Cadfael 1994 The Virgin in the Ice Spanish Subtitles
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- Опубліковано 19 січ 2014
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Oswin is like a son to him. And he winds up finding his own son. Perfect!
I want a pet Oswin. He's so adorable.
Two e of the best scenes of cinema history is when Cadfael and Oliver meet. I get chills every time i watch them. Thank you Ellis Peters for those beautiful woeds.
One of the best actors of all time Derek Jacobi
Absolutely!
Definitely ! His acting of Emperor Claudius in "I , Claudius" is one of the best and most professional in television history - alongside other great actors and actresses of his generation. That role and his part as Cadfael are truly iconic and I will never forget seeing him once when he was playing a part in a BBC crime series in the late 1960's. The production team had rented an old Victorian mansion opposite our house in Leamington Spa and the film crews and actors regularly turned up to shoot footage in and outside the house, this is where I saw him once. He has always been one of my favourite English actors, a master of the art of acting and from what I can gather, a very nice and decent man on top.
Indeed, but not the Cadfael of the books and I feel it should have been incumbent upon the television people to heed Ellis Peters' frequent description of Cadfael. I would never argue the point that Jacobi is a wonderful actor, but he is too much the aesthete, too "English" for this role. Cadfael was an earthy Welshman, described as short of stature with nut-brown hair and squarely built. Many people will have heard him in audio recordings played by the late Philip Madoc and PM would have been the ideal person to play the role on the television, too.
YES!!!!!
Thank you for the upload...I so loved this series when it first came out and I enjoy it so much more now compared with all the other contemporary murder mystery series that are produced, this is in a class all its own
+THthefirst Oh well, Morse stands alone in a whole category for itself. Nothing can't compare. :)
+Neldidellavittoria BTW, you may have noticed Russel Lewis is the screenwriter for some of the episodes of both series.
CADFAEL - DEREK JACOBI - ITV 1994-1998
This series is interesting for many reasons. First of all, it is well done in a real setting, with a real abbey church and abbey, Shrewsbury Abbey, real stone and not plywood. The costumes and the quality of life in this twelfth century England are credible. The mud and the dirt are constantly present. The medicine of the time and the agriculture of the time are also in many ways true to what it was. The Benedictines are often called the engineers of the Middle Ages, and they were. A quick look in one episode on the scriptorium is probably not enough about that intellectual and technological importance of the order. They saved the libraries and the knowledge of the Roman Empire and brought it out when needed, particularly starting in the tenth century to develop the green revolution and later on the proto-industrial revolution centered on water mills, a Roman invention that the Romans did not use since they had slaves.
The think that is missing though is the fact that this evolution was based on the religious reform of the 9th century that imposed the fifty two Sundays as days without work, plus the three religious festivities, Nativity, Passion and Assumption, altogether seventy-five days without human work. You can imagine how important it was to invent the horse collar, crop rotation, fertilizing, and these water mills that replaced so many men and women, even children, making the dream of a society centered on religion and without slaves a possible dream. We do not see these realities and these events enough.
It is interesting too because many episodes are on the background of a civil war between a king and some rebels. King Stephen reigned from 1135 to 1154. This civil war connected with Wales as for the rebels is depicted as violent, brutal and absolutely unreliable. The monks were supposed to be neutral and at the same time supporting the King. Complicated. It is surprising though that the religious status they had was too often enough to protect them against the villains on either side. But this civil war was only an event that enabled the suspense to work in the episodes.
The main interest is of course in the mysteries and crimes that happen in this context. Brother Cadfael is an ex-crusader who came back and did not hold his promise to go back to the woman he left waiting behind. Instead he joined the Benedictine order. But he developed a vast knowledge on plants and cures for many ailments and his mind was also very speculative about the motivations of people and he was often called upon to investigate this or that strange situation with one or two dead people. He is of course very innovative, and yet we know that these Benedictines were very clever as for disentangling some complicated situation. We of course think of “The Name of the Rose.”
