Victoria: The Complete First Season Blu-ray Movie

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Victoria: The Complete First Season Blu-ray Movie United States

PBS | 2016 | 410 min | Not rated | Jan 31, 2017

Victoria: The Complete First Season (Blu-ray Movie)

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Buy Victoria: The Complete First Season on Blu-ray Movie

Movie rating

7.3
 / 10

Blu-ray rating

Users0.0 of 50.0
Reviewer3.5 of 53.5
Overall3.5 of 53.5

Overview

Victoria: The Complete First Season (2016)

Starring: Jenna Coleman, Adrian Schiller, Tom Hughes (XVIII), Rufus Sewell, Daniela Holtz
Director: Olly Blackburn, Tom Vaughan, Sandra Goldbacher, Jim Loach, Daniel O'Hara

Biography100%
History43%
DramaInsignificant

Specifications

  • Video

    Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
    Video resolution: 1080p
    Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
    Original aspect ratio: 1.78:1

  • Audio

    English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1

  • Subtitles

    English SDH

  • Discs

    Blu-ray Disc
    Three-disc set (3 BDs)

  • Packaging

    Slipcover in original pressing

  • Playback

    Region A (B, C untested)

Review

Rating summary

Movie5.0 of 55.0
Video3.5 of 53.5
Audio4.0 of 54.0
Extras2.0 of 52.0
Overall3.5 of 53.5

Victoria: The Complete First Season Blu-ray Movie Review

An absorbing journey through Victorian England.

Reviewed by Martin Liebman March 4, 2017

"Queen Victoria." Just the title and name seem to ooze history, and rightly so. She was one of the most prominent and iconic monarchs in English history, one whose very name defines a legacy of culture, architecture, clothing, and sentimentalities of a bygone era. But beyond her place in the common vernacular, who was she? Who was the woman behind the crown and behind the connections for which she is so well known today? Filmed entertainment has explored her life and reign before, notably in the relatively recent film The Young Victoria, but the succinctly titled Victoria, through its eight season one episodes, aims to, and does, provide a more expansive and more in-depth view of her life, her politics, and British history and culture in the 1800s.


The show opens with the young Alexandrina Victoria (Jenna Coleman) learning that the king has died. At the young age of 18, she is now queen. The show progresses through her monarchy, depicting her rise to power at the head of the most powerful realm in world while asserting her independence from her mother. Season one covers only a brief three-year timeframe of her monarchy, but it does so in manner that introduces and defines key events surrounding her monarchy: her relationship with her future spouse, the push to produce an heir, and England’s role in the world.

Victoria blends politics, family drama, and romance, an effortless marriage of story arcs and character movements that aim to attract a wider range of audiences than other tales of European monarchs past, even those that strive to transform them into more agreeably contemporary productions, such as Marie Antoinette. Character complexities and how they fit into the story are carefully defined and well performed, each actor understanding the story's wider berth and their varied places in it. The show proves an immense success at not simply telling Victoria's story, but defining her era as it was though her interactions with key figures around her and their own separate wants, schemes, and maneuverings through relationships, politics, and business. The show is much more grounded than many of its contemporaries, too, shying away from sordid excesses and offering a more thoughtful, character-driven tale that proves rich in its own way without going out of its way to lure audiences with needless escapades (think Da Vinci's Demons) that distract from the show's, and the period's, and the characters', points of interest.

The show's diverse character roster offers incredible insight into the world as it was in Victorian England. The conflicted Lord Melbourne (Rufus Sewell) has dueling roles as Victoria’s private secretary and advisor and Prime Minster. Through him, viewers will occasionally become privy to British politics and the house's inner workings. Outsider Prince Albert (Tom Hughes) has both industrial interests and curiosities about the British political system, offering insights into the parliament, social advocacy, and then-modern industry. These characters keep the story focused on the critical narrative devices, keeping the show from devolving into a simple exploration of the era's frivolity that would lessen the story's dramatic impact. Further, and in a change of pace from the focus of many similar stories, Victoria looks at the power “beneath the stairs” as Baroness Lehzen (Daniela Holtz) wrests control of the household away from the people placed in power by Victoria’s mother, the Duchess of Kent (Catherine Fleming). Meanwhile, Miss Skerrett's (Nell Hudson) character adds intrigue as a member of the royal household with secrets that would see her fired should they come to light.

Production design -- sets and wardrobes -- does a remarkable job of transporting the audience into 1837 England. Viewers both familiar with Victorian furniture design and architecture or simply enjoying the luxuries the show has to offer are given a visual feast in the furnishings and rooms in Kensington, Windsor, Buckingham, and Westminster Abbey which serve as believable stand-ins for their famous counterparts, even as the show wasn't filmed on location, as was portions of Marie Antoinette. The clothing of the various characters accurately fit the times, revealing the splendid opulence of the British court contrasted with the more utilitarian attire worn by commoners both in the castle and on the streets. Further, the show is splendidly composed and scored, both amazingly complimentary to every scene's mood, the characters' dynamics, and the story's flow.

