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Airdate: Jamaica Inn

ABC premieres a 3 part adaptation of Daphne du Maurier’s classic gothic novel of the same name.

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ABC premieres 2014 BBC series Jamaica Inn, a 3 part adaptation of Daphne du Maurier’s classic gothic novel of the same name.

Adapted by Emma Frost (The White Queen, Consuming Passion) and directed by director Philippa Lowthorpe (Call The Midwife), this stars Jessica Brown Findlay as Mary Yellan, Matthew McNulty as Jem Merlyn, Sean Harris as Joss Merlyn, and Joanne Whalley as Aunt Patience.

Daphne du Maurier’s son, Kits Browning, previously said: “My Mother had always hoped that a film company would remake her story for television and I know that she would be so pleased with Emma Frost’s three-part adaptation of her book. There have been countless scripts in the past few years by writers who have tried to change the plot, drop characters from the book, invent new ones, and generally dig holes for themselves and so wreck what is a very good story. The du Maurier Estate is delighted with Emma’s scripts and we sincerely hope that it will be a great success for the BBC in the spring.”

Set in 1821 against the forbidding backdrop of windswept Cornish moors, the story follows the journey of young and spirited Mary Yellan who is forced to live with her Aunt Patience after the death of her mother.

Despite pressure to marry local boy Ned after her mother’s death, Mary refuses to compromise. Though Ned is kind to her, she doesn’t love him and won’t marry without love. Mary declines Ned’s proposal, and journeys to Jamaica Inn in Cornwall.

Mary arrives at the isolated Inn to discover her Aunt is a shell of the carefree woman she remembers from her childhood, and instead finds a tired and anxious woman who is firmly under the spell of her domineering husband Joss.

Joss is the head of a gang of men who smuggle all along the stretch of the Cornish coastline. It’s dangerous and violent work and when Joss isn’t smuggling, he is drinking heavily to forget all that he has seen.

To complicate matters further Mary finds herself drawn to the enigmatic Jem Merlyn, but Jem is her uncle’s brother and therefore not to be trusted in Mary’s mind – although her heart may say otherwise…

Life at Jamaica Inn challenges Mary’s black and white perceptions of morality as she finds herself living among smugglers in a lawless land where no one is quite who they seem. When she thinks she has witnessed a murder, Mary wonders at what cost she will stay silent.

9:30pm Sunday on ABC.

6 Responses

  1. Just turn on the subtitles – no worries. I did find it difficult to adjust from watching the previous program Poldark to another ‘costume’ drama straight after. I don’t think that works very well.

      1. And in one the smugglers were great blokes trying to feed their families and in the other murderous cutthroats who’d kill their grandmothers for a dram of whiskey.

    1. And both set in Cornwall. Having said that, I started watching JI only because it was on after Poldark. I probably wouldn’t have noticed it otherwise. I’ve recorded it but I did find in the first few minutes that the cornish accents are much broader so I may need the subtitles.

    1. Screening on the BBC was controversal and alot of complaints, with dialogue mumbling, in a difficult accent or too quiet. (Ep 1). The BBC tried to fix it for Ep 2, but I think the issues still lingered.
      May explain mixed reviews if you have viewed them from UK Press.

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