The murders, or at times mysterious deaths, were always dealt with in a modern way and the solution is never really what we expect. The director and the author play on our nerves and let us believe we know, though at times this piece of truth is so obvious that we know they want us to think we know, and the last twist reveals that we were wrong all along, just like Cadfael actually. That makes the stories interesting just at that level and the Crime Scene Investigation is always rich and tricky.
For all these reasons I think this series should satisfy many people who want to be titillated with mystery, crime and a spiritual dimension which is at times perverse but most of the time just real. Some of the monks are real obnoxious people, selfish, self-centered, frankly racist or segregationist. But some others are full of compassion and patience and they are those who carry the day in the end.
Dr. Jacques COULARDEAU
Una serie muy buena, atrapa, intriga y cierra cada capitulo de forma genial
Cadfaels son! I didn't see that coming. Thank you so much for uploading this great series:)
+Hop Jump he meets him again in the very last book of the series and learns he is Cadfaels son
J Sun, could you please tell me the title of the last book, maybe I can find it on line...
Isabella: The very last book in the series is called Brother Cadfael's Penance, and his son's in that, but he (the son) also appears in one of the previous Cadfael books entitled The Pilgrim of Hate which may be more interesting for you.
So Olivier is Cadfael's own son..... Amazing series. Thank you for uploading.
JWPhoto You're welcome!
One of the "deeper" Cadfael stories, well done.
Now that's good writing, directing and acting...
"Oswin"'s acting is PERFECT
This is one of the best shows I have found , thanks for sharing.
I could watch this series over and over.. have a hard copy in case it disappears online!
This episode gets me every time I see it. I wish he would have told him. 😊
Just have to add that brother Cadfael and brother Oswin are really wonderful. The actor that plays Oswin is really great in the part.
i loved the origional Hugh i don't know why they let him go
jennifur sun
Oh I did too. I never felt the same warmth from the replacement.
crystalheart9 Well, if we could ever find DECODING CADFAEL in its entirety on line, we might know why he was replaced.
Miel Mani Very difficult to find. It would be great!
so is the actor who plays Brother Jerome, the guy you would love to hate. i looked him up not to long ago and found out his only daughter was killed not to long ago in an accident of some kind. sad if you google up the cast of the series it will tell you all about the actors who played on it
Preciosa. es uno de los episodios que más me ha gustado. Bonita,Bonita. Gracias gatito por compartirla.
My absolute favourite episode. Thanks for this.
Poor kid. Locked up in a monastery, and when he meets a nice girl the guild drives him mental.
Wonderful adaptation of a great book.
tbh I prefer the original Hugh to the different ones that came later in the series. And Poor Oswald.
A moving episode....wonderful series...thank you ....
Very touching episode. Me conmovió.
Thank you for post, great episode.
Thanks for the upload!
Recién la descubro en youtube -Muy buena!. Agradezco el subtitulado en español.
The actors who play Olivier de Bretagne and Ermina appear in the soap The Royal, Oswin is in Emmerdale!
Gracias, todas las historias conmovedoras, feliz de haberlas disfrutado.Suerte y bendiciones.
Lo bendiga tambien
super, my favourite to date, Be content!
Great episode. Thanks !
Thank you for posting😎
+V Blondin You're welcome!
Great writing from EP as ever.
A big honest people
Love this series so much. Thank you for the uploads. The characters are so well cast. Brother Jerome is vicious lap dog to the prior ( I can't remember his name).
Just shows that you can find nasty people anywhere.
sad but true
I remember years ago, at the Hay-on-Wye Festival hearing the late Tony Benn speak. "I am sure there are socialists in the Labour Party," he said, "just as I am sure there are some Christians in the church."
Muy buena película!!!! Excelente tu canal!!! Gracias!!!
+draemr1 Gracias!
Enjoyed the movie. Thanks.
T.T era su hijo... ¡Qué hermoso!
Me recuerda a William de Baskerville, de El Nombre de la Rosa.
!!! gracias !!!
Brother Jerome's such a little reptile...don't ya just luv to hate him. Great acting on behalf of the actor in the role.
