If you aren’t a fan of the television series, there’s no point in seeing this movie. If you are a fan, A New Era delivers the goods. All of your favorite characters are on hand once again in a new chapter that is more of a continuation of the main plot line than the previous movie. The Crowley’s (a.k.a. the poorest rich people you know) need money to fix a leaky roof. As luck would have it, a director wishes to film a movie on the estate. Lady Mary (Michelle Dockery) is all for it, but Lord Grantham (Hugh Bonneville) has his priggish qualms about it, as usual. As (even more) luck would have it, Lady Violet (Maggie Smith) has just been left a villa in the south of France from a Marquis she met eons ago. (Yes, before she was married.) Mary sends her father and a contingent of her family off to the villa so that she can supervise the production. Unfortunately, technology catches up with the director, who must shift gears and make a talkie. Mary thinks they can pull it off, but unfortunately the lead actress sounds like a wench in a pub. (What movie does that remind you of?) Meanwhile, in sunny France, Lord Grantham has to confront the idea that his mother had a dalliance out of marriage, making him a bastard!
Like the series and the preceding movie, A New Era delivers what fans have come to expect and appreciate: impeccable production values, top-notch acting, dollops of melodrama, wonderful costumes and snappy dialog, all set to that iconic orchestral score. I liked how several of the supporting characters continue to grow in interesting ways, including resident nebbish Mr. Molesley (Kevin Doyle). It goes without saying that this movie includes a wedding, a proposal and several professions of love, some expected, some surprising. In the end, there’s the unexpected departure of a character who’s been around since the beginning, as well as the not-so-unexpected death of a beloved character. Julian Fellowes, the mastermind behind Downton Abbey, makes it look so effortless. Regardless, Tom Branson (Allen Leech) is still the luckiest chauffeur ever, and he knows it. Recommended.
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