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Hornblower: Duty

Hornblower: Duty (2003)

January. 06,2003
|
7.9
|
PG
| Adventure History TV Movie

Admiral Pellew interrupts Hornblower's wedding reception and tasks him to locate a British ship which has disappeared off the French coast, where Napoleon's troops are engaged in covert activities.

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Reviews

Evengyny
2003/01/06

Thanks for the memories!

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BootDigest
2003/01/07

Such a frustrating disappointment

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SpuffyWeb
2003/01/08

Sadly Over-hyped

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Fairaher
2003/01/09

The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.

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leehught-935-735275
2003/01/10

If you have read CS Forester's "Hornblower and the Hotspur" you are wondering where it went. While a few incidents are present here from the book, the story line has nothing to do with the book. You will be disappointed that the main themes and character of Horatio have been lost. While the series is entertaining, do not expect the TV movies to be the books. "Based on" is used in its very broad sense. So watch the movies first. Then go read the books, they are much richer and complex. However, the character of Hornblower will be vastly different and the historic settings as well. Unfortunately, another example of taking the reputation of a book, some names and some of the incidents and then writing your own story without the depth of the original.So, just treat them as separate works with name connections only.

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ecky-5
2003/01/11

I'm a long-time Hornblower fan; I own all the books and have read them so often they're falling apart. I can almost recite the Gregory Peck movie word for word as well! but this series is far, far better and of course more 'gutsy'. I bought the boxed DVD set on its release because it's one of those classic British historical dramas I will never get tired of watching.While a fair amount of poetic license has been taken with the novels, I still feel I haven't been in any way cheated, or that Forester's characters have been misused. The way the screenwriters melded the different books together to make a full and exciting series is truly excellent, and Ioan Gruffudd shines as Hornblower; he even fits Forester's physical description. Robert Lindsay as Sir Edmund Pellew was brilliant, as indeed were every one of the actors.I only wish they hadn't stopped!A terrific series, well worth a look for anyone keen on swashing their buckles.

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TheNorthernMonkee
2003/01/12

SPOILERS In the eighth, and at present final, episode of the Hornblower series, the Americans make an entrance into Horatio's world. With an impressive budget (allowing for excessive rain), this episode is another fine addition to what has been an excellent series.Newly married, Horatio Hornblower (Ioan Gruffudd) is back aboard the HMS Hotspur with lightning fast speed. Now on route to find an old friend, he encounters an American woman and her husband, who hides an unusual secret.In what might well be his final performance as the maritime hero, Ioan Gruffudd is once more brilliant. Over the last few years, the actor has made the role his own and it will be no surprise if he is now a success in Hollywood.Ioan Gruffudd isn't the only actor to be superb once more. Yet again he is helped by magnificent turns by Robert Lindsay, Paul Copley, Sean Gilder and Paul McGann. All perform admirably, and all are worthy of praise.This final chapter also seems to contain some of the most extreme weather to feature in any episode. With extreme rain and snow, the weather machines are turned up to full throughout. It is well handled however and it's little surprise it is used to Hornblower's advantage.As a final part of the series, this is the perfect way to finish. With a suitably happy ending it leaves the audience happy and content. Led for the final time by a suitable Ioan Gruffudd, it is well made and all in all, the perfect conclusion.

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Philby-3
2003/01/13

From Midshipman to Post-Captain, the fictional career in the Royal Navy of one Horatio Hornblower has been well documented by Andrew Grieve over the past few years. `Duty' is the latest in the series with our hero getting married to his landlady's daughter (Julia Sawalah) and then sailing off across the channel for some close and personal stuff with the French.There's nothing to the story and yet somehow you are dragged in. Maybe it's Ioan Gruffud's saturnine charm as Hornie (or `Horrie' as his wife calls him). He's actually a bit of a prig but unlike most of his species acts fast and gets away with things a more hesitant man would never achieve. His facility for putting his own neck on the line strangely endears him to his crew (if my boss was that reckless I think I'd ask for a transfer to something less hazardous, like fireships). His attitude towards his new wife is peculiar; he has married her out of a sense of duty, he doesn't dislike her but he is aware she's not Admiral's wife material. Still when a character's mother-in-law is played by Barbara Flynn, a man has to take his chances.Realism is not a big feature of this show (the French unconcernedly moving their troops around with a British ship in the bay) despite the use of what looks like a full-sized replica of the sloop `Hotspur'. In an earlier episode a few hundred British troops manage to get ashore in full view of the French on the beach without being noticed. It's also not too likely that a steward as good as Doughty would have been put on a capital charge for accidentally striking a junior officer, nor that a younger brother of Napoleon Bonaparte would wind up aboard one of His Majesty's ships (though come to think of it one did become King of Naples). But all that doesn't matter. C S Forester could tell a good yarn and the series makers have ultilised his formula to good effect. The whole thing is overflowing with chauvinism and xenophobia (even the Americans can't be trusted) and yet we cheer every time Hornie puts his sword through some unlucky foreigner. There's plenty of good period detail without too much pedantry and Matthews the Bosun (Peter Copley and Styles (the lower deck trouble magnet played by Sean Gilder) are always entertaining. It's simple, but not mindless stuff and its US popularity is intriguing. I can't see it having much appeal to the French, though.

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