Features:
 - Color
 - Closed-captioned
 - Box set
 
  
 Description:
  The life of an English schoolmaster may sound like dry stuff, but To  Serve Them All My Days finds engrossing drama and dry wit in the most  ordinary of circumstances. David Powlett-Jones (John Duttine), a young  Welshman, returns from the trenches of World War I disillusioned and suffering  from shellshock. Accepted as a teacher at an elite boy's boarding school  called Bamfylde, Powlett-Jones fears he won't last--but the faith of the  headmaster who hired him (Frank Middlemass) proves well-founded.  Powlett-Jones immediately flies in the face of convention, fighting with a  pompous science teacher (Neil Stacy), speaking out in favor of socialist  reforms, and finding a mixture of discipline and empathy with the boys he  teaches. Over the course of his 20-year rise through the ranks of  Bamfylde, he finds and loses love with several women (Belinda Lang, Kim  Braden, and Susan Jameson); one of the greatest strengths of To Serve  Them All My Days is how fully realized these women are, each  strikingly individual and self-directed.   The writing and acting are  impeccable, always cutting to the most engaging aspect of every scene, yet  grounding every conflict in a rich understanding of character and  circumstance. Even the minor characters are made vivid and distinct, and  the realities of life--politics, sex, mortality--are handled frankly and  honestly. In fact, To Serve Them All My Days demonstrates the best  aspects of a miniseries, taking the scope of 13 episodes to map in  detail a human life, with all its victories and disasters. Truly a  pleasure to watch; of particular note is Alan MacNaughtan as a sardonic  fellow teacher, whose ironic observations and close friendship with  Powlett-Jones give the series a good dose of both humor and compassion. Based on the classic novel by R.F. Delderfield. --Bret Fetzer
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