Follows Rupert Campbell-Black and Tony Baddingham as they have a longstanding rivalry that comes to a head.Follows Rupert Campbell-Black and Tony Baddingham as they have a longstanding rivalry that comes to a head.Follows Rupert Campbell-Black and Tony Baddingham as they have a longstanding rivalry that comes to a head.
- Won 2 BAFTA Awards
- 5 wins & 11 nominations total
Browse episodes
Featured reviews
I was 19 in 1980, so I reached manhood in the "decade of greed", but American, not British. However, this struck me as very true to the 80s. The characters were larger than life, the excess was correct (can't tell you how many times I went to a party and got coked up and watched the sun come up) and the narcissism is spot on. The casual sex is also on par with the 80s. Enjoying thios series and hoping there is more. And yes, I did think this is very much like "Dallas" by the 3rd episode. Thing is: I liked Dallas.
Why do I need six hundred characters to post a review? It seems absurd. Am I right, or is this review not good enough to print? What do you think? Do we expect more? Getting penalized for brevity seems silly. Yet still I need more characters. WHY? WHY? WHY?
Why do I need six hundred characters to post a review? It seems absurd. Am I right, or is this review not good enough to print? What do you think? Do we expect more? Getting penalized for brevity seems silly. Yet still I need more characters. WHY? WHY? WHY?
In terms of TV shows, this year has been fairly average. Rivals stands out as an absolute highlight. It's a multi-layered work that definitely deserves a sequel.
Conceptually, it's a soap opera, narratively a satire, and stylistically a period piece. A careful viewer will find a message within that, for once, isn't superficial or forcefully pushing political idealism but instead seeks truth. Rivals is entertaining, clever, raunchy, and funny. Not a single episode feels loose, unnecessary, or forced; the story and characters build beautifully toward an outstanding climax.
The writing, scenes, lines, and direction all serve the greater whole. The soundtrack appeals to every child of the '80s. The acting is a pleasure to watch. The always excellent David Tennant shines as a humanized villain, with Alex Hassell as his opposing force. Victoria Smurfit and Aidan Turner form a believable, well-matched broken couple. The audience witnesses the rise of a few new stars, especially Bella Maclean will be name to recon in the future.
Highly recommended, the best show of the fall.
Conceptually, it's a soap opera, narratively a satire, and stylistically a period piece. A careful viewer will find a message within that, for once, isn't superficial or forcefully pushing political idealism but instead seeks truth. Rivals is entertaining, clever, raunchy, and funny. Not a single episode feels loose, unnecessary, or forced; the story and characters build beautifully toward an outstanding climax.
The writing, scenes, lines, and direction all serve the greater whole. The soundtrack appeals to every child of the '80s. The acting is a pleasure to watch. The always excellent David Tennant shines as a humanized villain, with Alex Hassell as his opposing force. Victoria Smurfit and Aidan Turner form a believable, well-matched broken couple. The audience witnesses the rise of a few new stars, especially Bella Maclean will be name to recon in the future.
Highly recommended, the best show of the fall.
I read Rivals a few years ago and enjoyed every page! It's quite difficult to compare the book and its characters to its television adaptation, since we all bring our own perception of what certain characters should look and act like. Also, while we can read a book at our leisure, television has to move along at a pace that fits the format and doesn't drag, so some characters or side story lines may have to be cut for time's sake. That being said, yes, there are differences from the book, but none so great that it ruins the overall fun and entertainment value. The characters, especially Aidan Turner as Declan O'Hara, the upstanding journalist and David Tennant, the nasty Lord B are great! Makes us love Declan as much as we hate Lord B! The 80s music is fantastic, though the one part I found annoying was the opening high pitched opera music, just not a good fit. As to all the sex scenes, yes, we could do without some, since we all have an imagination, but that would not be the book Cooper wrote. It was wonderful to spot Jilly Cooper herself in the restaurant lunch scene. She looked as though she was thoroughly enjoying the show, as did I. The last episode ended quite different from the book, so I'm hoping there will be at least another season where we get to see what happens with Taggie and RCB . . . And of course, we know nasty Lord B has to be around to wreak more havoc.
I am laughing at some of the reviews, clearly by readers who take themselves far too seriously.
This is a Jilly Cooper adaption.
It's not a series to be intellectualised or morally judged.
It's so much fun.
Superbly cast.
Yes, RCB's hair and eyes are the wrong colour. As is Taggies hair. But they work. Somehow.
RCB will disappoint some for this reason. But Alex Hassell is captures everything else about him.
Danny Dyer is perfect. David Tennant is EXCELLENT as always. And Aidan Turner is just gorgeous, if slightly young to play Declan.
Falters slightly in the final third. But yes. It's fabulous fun.
Watched it all in 1 go.
This is a Jilly Cooper adaption.
It's not a series to be intellectualised or morally judged.
It's so much fun.
Superbly cast.
Yes, RCB's hair and eyes are the wrong colour. As is Taggies hair. But they work. Somehow.
RCB will disappoint some for this reason. But Alex Hassell is captures everything else about him.
Danny Dyer is perfect. David Tennant is EXCELLENT as always. And Aidan Turner is just gorgeous, if slightly young to play Declan.
Falters slightly in the final third. But yes. It's fabulous fun.
Watched it all in 1 go.
This series is hilarious it's kind of is like a mixture of League of Gentlemen, Pride and Prejudice, Alan Patridge and maybe a bit of Industry !!
So much British talent keep this engaging and compelling so that you just have to keep on watching. Anyone who grew up watching British ITV (channel 3) in the 80s can relate to almost every character. Still strange to think we only had 4 TV channels during this decade so each channel commanded huge viewing figures. Each character reminds me of someone on TV during that era or who they may have been slightly modelled on.
Definitely worth watching just to see who is going to do what next. Even if you didn't grow up watching British television definitely recommend.
So much British talent keep this engaging and compelling so that you just have to keep on watching. Anyone who grew up watching British ITV (channel 3) in the 80s can relate to almost every character. Still strange to think we only had 4 TV channels during this decade so each channel commanded huge viewing figures. Each character reminds me of someone on TV during that era or who they may have been slightly modelled on.
Definitely worth watching just to see who is going to do what next. Even if you didn't grow up watching British television definitely recommend.
Did you know
- TriviaCoincidentally, Aidan Turner has previously filmed at Chavenage House (The Priory in Rivals). The same filming location was also used to portray Trenwith House in the 2015 BBC TV adaptation of Poldark.
- How many seasons does Rivals have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 55m
- Color
- Sound mix
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content