON ABBEY SERIES TWO BONUS EPISODE ONE COMMENTARY DELETED SCENES HOUSE TO HOSPITAL FASHION AND UNIFORMS ROMANCE IN A TIME OF WARFARE SERIES THREE BONUS DOWNTON ABBEY IN 1920 LADY MARY'S WEDDING DAY LADY EDITH'S WEDDING DAY THE MEN OF DOWNTON ABBEY AN INTERVIEW WITH SHIRLEY MACLAINE BEHIND THE SCENES THE CRICKET MATCH SERIES FOUR BONUS THE MAKING OF THE DOWNTON DIARIES NEW ARRIVALS SERIES FIVE BONUS THE ROARING TWENTIES A DAY WITH LADY ROSE BEHIND THE SCENES - DAY 100 THE MANNERS OF DOWNTON ABBEY SERIES SIX BONUS MORE MANNERS OF DOWNTON ABBEY THE CARS OF DOWNTON FAREWELL HIGHCLERE CHANGING TIMES LEGACY DISC ONE FEATURE DOCUMENTARY: THE STORY OF DOWNTON ABBEY THE CREATOR'S FAVOURITE SCENES SUPERCUTS LEGACY DISC TWO CHARACTER DOCUMENTARIES BAFTA CELEBRATES DOWNTON ABBEY
A stupendous historical saga, Braveheart won five Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Director for star Mel Gibson. He plays William Wallace, a 13th-century Scottish commoner who unites the various clans against a cruel English King, Edward the Longshanks (Patrick McGoohan). The scenes of hand-to-hand combat are brutally violent, but they never glorify the bloodshed. There is such enormous scope to this story that it works on a smaller, more personal scale as well, essaying love and loss, patriotism and passion. Extremely moving, it reveals Gibson as a multitalented performer and remarkable director with an eye for detail and an understanding of human emotion. (His first directorial effort was 1993's Man Without a Face.) The film is nearly three hours long and includes several plot tangents, yet is never dull. This movie resonates long after you have seen it, both for its visual beauty and for its powerful story. --Rochelle O'Gorman
Employed as a night-nurse for the ailing Mr Cunningham, young carer, Emma, arrives at an isolated house in the English countryside for her first shift, expecting an uneventful evening ahead. But stepping inside the house, and left alone with her silent, new patient, Emma is unable to shake a growing sense of dread. As the night draws on, unease blossoms into terror as signs of a supernatural presence grow increasingly harder to ignore. Desperate to escape the premises, yet unwilling to leave the old man behind, Emma is forced to confront the dark secrets which lie buried in the house secrets that drive her towards an appalling revelation. A disturbingly clever, dark psychological horror from Director David Holroyd (WMD, Bad Girls, The Bill), starring Sophie Stevens (The Black Prince), Kirstie Steele (Waterloo Road, Glasgow Girls) and Nick Bayly (Goodnight Sweetheart, Emmerdale).
A stupendous historical saga, Braveheart won five Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Director for star Mel Gibson. He plays William Wallace, a 13th-century Scottish commoner who unites the various clans against a cruel English King, Edward the Longshanks (Patrick McGoohan). The scenes of hand-to-hand combat are brutally violent, but they never glorify the bloodshed. There is such enormous scope to this story that it works on a smaller, more personal scale as well, essaying love and loss, patriotism and passion. Extremely moving, it reveals Gibson as a multitalented performer and remarkable director with an eye for detail and an understanding of human emotion. (His first directorial effort was 1993's Man Without a Face.) The film is nearly three hours long and includes several plot tangents, yet is never dull. This movie resonates long after you have seen it, both for its visual beauty and for its powerful story. --Rochelle O'Gorman
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