Our House
- Série télévisée
- 2022
- 3h 4min
L'histoire de Fi Lawson, qui arrive un jour à la maison pour trouver une famille d'étrangers emménageant dans sa maison et son mari, Bram, a disparu.L'histoire de Fi Lawson, qui arrive un jour à la maison pour trouver une famille d'étrangers emménageant dans sa maison et son mari, Bram, a disparu.L'histoire de Fi Lawson, qui arrive un jour à la maison pour trouver une famille d'étrangers emménageant dans sa maison et son mari, Bram, a disparu.
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As others have said, episode 1 was very good and left me intrigued as to where the story would go next. But it didn't go anywhere. All the drama and tension fizzled out over the next 2 episodes. By the time ep4 came on I was already done. Just as well as the ending was terrible too.
All in all, it felt like someone had a really good idea for the start of a story, and then was given the green light to make it before they'd actually figured out the rest of the plot.
All in all, it felt like someone had a really good idea for the start of a story, and then was given the green light to make it before they'd actually figured out the rest of the plot.
Episode 1 was good laying out the story frame. Found it intriguing - episode 2 did not add enough, by three it had nothing. Original idea wasted. The whole point of UK drama having fewer episodes than US drama is that the content is rich and concentrated - now we have short and dilute - not a good bargain.
Really unusual and original start, which made me eagerly watch episode 2/4. Started to go downhill mid-way through this episode, and by the final part, I was close to turning it off before it ended. The ending was complete nonsense and totally farcical. Love Perry-Jones and Compston in other productions, but this....uuugghh!!
This intricately plotted four-part thriller started intriguingly and dramatically with Tuppence Middleton's Fiona character returning to her home after a weekend away just in time to find that another couple is moving into her plush London family town house and that she knows nothing about it.
From this arresting opening, we soon learn that she is in a rocky marriage and indeed is separated from Martin Compston's Bram (Bram?) who despite being a doting dad to their two young boys, can't resist the old forbidden fruit when Fi's best friend knocks on his door in an inebriated state after she's fallen out with her own husband, although oddly we don't get to see her guy's reaction to the fling.
Anyway, it soon becomes obvious that everything leads back to Bram who has conveniently disappeared and can't be reached leaving Fi to turn detective to try to get her £2,000,000 house back. Everything she tries seems to lead to a dead-end but at least there's some respite for her in the form of handsome hunky Rupert Penry-Jones Toby character who seems ever so nice and supportive, or is he what he seems...?
Bram, meanwhile, on this enforced break has been enticed into bed by a confident young woman who afterwards seems to know a lot about him and just won't go away...
Cue multiple flashbacks and criss-crossing story-lines as we crucially learn that Bram has previously been lured into a dead-of-night road-rage encounter with fateful consequences not only for him, but even more so for the young passenger of another car innocently caught up in the incident.
It's strange at first to credit that it's all about the house but when you realise the price of property in London these days, perhaps it's not that much of a stretch. Anyway, over four taut, if improbably plotted and characterised episodes, each ending on a good-old fashioned cliffhanger, this show certainly kept the viewer guessing right up to the end. Well acted by the principals, once you swallowed all the improbable coincidences and plot-holes in the narrative, this was exciting and satisfying prime-time entertainment.
From this arresting opening, we soon learn that she is in a rocky marriage and indeed is separated from Martin Compston's Bram (Bram?) who despite being a doting dad to their two young boys, can't resist the old forbidden fruit when Fi's best friend knocks on his door in an inebriated state after she's fallen out with her own husband, although oddly we don't get to see her guy's reaction to the fling.
Anyway, it soon becomes obvious that everything leads back to Bram who has conveniently disappeared and can't be reached leaving Fi to turn detective to try to get her £2,000,000 house back. Everything she tries seems to lead to a dead-end but at least there's some respite for her in the form of handsome hunky Rupert Penry-Jones Toby character who seems ever so nice and supportive, or is he what he seems...?
Bram, meanwhile, on this enforced break has been enticed into bed by a confident young woman who afterwards seems to know a lot about him and just won't go away...
Cue multiple flashbacks and criss-crossing story-lines as we crucially learn that Bram has previously been lured into a dead-of-night road-rage encounter with fateful consequences not only for him, but even more so for the young passenger of another car innocently caught up in the incident.
It's strange at first to credit that it's all about the house but when you realise the price of property in London these days, perhaps it's not that much of a stretch. Anyway, over four taut, if improbably plotted and characterised episodes, each ending on a good-old fashioned cliffhanger, this show certainly kept the viewer guessing right up to the end. Well acted by the principals, once you swallowed all the improbable coincidences and plot-holes in the narrative, this was exciting and satisfying prime-time entertainment.
A woman returns home, to find her husband has sold their house, and vanished.
I thoroughly enjoyed this four part series, I have read some of the reviews, I'm not sure what the naysayers were watching, this was a tense, dramatic, well acted series, which is loaded with surprises, twists and turns galore.
There's a degree of originality to it, it's unlike anything I've watched for some time, at the end of part one I was perplexed at how the story could be stretched out, at the end of part two I was left in no doubt, it went in a very different direction.
It's slick, it's well produced, it's certainly well acted, Tuppence Middleton, Martin Compston and Rupert Penry Jones are all great, as are the supporting cast.
You'll be left baffled and intrigued, you won't be able to predict events.
8/10.
I thoroughly enjoyed this four part series, I have read some of the reviews, I'm not sure what the naysayers were watching, this was a tense, dramatic, well acted series, which is loaded with surprises, twists and turns galore.
There's a degree of originality to it, it's unlike anything I've watched for some time, at the end of part one I was perplexed at how the story could be stretched out, at the end of part two I was left in no doubt, it went in a very different direction.
It's slick, it's well produced, it's certainly well acted, Tuppence Middleton, Martin Compston and Rupert Penry Jones are all great, as are the supporting cast.
You'll be left baffled and intrigued, you won't be able to predict events.
8/10.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe closeup of Bram's passport shows his place of birth as Greenock England. Martin Compston's birthplace is Greenock Scotland.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Jeremy Vine: Épisode #5.60 (2022)
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- How many seasons does Our House have?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée3 heures 4 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1
- 1.78 : 1
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