The British (TV Series 2012–2014) Poster

(2012–2014)

User Reviews

Review this title
12 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Hollywood History
the-clarks-265-11735522 January 2022
Its a starter , nothing more, is it The History of The British ? No, is it a a gateway into the History of This Great Land, good and bad ? Yes. Use it. I have just watched the episode about the Black Death, I live near Tichfield, the village mentioned in the series, I watched it. Went on line, and am now reading an in depth account of the period written by The Bishop of Winchester.

Its a TV programme for the modern viewer, not The World at War.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Good show
jvw0822 August 2014
Overall I have only seen a few episodes but I think it's a rather good show. It will be impossible to fit 2000 years of history in just one TV series with any great depth, so the show does skip a fair bit and can be vague on certain subjects, which if you're a die-hard historian will absolutely loathe. One must understand the audience this show is intended to however (hint: it's not aimed at historians), and in that regard this show does surprisingly well.

This show can be seen as an excellent way to introduce 2000 years of British history to people who perhaps otherwise wouldn't have known this type of information or people who may not be historically interested to begin with. For kids it's brilliant as it keeps them engaged with the guests, the acting and the well made visuals depicting particular moments in time. I believe kids will definitely enjoy this show. The series can then potentially act as a platform for viewers to do further research on their own accord if they so choose.

From that point of view this show serves it's purpose very well in my opinion and it's a great show that can help generate further interest in and awareness of general history.

Also, to the person who gave this show only 1 star. Unfortunately the Romans, as a general concensus, were not black. That doesn't make any sense to be honest, considering how modern day Syrians are notoriously "whiter" than other arabic nations and that is due to the fact they can genetically trace elements of their ancestry to the Romans from the Roman period. It is this very roman ancestry / genetics that give some Syrians green eyes and lighter skin. If the Romans were truly as black as you are suggesting then why doesn't this show on Syrians despite the genetic / DNA matching evidence that suggests otherwise?
6 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Important bits missing and should be called The English
djskosh2 March 2018
Where were the Vikings and the Saxons? Where were the wars of independence? Why was this predominantly about England and not the whole of Britain as the title implies?

Biased stories interspersed with a few celebrities saying how great us Brits are, what a load of rubbish.
8 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Just hmf
davemundm29 October 2020
Though well produced this series should have been called the English. Complete lack of info outside of England full stop, quite disappointing really.
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Propaganda 100%
sonjie3 September 2016
I sat through the entire series because I'm British and am interested in learning about the history of my country, and I want to keep an open mind and see it from as many different viewpoints as possible. That said, this series left me wondering who had commissioned it, and with what nefarious objective in mind.

It is well produced, in a technical and visual sense, and the narrator is excellent, but the series has clearly been sensationalised and dumbed down for today's supposedly attention-lacking audience, and interspersed with inane pro-British commentary from a ridiculous choice of wholly irrelevant celebrities.

It is also very selective in choosing to show only a few snippets of the history of Britain over the last 2000 years.

These points I could have forgiven though, if it weren't for the overall feeling of propaganda that the series is imbued with. From the start to the end, it feels like a Hitler Youth type propaganda message about how marvellous and superior the British are, and always have been.

In summary, this series is factually incomplete, ideologically distasteful and overwhelmingly disappointing.
12 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Entertainment - NOT factual...
rylen23 January 2013
As entertainment the series are okay. Well known actors, football players, newsmen and others all able to read the script rather well.

But as a documentary is it appalling.. it's subjective, self-tasting and romantic.

As a historical document it is worthless, and as propagandistic patriotic romance it is too obvious to be powerful.

It neglects facts, it seems the purpose is to show the Brits were first and best with everything.

As an example, whereas facts tell us that Gutenberg was the man behind the spreading of the 'idea of printing' all across Europe, it is said here that William Caxton did so..

He DID bring the first press to England more than 3 decades after Gutenberg's Bible had been printed. To compare printing to be AS important as the internet is alright and true, but then to take credit for spreading the printed word, reminds me of Al Gore claiming he "invented" the internet.

The reenactment scenes and 3D effects in the virtual illustrations are immaculate, and all that brings a positive note to this disaster of a show.

Several times the pundits claim, "Britain was the original nation of entrepreneurs, the original nation of inventors" which obviously are not true and very self-tasting.

verdict: obnoxious
16 out of 27 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
A most bizarre history documentary series
Lammasuswatch13 October 2014
I did actually watch the whole series - quite a trial for a person who is really fascinated by history, and expects to learn something from any history documentary series. But I was curious to see how it would all fit together (and to just what lengths the producers would go).

It's hard to categorise "The British", or even guess at what purposes the producers had in mind. An attempt to draw in and capture the notoriously short attention spans of the Reality TV / Soap Opera / celebrity generation? In fact the whole series reminded me exactly of those sorts of rah-rah TV productions that try to drum up support for a national team prior to a major international sporting event. Or like one of those expert commentary shows about football. It was not produced by the usual British documentary companies, but for Sky-TV (part of the Rupert Murdoch stable). Aha!

