A poor, pretty, village woman living in Scotland in the 17th Century is sentenced to be burned at the stake, for the natural death of her lover, the son of an Earl. She shouts out a curse th... Read allA poor, pretty, village woman living in Scotland in the 17th Century is sentenced to be burned at the stake, for the natural death of her lover, the son of an Earl. She shouts out a curse that the oldest son of every generation to come of the Earl will die before the father.A poor, pretty, village woman living in Scotland in the 17th Century is sentenced to be burned at the stake, for the natural death of her lover, the son of an Earl. She shouts out a curse that the oldest son of every generation to come of the Earl will die before the father.
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We swear...this is TRUE...it was told to us by a friend of a friend of a friend's ex-wife's uncle...
The show starts hundreds of years ago. I rich Lord's son is dying and he vows to kill the Doctor if the young man dies. The Doc does what any responsible doctor would do after bleeding the guy repeatedly--claim he's not at fault and say that a local woman bewitched the son! So, they did what any responsible rich Lord would do--they have a quickie trial and then execute the lady! As she was about to be taken away to her death, she curses the family--saying that the eldest son will ALWAYS precede the father in death (what an oddly specific curse--I would have thought toads in their underwear or horns growing out of their heads would have sufficed).
Centuries have passed. And, like the woman's curse said, eight generations of first-born men have died before their fathers. Now, the soon to be number nine is about to jump out of his skin! Why? Because dad is dying--and that means he must die first...and quite soon. What's next? See the show.
The biggest problem I had with the show was having the same actor (Donald Harron) playing the original father AND the father in the present day. Genetics do NOT work that way---even if you marry successive generations of your own sisters! What a dumb cliché--and it tended to cheapen the show. Plus, the ending was pretty easy to predict.
Definitely not my favourite, but better than some of the more critical reviews would suggest, comparing it to what went before, it's just a bit raw.
It's the first time the show has dabbled with a bit of witchcraft, and it works, it's quite a good storyline, and I did actually like the way that it jumped forward a couple of years, it was a nice twist.
What did detract for me, unusually was some of the acting, it wasn't as sharp as usual, at times some of the cat were guilty of overdoing it a bit, more than once we had a touch of the hysterics.
I am a big fan of Torin Thatcher, what a wonderful character actor, he's big and brash, a real presence, someone I always associate as a villain, he stood out here, for the right reasons.
6/10.
Flash-forwarding to the 1950s, Mr. Harron (now playing descendant William) frantically waits while his father lays in a death bed. Although he appears hale and hearty, Harron is convinced he will somehow die before his ailing father, extending the family curse to another generation. Wife Fintan Meyler (as Harriet) thinks otherwise... "Doomsday" could only be more predictable if you played it backwards. But the cast is entertaining, especially the dependable Thatcher.
**** Doomsday (10/13/59) John Newland ~ Donald Harron, Torin Thatcher, Edward Atienza, Fintan Meyler
Details
- Runtime
- 30m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1