L'avocat Peter Kingdom, avec l'aide de son apprenti Lyle et de la secrétaire Gloria, dirige un petit cabinet juridique à Market Shipborough pour les excentriques de Norfolk.L'avocat Peter Kingdom, avec l'aide de son apprenti Lyle et de la secrétaire Gloria, dirige un petit cabinet juridique à Market Shipborough pour les excentriques de Norfolk.L'avocat Peter Kingdom, avec l'aide de son apprenti Lyle et de la secrétaire Gloria, dirige un petit cabinet juridique à Market Shipborough pour les excentriques de Norfolk.
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I came across this show, on youtube.com, trying to find shows featuring Dominic Mafham. I was pleasantly surprised in spite of the fact that he isn't a main character. It is a lawyer version of Northern Exposure. I do find Hermione Norris's character a bit irritating but I think it is because I enjoyed her so much in Wire in the Blood and I tend to dislike "lovable but crazy and destructive sibling" characters. The stories are light and simple with a little darkness sprinkled from the plot involving Simon Kingdom. I have only watched the first few episodes of the first season so that might change. Overall, I would recommend this show as a nice alternative to most American network television.
10rmclink
Stephen Fry as the title role of Kingdom is wonderful. I don't find the other characters irritating at all. They're charming. They have great potential for growth which is why I watch this sort of show. I use to watch shows like "The Golden Girls" not because it was fantastic, in fact it was kind of predictable, but the actors performed that show with grace and a level of excellence seldom seen. Same for "Kingdom". Excellent. Stephen Fry is just a delight to watch do anything. He's real. Maybe he does one very good version of himself but have you ever seen a Brad Pitt movie? Same guy over and over and his movies make millions. Give me Stephen Fry any day. Give me Kingdom.
I surprised myself by enjoying this - it's not usually the kind of programme that I'll sit down and avidly watch, but the producers have successfully managed to put all the ingredients into the pot and so turn out a very enjoyable meal.
All of the main characters are well written and well portrayed, especially Stephen Fry who really excels in the title role.
The stories are always interesting as are the underlying plot strands and there's a nice bit of comedy thrown in for good measure.
Even if this isn't usually your 'cup of tea' I'd highly recommend giving it a go. I really hope there is a second series.
All of the main characters are well written and well portrayed, especially Stephen Fry who really excels in the title role.
The stories are always interesting as are the underlying plot strands and there's a nice bit of comedy thrown in for good measure.
Even if this isn't usually your 'cup of tea' I'd highly recommend giving it a go. I really hope there is a second series.
Just finished watching this charming British show...I know it's old news but it's sad they couldn't carry on at least one more season. In this challenging year of 2020, it's nice to visit such a gentle "Kingdom"...at least for a little while.
I never thought Stephen Fry was quite right for the role of Jeeves (Jeeves really is kind of a d*ck, after all), but here he's perfect. He plays Peter Kingdom, the white sheep in a family of "serial shaggers," sickos and sociopaths. A Cambridge-trained lawyer, he's been carrying on the family practice in a small Norfolk town after his father's death and his brother's suspicious disappearance, and as the series opens, his damaged half-sister, Beatrice, has checked out of a clinic and come to join him. Fry's large, affable figure doesn't always blend in with this murky background, but most of the episodes deal with the cozier, goofier side of English country life—Druids, crop circles, cricket, quiz night at the pub, the vicar's "rude vegetable" contest, lockkeeper's cottages and garden allotments; there's even a brief glimpse of morris dancing.
More serious subjects like the exploitation of migrant farmworkers, the Data Protection Act 1998 (which may or may not prohibit a father from filming his daughter's cello recital) and CCTV snooping are treated in soft focus, and plot lines tend to be resolved conveniently but not always plausibly (how does young Scott manage to steal that racehorse again?). Nevertheless, Fry and the writers do a wonderful job of portraying Peter Kingdom as a soulful local hero and an incorruptible champion of "hooman roights" (as the Norfolkers say, at least some of them); the jokes are pretty good (when Kingdom's lovelorn associate, Lyle, refers to himself as a "great catch," Kingdom replies, "So's a giant squid, but you wouldn't want to be leading one down the aisle"), the supporting cast is excellent (even Beatrice starts to grow on you) and the swelling, hymnlike theme music and the aerial shots of the gorgeous Norfolk coastline certainly help to get the job done. We burned through all 18 eps on streaming Netflix (now it's only available on disc I'm sorry to say) and were inconsolable when it was over.
More serious subjects like the exploitation of migrant farmworkers, the Data Protection Act 1998 (which may or may not prohibit a father from filming his daughter's cello recital) and CCTV snooping are treated in soft focus, and plot lines tend to be resolved conveniently but not always plausibly (how does young Scott manage to steal that racehorse again?). Nevertheless, Fry and the writers do a wonderful job of portraying Peter Kingdom as a soulful local hero and an incorruptible champion of "hooman roights" (as the Norfolkers say, at least some of them); the jokes are pretty good (when Kingdom's lovelorn associate, Lyle, refers to himself as a "great catch," Kingdom replies, "So's a giant squid, but you wouldn't want to be leading one down the aisle"), the supporting cast is excellent (even Beatrice starts to grow on you) and the swelling, hymnlike theme music and the aerial shots of the gorgeous Norfolk coastline certainly help to get the job done. We burned through all 18 eps on streaming Netflix (now it's only available on disc I'm sorry to say) and were inconsolable when it was over.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe filming in Cambridge was carried out in Queens' College. This is where Stephen Fry attended in the 1970's and in 2005 was awarded an honorary Fellowship - allowing him to walk on the grass.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Drama Trails: 'Coronation Street' to 'Kingdom' (2008)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Питер Кингдом вас не бросит
- Lieux de tournage
- Holkham Bay, Norfolk, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(aerial shots of beach)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
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