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The Inheritance

  • TV Movie
  • 1997
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
The Inheritance (1997)
Period DramaDramaRomance

A 19th-century woman, companion to a blue-blooded New England girl, falls for an aristocrat.A 19th-century woman, companion to a blue-blooded New England girl, falls for an aristocrat.A 19th-century woman, companion to a blue-blooded New England girl, falls for an aristocrat.

  • Director
    • Bobby Roth
  • Writers
    • Maria Nation
    • Louisa May Alcott
  • Stars
    • Cari Shayne
    • Brigitta Dau
    • Paul Anthony Stewart
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bobby Roth
    • Writers
      • Maria Nation
      • Louisa May Alcott
    • Stars
      • Cari Shayne
      • Brigitta Dau
      • Paul Anthony Stewart
    • 31User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos104

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    Top cast16

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    Cari Shayne
    Cari Shayne
    • Edith Adelon
    Brigitta Dau
    Brigitta Dau
    • Amy Hamilton
    Paul Anthony Stewart
    Paul Anthony Stewart
    • Frederick Arlington
    Brigid Brannagh
    Brigid Brannagh
    • Ida Glenshaw
    Michael Gallagher
    • Louis
    Max Gail
    Max Gail
    • Arliss Johnson
    Thomas Gibson
    Thomas Gibson
    • James Percy
    Tom Conti
    Tom Conti
    • Henry Hamilton
    Meredith Baxter
    Meredith Baxter
    • Beatrice Hamilton
    Alicia Bergman
    • Emma
    Michelle Davison
    • Cook
    Henry G. Sanders
    Henry G. Sanders
    • Blacksmith
    • (as Henry Sanders)
    Paul Bartel
    Paul Bartel
    • Doctor
    Rob Nilsson
    Rob Nilsson
    • Minister
    Lloyd Gordon
    Lloyd Gordon
    • Dancer
    Tracey Walter
    Tracey Walter
      • Director
        • Bobby Roth
      • Writers
        • Maria Nation
        • Louisa May Alcott
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews31

      7.01.7K
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      Featured reviews

      Kwantic

      Simple and Sweet Story

      I've seen this movie about 5 or more times, and it never ceases to touch me. I'm a huge fan a Louisa May Alcott (Little Women is one of my all time favorite books). So it greatly surprised me that I enjoyed the movie better then the book. The movie was well done, sticking to the book, but also changing a few details. They changed enough details to improve the over all story, but not enough to create a whole new story. For fans of the book, there's no reason that you won't enjoy this film. This movie presents a simple, sweet, and at times moving story. Edith is a 'servant' in the Hamilton's house. A Young Women of character, something that's so rare these days. The actors do a great job portraying there roles. Scenery for this movie is breath taking. Definitely worth every penny you spend to buy it.
      8ferden84

      unforgettable and warm my heart

      i have seen it at a Sunday afternoon when i was in middle school. when the movie finished i begin to search the information of it from the internet. u know that is 1999 or 1998 it's really hard to find some English for me because of my poor English....and just 1min ago, when i searching something others the word"Inheritance" made me remind this movie and that warm feeling coming back. i still remember the end of the story, the hostess used to be cultivate the first rose that's so sweet and after that when i buy the rose i will remember this sweet story no matter it's really or just a story. and there's a surprise that the act of James Percy. explain why when i see criminal minds i always think Hotch is so familiar it's really worth to see and remember
      9inkblot11

      Inherit this one and you receive a treasure; if not, go buy one today!

      Henry Hamilton (Tom Conti, excellent) and his wife, Beatrice (Meredith Baxter) have a lovely, upstate New York property in the late 1800's. Their only child, Amy, loves books and reading and loathes going outdoors. She is on the verge of womanhood. Also in their household, since her infancy, is a young lady of similar age, Edith (Cari Shayne). Edith was the daughter of a servant in Henry's brother's home in Italy and, when the sibling died, the Hamiltons took charge of the baby. She has been reared with love but is also a servant in the Hamilton household, being a companion for their child, Amy. There is a definite distinction between the girls, with Beatrice reminding Edith that when Amy marries, she, Edith, will have to look for a new position or marry herself. The sweet, loving "companion" never raises her voice about anything but, when the world gets too difficult, she goes for a ride on one of the horses on the property, being an excellent rider. Now into the home comes two guests who will be living there indefinitely. One is a distant cousin, Ida (Brigid Brannagh), an unmarried lady who, though quite beautiful and relatively young, is still without a husband. Beatrice hopes to matchmake her with their other guest, James Percy (Thomas Gibson), an old friend who has been unlucky in love, too. However, the best laid plans often stumble! James and Edith are almost instantly taken with each other, despite the differences in their status, while Ida proves to be a catty, deceiving shrew who lives to make trouble. A son of a local richman, Frederick (Paul Anthony Stewart) catches her eye, but, he seems attentive to Edith, too, making the situation even more complicated. Then, too, there is someone stealing Mrs. Hamilton's jewels on the sly and Henry wants to enlist Edith as the horsewoman for his prize stallion in a local race. No woman has ever entered before, though the rules don't forbid it. In all of these twists and turns, how will it all end, especially in the romantic category? And, are there more secrets to uncover? This movie is a treasure so make you own inheritance and buy a copy soon...got mine at the local grocery for $4.99! What an unbelievable bargain for a romantic drama fan! Also, this tale is TRUE and was originally a work of non-fiction by Louisa May Alcott. Fascinating stuff, makes one want to run to the library or Internet. The cast is just wonderful, with Conti leading the way. He is absolutely excellent as the caring patriarch while Baxter looks sensational and is likewise great in her role as the matron with a heart who nonetheless believes in the class structure of the times. Shayne and the very handsome Gibson make a lovely, sweet couple in waiting while Brannagh is quite fun as the prickly pear of a woman. All other cast members, including Stewart and Max Gail, are very fine, too. As for the film's appearance, what a stunning bit of scenery, costuming and cinematography! This is a gorgeous looking movie while its substance, as evidenced by its script and direction, is extremely worthy as well. Then, too, its G-rated content makes it suitable for every potential viewer, young and old. Do you enjoy romantic, substantive, and family-oriented films which are also quite, quite good? Seek this one out in the next couple hours for your loved ones.
      saralynnNG