I agree! :)
Agreed, the actor playing Bro Jerome is absolutely brilliant!
He is such a creep, isn't he ! Always lurking around the monastery trying to catch out any brethren for real or imagined transgressions. I can well imagine that every monastery had one like him, a religious fanatic and zealot who turned the words of Jesus into the accusations of an inquisition. Monks and priests of his type are for me the most loathsome in the history of religion. The actor plays Jerome so well, one wishes to hit him in the face every time he opens his mouth with his mostly unfounded accusations. Thank God for truly holy men like Cadfael, true believers in the works of Jesus, sympathetic, empathic and common sensed - brilliantly played by Derek Jacobi. 🌟🌟🌟
@@mfjdv2020
I just found out that the actor who played Brother Jerome, Julian Firth, is the brother of the more famous English actor Colin Firth. 🌟
Julian Firth was also one of the maesters in Game of Thrones, and was the victim in the 'greenhouse scene' in Scum.
wish they had finished the whole series of books
Yes, I would have loved to see the last book in the series where Cadfael leaves Shrewsbury to rescue his son from imprisonment by King Stephen.
@@Romcom356 Oh yes, that would have been great. I always get angry at the end of this episode when he says nothing. But now i'm sad :-( they didn't do as you said.
but he spoke of LIPS brother!
I realll... Love old aged based pictures.
Thanks for the upload.
I watch these Cadfael episodes because they have an unusual setting but I must confess that the plots often sound implausible.
these were actually shot in and around Shrewsbury with mostly English and Irish actors
+jennifur sun They were film in Fot Studios, Budapest.
+henryvagincourt i had heard that parts of it were filmed on site in England.thanks for the update
Some were as you rightly say.
the plots are changed for filming. if you read the book first, it makes much more sense.
A time with no plastic at all and they managed just fine…no sugar either. They would have had honey and maybe dates from the east but imagine how expensive they would have been. The lords of the manners looked after their workers and families and monasteries provided shelter for travellers, medical help for the sick and food for the poor. You were very fortunate if you were born into a rich family as opposed to some peasant who was owned by his master so therefore not free.
I wish they paid more respect to the books.
Most agreeable.
some one asked about the music for the show. the composer was a man named Colin Towns maybe that will help
One of my faves. Le Gaucher is so deliciously evil!
as a horsey person why have the horses all have summer coats!
SERIE MUY BUENA LA VIDA EN EL MEDIOEVO DURA Y CON MUCHOS PREJUICIOS MIEDOS Y SUPERTICIONES.
Wish they didn’t differ from the book, brother Oswin wasn’t the injured brother in the book. Wonder what Ellis Peters would have thought of their interpretation.. still if you look at it as a completely different story it’s far less needling and enjoyable instead. Thanks for posting/
Master Dutton's dog is a schipperke!
back in those days their feet must have been very cold due to the snow.
The horses' feet?
An over all, excellent series, have enjoyed them from their original broadcast premiers, onward. But, from the 1st time..I really wished that either the Director or Producers would have displayed a much Greater of the Language-the Old English, as well as other, 'tongues' that were the common lingua franca of the day..It would be awesome to hear Brother Cadfael chatting away with one of the other monks in LATIN, then turn and converse with one of the shire-folks in O.E. I feel that a 'scholarly scripted' re-Booting of the series is in order; but I fear that the temptation to turn it into some 'B.S.' mock-up a la an FX, or Spike or WE channel missed-conceived 'politically corrected, out-of-time-and -place sex Romp, would Rule, with Forced diversity all of which, when laced together, would look like a fattened goose, fit only for the oven-fires of the Monastery.
They weren't speaking "Old English" by that time, they were speaking Norman-French. Most of the non-Welsh characters in the books are originally from Normandy, Brittany and Anjou (what is now north-west France). And Bro Cadfael's first language is Welsh. It says in one of the books that he never did learn a great deal of Latin either.
Only the majority of the Nobility spoke French, the rank and file English people including a small amount of the nobility would speak Old English.