But Victoria's true strength is neither the clothing nor scenery but rather the cast. Jenna Coleman does a masterful job as the sometimes brash and sometimes uncertain queen, particularly considering her burgeoning relationships with Lord Melbourne and Prince Albert. Her fluctuations between self-assured monarch and clueless and spoiled yet innocent child whose only real friend is her canine companion, Dash, lend the series and the character credibility and help bring her to life as a young woman instead of the older version of Queen Victoria more often depicted in film. Tom Hughes likewise impresses at presenting Albert not as the most well-known character but as the young Prince living out-of-place as he attempts to court the queen. The couple makes the uneasy transition from strangers to lovers believable, and their love story satisfies.


Victoria: The Complete First Season Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality  3.5 of 5

Victoria: The Complete First Season's 1080p transfer suffers through some occasionally appearing distractions, such as banding, macroblocking, and noise, each coming and going and at different levels of intensity. However, rarely are they debilitating to a scene and don't interfere, individually or collectively, with any deal-breaking regularity. On the whole, the transfer is quite nice, boasting impressive, though not seriously complex, details. Skin textures reveal enough in the way of pores, moles, lines, and hair to please, though it's no so intimate as to mimic a real-life gaze. Period attire is likewise well defined but not to the point of picking apart the fabric and stitches at their most inmate level. Still, there's plenty of rich, well defined texture on display, particularly heavier garments and decorative support pieces. Environments are generally sharp, too, indoors and out, and only some of the less effective digital compositions stand out as less than well defined. Colors satisfy. The palette fluctuates in terms of intensity and saturation depending on any given scene or episode's mood or lighting. Generally, bright outdoors showcase rich greens and blues and reds that pop, while warmer or more dimly lit interiors favor more carefully reserved colors. Black levels, both shadows and clothes, hold true. Flesh tones appear accurate. The transfer satisfies general format demands but the digital source isn't quite strong enough to sparkle at the highest levels.


Victoria: The Complete First Season Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality  4.0 of 5

Victoria: The Complete First Season features a DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 lossless soundtrack that delivers a good, quality listen within the series' somewhat reserved parameters. Music is generally the most dominant feature. Whether overlaid score and choral or in-world orchestral music, the track enjoys effortless flow along the front, terrific instrument-defining clarity, and gentle surround support. The sense of airy width and flow is terrific. Larger spaces offer a more diffuse sense of place. Whether dialogue reverberation throughout a large room that's sparsely populated in the final episode or throughout the cavernous chapel that hosts a wedding in episode five, the track always offers a subtle, but critical, sense of believable place. Light support elements are pleasantly integrated, whether horse hooves or rolling carriages, clanking silverware, even gunfire. Dialogue dominates the majority and it's presented with impressive front-center positioning, clarity, and prioritization.


Victoria: The Complete First Season Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras  2.0 of 5

Victoria: The Complete First Season contains all of its supplemental content on disc three.

  • Jenna Coleman (Queen Victoria) (1080p, 5:45): Actress Jenna Coleman discusses her role as the iconic queen, the diaries and sketchbooks she studied while preparing for the role, and the challenges of playing a real, as opposed to fictional, character.
  • Tom Hughes (Prince Albert) (1080p, 2:48): Actor Tom Hughes discusses becoming his character and the struggles in depicting the young Albert instead of the most oft remembered older Albert as mourned by his wife.
  • Rufus Sewell (Lord Melbourne) (1080p, 3:51): The actor describes his role as "Lord M", the real Lord Melbourne's life, and the fun he had becoming his character.
  • Tour of the Buckingham Palace Set with Nell Hudson and Tommy-Lawrence Knight (1080p, 3:32): A showcase of the set and some neat trivia about the props found within it.
  • Creating the CGI Magic (1080p, 4:28): A look at how 1830s London was digitally recreated to provide a realistic backdrop for the series, adding in extra characters for various scenes, and altering various rooms to seamlessly integrate Victorian England into the sets.
  • Visit Yorkshire (1080p [appears upscaled], 0:44): A quick promo spot about visiting Yorkshire.


Victoria: The Complete First Season Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation  3.5 of 5

Victoria: The Complete First Season dazzles as it constructs, establishes, and explores its characters and world. The era is richly realized, from costumes to locations, and the performances are first-rate. The show may not engage audiences looking for sex and violence, but for viewers fascinated by the era and characters Victoria impresses on all fronts and leaves audiences eager for season two. PBS' Blu-ray boasts good, if not occasionally troubled, video, a quality lossless soundtrack, and several interesting and basically supportive supplements. Highly recommended.