      Laughter and tears

      My roommates and I watched this movie after a long, stressful day, and we laughed and cried. Henry Hamilton steals the show with tasteful humor and well-timed wit. As a Louisa May Alcott story, yes, it's a chick flick and sappy, but even men will love Henry's humor, in addition to a fast-paced horse race and several heated arguments. The music is descriptive; when you first meet "the bad guy," the music takes a foreboding turn. Some lines are cheesy, and Ida will drive you crazy, but all in all, it's a fun, romantic, and enjoyable film the whole family can enjoy, free of nudity and violence and almost entirely void of offensive language. Watch it! (And if you like Henry Hamilton, you'll love the 1985 movie "Saving Grace," in which he stars as the Pope.)
      10GrayAreaDVM

      Unforgettable, for those of us who are in love with love itself.

      I saw this first in 1997 on the Kraft something-something (CBS). The very first part looked so refreshing that I threw in a tape and have absolutely been gone on it ever since. I had read about the newly discovered manuscript and book publication at an earlier time. I bought several copies of the book and gave them out as gifts to friends and relatives. Everyone who has watched it with me has loved it. My brother, in from Knoxville once, and after watching the usual popular movies at that time, was, up to that point fairly unimpressed. I decided to put it in. He watched and even though he had not even commented on any of the others, he looked at me after the end credits then lights on, and said, "That was a good one." You have to know my understated Economics Professor-of-a brother to know how funny that comment was and how it pleased me. The filmed presentation and its screenplay are more flowing, integrated and related to a self-contained start-to-finish story than is the actual book. The scene where Edith is with her ailing uncle, her innocence, her lack of guile or ability to deceive, contrive or lie, is unbelievably attractive in character and essence. Edith is so transparently good and kind and always helping others without taking credit this story is about the rewards of that goodness and that sweetness. There are hints from the beginning that are noticed after the fact, about where the relationships lie and why certain people do what they do and act the way they do. How could the entire story be so simple and yet enchanting enough to cause me to think of it all the time. When Edith first meets Percy by the horse, spilling her apples and yet touching his scratched face with her handkerchief I loved the way the directors let us know the magic was on. When Percy comes in the house for the first time and meets her Edith cannot hide her bright-eyed, innocent crush and that she has met him already. Her facial expressions are uniquely well done as she hides behind the curtain. You can see that she is jealous already, even though she knows he is not there for her nor could there be a crossing of social barriers, yet he was hers, she thought. How many movies are there where one kiss, just one kiss is so dramatic? With all the thrills, spills and chills in modern movies, needed to even keep an audience awake, is this not a gem for those of us who are just plain in love with love?

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      Related interests

      Emma Watson, Saoirse Ronan, Florence Pugh, and Eliza Scanlen in Little Women (2019)
      Period Drama
      Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
      Drama
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      Romance

      Storyline

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      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        One of eight (8) films available on the 2012, 2-DVD set, "British Cinema Collections: 8 Acclaimed Films". The films are:

        Disc 1: "Love Among the Ruins" (1975), "THE INHERITANCE" (1997), Leo Tolstoy's "Anna Karenina" (1948), and Robert Louis Stevenson's "St. Ives" (1998).

        Disc 2: "School for Seduction" (2004), "Dirty Pretty Things"" (2002), "Rogue Trader" (1999), and "Rowing with the Wind" (1988).
      • Quotes

        Henry Hamilton: I was just remembering

        [chuckles]

        Henry Hamilton: a gust of wind. That first moment... it was summer. You were so young. If I'd been your father, I'd have shot me. You were wearing white and your hair was tied back, so politely. And then a little gust of wind suddenly did what I'd wanted to do since I'd first saw you. It just took a little strand of your hair and just caressed your face with it. And I knew then that I'd love you forever. That's what I'll remember, Bea.

      • Crazy credits
        SPOILER: Epilogue:  "Amy Hamilton became a leader of the Suffragette movement. At the age of 61 she won the right to cast her first vote.  Beatrice Hamilton cultivated the world's first true burgundy-colored rose. She named it the Henry Otis.  Frederick Arlington married in 1879. And 1880. And 1885. He filed for personal bankruptcy in 1909.   Ida Glenshaw returned home to her aunts. In 1893 she spent six months in the Northland Correctional Facilities for shoplifting. She never married.  Mr. And Mrs. James Percy were wed in the spring. Edith left Evenswood to move into James' cottage by the ocean.  They lived happily ever after."

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • April 6, 1997 (United States)
      • Countries of origin
        • Canada
        • United States
      • Language
        • English
      • Also known as
        • Louisa May Alcott's The Inheritance
      • Filming locations
        • Greystone Park & Mansion - 905 Loma Vista Drive, Beverly Hills, California, USA
      • Production companies
        • Alliance Atlantis Communications
        • Alliance Communications Corporation
        • Cosgrove/Meurer Productions
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 35m(95 min)
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Stereo
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.33 : 1

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