Review of the Downton Abbey Movie

Both the Downton Abbey movie and the television series have the same strengths and weaknesses.  The acting is superb and the costumes are wonderful; however, the dialogue sounds flat and the plots are melodramatic and sometimes illogical.  Audience members who have not watched the television series will be overwhelmed by the number of characters in the film. The movie version spends too much time on the British king and queen’s visit to Downton Abbey in 1927, which I did not find very interesting.  Then, script writer Julian Fellowes throws several new plot twists into the last thirty minutes without really developing the characters or the situations, which I found much more potentially enticing than the pomp and circumstance of a royal entourage.  Fellowes tries to tie up loose ends from the television show.  For example, he finds a new love for Tom Branson, a new love for the scullery maid Daisy Robinson, and another new love for the gay butler Thomas Barrows.  Marital discord between some royal and nonroyal couples gets quickly resolved without being…

Continue ReadingReview of the Downton Abbey Movie

Two poems forthcoming in the journal Nashim

The journal Nashim has accepted my two poems "Family Reunions" and "Synagogue Rummage Sale" for publication in its fall 2020 issue. I'm delighted! "Family Reunions" is about my my family's close ties to my mother's twin brother's family. We celebrated all holidays together. I used to be in charge of rummage sales at my synagogue, and I write about this complex experience in "Synagogue Rummage Sale." Janet Ruth Heller reading her poetry at the Kalamazoo Public Library; photo by Hedy Habra

Continue ReadingTwo poems forthcoming in the journal Nashim

No more posts to load