Yes, I wish someone could make a series of a similar type, but today they'd definitely insert very out-of-place actors and inject unbelievable plot lines/ situations... God only knows they'd have some kind of rainbow orgy somewhere just for viewers. They'd probably turn it into a sci fi flick.
I watched this episode many years ago, but never picked up that Cadfael was the father.
It's a lovely bit in the book when Cadfael just sits in wonder that he has a son and decides it is something too precious to even share with Hugh Beringer, his closest friend. Ellis Peters makes the reader feel his wonder, his warmth and his humility.
08/08/2021
What a lively twist at the end
Me encantó esta historia...! Esta es la sexta que veo y parecer ser... que fue la última... ¡Qué lástima...!. Me acordé de "El nombre de la Rosa' de Umberto Eco... De todas formas, muchas gracias por compartirlas y te deseo mucha suerte...
+Flor Sina Pellidos 'El Campo del Alfarero' y otras más están e n mi otro canal, De Época 2.
De época
Si... ya las ví todas.... me encantaron...!
+Flor Sina Pellidos Bieeeen! Me alegro muchísimo te gustaran.
@@deepoca1151 gracias por el apunte...después sigo con él... Cadfael me ENCANTA...
Cadfael's son is a chip off the old monk.
More like a chip off the old Crusader.
52:34 That sergeant is usually such a dick to Cadfael, but just this once I'm glad to see him.
His name is Will Warden, and he isn't nearly as unpleasant in the books. Just a little condescending, but a decent sort.
LOl. yes indeed. That's part of the fun. So often these stories have a few obvious villains and a lot of nice people. I think the writer of the Cadfael novels created a lot of unsympathetic yet realistic characters , and the TV series did a good job not sugarcoating it. ;).
@@mfjdv2020 Yes, i noticed that with more characters in this series. Normally TV series are a mellower version of the original novels. In this series it's the other way around.
That Brother Jerome has always been so judgmental, self-righteous and tacky! He has no business being a monk.
Una pregunta, estimada gente de De Época: ¿sería posible que publicaran en uno de sus canales la miniserie completa de Clarissa Harlowe? Aquí en UA-cam pueden encontrar la miniserie completa y sin subtítulos (al rato proporciono el nombre de la usuaria; yo también tengo la miniserie, pero los subtítulos están en chino).
La usuaria es Lucy Castineau
vickytaspartan Gracias, Vicky. Intentaré subirla aquí con sus subtítulos en castellano. Gracias por la sugerencia, no conocía esta serie.
De época De nada :). Y quisiera hacer una pequeña corrección: es Lucille, no Lucy. Y para facilitarles la búsqueda, escriban en el buscador "Clarissa BBC". :)
vickytaspartan Ya están en la red los subtítulos de la 1ra parte de Clarissa. Aún no puedo subir la serie aquí. (UA-cam me tiene "castigada") :)
De época Órale! Gracias! Pasaré por su website :)
I have noticed that some of the monks use the expression Be content!" So, a modern translation would be, what? Chill out?
LOL Probably!
snippy whapper Yes, with the meaning of being satisfied about something.
I think it's also along the lines of accepting (the situation). You can't change it so accept it & choose to 'be content'.
Be content: "God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference."
Brother Jerome and prior Robert pair of weasels
Can you just imagine the body odor of these folks. No deodorant back then and probably didn't bath for days on end.
Not quite True, there are several 'Medieval 'chat-sites' on Face Book....where in a vast number of scholarly discussions and papers are posted, that amongst such are various reports, copies of 'eye-witness' accounts and Historical Documentation that Quite Clearly show that--NO, " these folks' DID NOT smell. They had both the skill and know-how, to maintain a level of bodily cleanliness about on the level of the settlers of the OLD WEST, be they 'towns-folk' or Cowboys-on-the-Range...LOL...What would you think the John Wayne character in the movie, "Stage Coach' smelled Like? These people were cleaner, than some to many of the people in our 'modern society'.
@@stanochocki8984 As Tony Hillerman points out in his Navajo novels they took sand baths and steam baths using minimal amounts of water.