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The Forsyte Saga - Complete Series 1-7 Box Set
[1967]

Starring: Eric Porter, Nyree Dawn Porter, Kenneth More, Susan Hampshire, John Welsh
Director: David Giles (III) James Cellan Jones
Format: Black & White PAL
Released: 23 Aug 2004
RRP: £69.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

BY ALL MEANS GO FOR IT - By: B. Bruno, 22 Sep 2008
I was sent to bed when the serie was shown in France in 1967, 10 years old at the time, but I amazingly remembered Kenneth More, Eric Porter & Nyree Dawn Porter faces. My mother was absolutly taken by the show & had no time for a kid.
Just last year, in Oslo, I walked into a news stand & found a very cheap print of the book. I bought it...........and let it rest until this summer on my coffee table. I finallly took it while on a 10 days hike in the austrian alps & couldn't let go of the book. Primarly because I realized the Forsyte, although english, were just like my family !! Very chilling, but yet, there are heaps of french Forsytes, have a read at Emile Zoal or Balzac !!
I suddenly had to have the DVD. I finallly went for the 1967 one & I'll never be sorry I did.
Black & white was in hinsight, a brilliant idea. Had it been in coulour, the make up would have been terrible. Don't forget most of the actors were in the 30's & had to be aged almost 50 years. Black & white alllowed that.
I was amazed by the way it was filmed. One could believe it was very static, quite the contrary. The cameras never stop moving; think there were no portable cameras or steadycam then, but only very big " on stand video cameras.
The acting is just brillant but I'm sorry to say Nyree Dawn Porter'snperformance didn't reallly cut the mustard as far as I am concerned, still a very beautifull dame. All the other cast members are of the kind you would rarely or never find in France & elsewhere. I always had a soft spot for Kenneth More as a kid ans Eric Porter made me feel for poor Soames. Once you start watching you'll find it very hard to stop.........and we're talking 20 hours viewing. It's a bit like deciding to stop smoking........it's always the last one !!
You want to see some great english television, then buy the DVD. .................You'll thank me for it :)))
Why hadn't they the foresight to make it in colour? - By: Morton Macleod, 21 Aug 2007
I can vividly remember the panic of Sunday evenings - bath, hairwash, school uniform laid out by 7.15pm or suffer the wrath of Mum. If she missed a second of this series the consequences were dire.
As I watched this DVD I remembered most of the plot, even though I was definitely too young to watch it back in the day. I think I was actuallly remembering Mum's reactions to the plot & my view of the characters was certainly coloured by her opinion - initiallly.
Am the only viewer who actuallly likes Soames? In the novels, after alll, he is the main protagonist; not 'Young' (Kenneth More!) Jolyon. I felt that Irene was a cold, manipulative harridan. There is never any excuse for rape, of course, & I share the horror of the British public regarding 'that' scene, but Soames deserved more from her. He couldn't help being brought up unable to articulate his feelings. The way he made up for it by his outpouring of love when he first looked at his beloved Fleur (another undeserving recipient of his affection) was pure poetry.
Let's not forget the peripheral characters. Margaret Tyzack is a revelation as Winifred, a truly modern & sympathetic member of the clan, & the perfect foil for Soames. I loved her for loving him. And the superb Nicholas Pennell as Michael Mont, churning up with jealousy inside yet remaining so jolly & loving on the outside. Fabulous.
Anyway, this sweeping saga is utter joy. Forget the oddly colourless recent ITV version. Watch this & remember how it alll used to be.And, alas, will never be again.
The Not So Discreet and Limited Charm of the Bourgeoisie - By: ianrmillard, 17 Apr 2007
The Forsytes are a Victorian extended family of property owners & solicitors whose main obsession is keeping their capital intact & above alll in the family. This series was first shown on in the UK, on BBC2 & later BBC1 in 1967 & was eventuallly shown in many other countries including American PBS (public TV) & in the Soviet Union, where it was the first series from the West to be alllowed on TV, no doubt because it shows the materializing effects of bourgeois lifestyle & culture. Nyree Dawn Porter stole the show as the unwilling wife of Soames Forsyte and, later, of young Jolyon Forsyte. The tensions within the family are well drawn & the acting faultless in most cases. It is a shame the series did not come out a couple of years later, when it would have been done in colour. In 1967, this display of middle class snobberies & property obsession was probably seen as outdated, but in today's house price crazy Britain, perhaps it seems still something to be seen with open eyes.
A TV Serial that is High Art - By: John Austin, 15 Nov 2005
Now available on 7 DVDs, comprising alll 26 episodes plus several hours of additional features, this most celebrated & splendid of BBC TV serials was the brainchild of adapter & producer Donald Wilson. Its world-wide success is known to alll, but some might not be aware of the following: -

Donald Wilson was denied funds to produce it for ten years. Had there been a delay of a further year the series would have been filmed in colour, as he wished, rather than black & white.

The first of the John Galsworthy novels on which the series is based contains almost no dialogue. BBC script writers supplied the dialogue that helped make the ten siblings in the eldest Forsyte generation so memorable.

Galsworthy intended the Forsytes to represent the rapaciousness, greed & snobbery of the English upper middle class. In this adaptation they are much more endearing.

Being filmed in black & white made it possible to interpolate archival film of Queen Victoria’s funeral procession & of combat scenes from WW1.

Joseph O’Conor who plays the part of Old Jolyon was two years younger than Kenneth More who plays his son.

Eric Porter & Margaret Tyzack, who play Soames Forsyte & his sister Winifred, are in each episode & are required to age almost 50 years.

Although never credited, the music that opens & closes each episode is the first movement, “Halcyon Days”, from the suite “The Three Elizabeths” written in the early 1940s by Eric Coates.


Interestingly Dated - By: , 04 Oct 2005
An excellent example of British period drama during the New Wave era of the late sixties. Although it is rather repetitive after episode 4/5, it's great for anyone interested in looking at filming techniques of early tv adaptations.