In a collection of really strange production decisions, one of the most bewildering was the choice of talking head 'expert' commentary. There were some of the usual smattering of history professors and expert authors, but they all seemed to have little of consequence to say. Presumably the producers didn't want to overtax viewers' mental capacity (or have them switching back to Big Brother).

But 'expert opinion' did not get much exposure anyway compared to actors, comedians, famous broadcasters, rock singers, musicians and footballers! I mean, I like and respect Helen Mirren and Jeremy Irons and many of the other actors featured. Normally. But these are truly the worst lines these people have ever had to deliver, even in their bad films. And nearly all of the comments from all these last categories of commentators were about how these people "felt". Often not even about the specific historical event or trend being outlined, but in a general, vaguely propagandistic way, as if they were giving their opinion on why their favourite football team would win their game on the coming weekend. Relevant? Rarely. Weird? Nearly always.

Those are the really bad features. Obviously it's hard to give a potted history of more than 2,000 years of British history in seven 50-minute episodes, especially where people like Simon Schama have done it so well. So, if the purpose was to give the current generation an overview of British history that they would otherwise never have (or never have watched), then I suppose it fulfils that purpose. And with the epic battle scenes, currently in-trend computer graphical reconstructions and other such 'blockbuster' features, it is clear that this was the intention. So, if it does awaken curiosity about the past in those people and the wish to investigate further, so much the better.

But it says less about any particularly accurate or objective recounting of history. It silently says more about what thinking skills human beings are losing as a result of the passive 24-hour infotainment web we are being drawn into, as well as the increasingly lamentable state of western education. Some powers that be want us trained to work their jobs, indoctrinated to cheer for our manufactured heroes, but not generally educated to question what has been done in the past, what we can learn from it, what we are doing now, or why. That's what history documentary series usually do. This one don't. It's all Yay Team!

Let's hope this is not the start of a trend for historical documentaries. As it seemed to be such a flop, this is probably unlikely. After all, ratings are king in this world.

I thought the very last frame of the credits, announcing that it was a "nut-opia" production (my breakup of the word) said it all.
7 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Don't get it!
highaird2 December 2020
Why are actors like Helen Mirren and comedians like Russell Brand commenting on a piece of British history? Sorry but it trivialises the whole series. Just concentrate on history and the truth.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
What a load of TRIPE!!!
aquamanUK29 December 2012
I am only half way through watching the first episode of the Hollywood/Disney-fied version of British History and find it appalling and disgusting. Have they had a 'Single' Historian on the programme? NO! Have they had loads of actors and actresses who are 'known' in USA on - YES. Do these people KNOW anything of British History HFNO!

Not a single person on the programme has read Tacitus or reviewed the historical archaeological evidence? NO

Showing WHITE 'North' European looking Romans invading Britain in 56AD... The romans and all people's of the Med. Sea region of that era were black as the ace of spades! IF they had read Tacitus and the records of the Roman Empire, they would know the reason for the invasion was the 'Angelic' look of the peoples, strong - sturdy - white or red hair, with Pale complexions, that fetched the highest price on in the Roman Slave Auctions!! The invasion was about MONEY! Not about land, Southern France and Egypt were the bread baskets... the 'midge' infested North! Why do people of Italy have blue eye's today, the slaves that were paid in tribute 'post-Budica'! I could tell it was tripe when they said it was 10,000 Romans who invaded Britain, it was 5 legions of 25,000 (per legion) just to 'impose' their military might and take slaves from the southern half of Britain. This programme is total fantasy and it should either never have been made or the producers should have consulted REAL HISTORIANS. I shall NOT be watching the rest of this Tripe as it can only get worse and there is far too much of 'bash the British' attitude in a few nations of the world.
8 out of 26 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Not very good
sentient-7452822 August 2020
The special effects are fine, the re-enactments are fine. But when interviewing people, they have only 2 or 3 historians in episode 1, and the rest is a bunch of random actors, broadcasters and other such people without any credentials to talk about history.

They also cherry-picked events arbitrarily. How come they have an episode about the celts and the romans and forget all about Caesar and Boudicca? Episode 1 covers the 400 years or so of roman ocupation, and then episode 2 brushes through saxon times, the viking age and the normans, so in episode 3 they can talk about Tudors.

I mean, come on! This is just being lazy. There's a massive amount of history in there and they just couldn't be bothered. It had a lot of wasted potential. Pity.
2 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Stirring and Stirling
Essex_Rider6 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Like all histories, they are written by the historian or race that is dominant. The British is a reasonably good way to entertain and inform while trying to condense over 2000 years of the life of these islands. I see that the bad reviews have been written by those others than the British, so, let's reiterate here shall we? It is a fact that English is the dominant world language. It is a fact that the British expanded the most powerful empire the world has ever seen. It is a fact that we are and were a nation of inventors and entrepreneurs. It is a fact that we, not the Americans, did in fact invent the modern world. It is a fact that Americans drive on the wrong side of the road.

It is a good series, not always accurate, for instance the role of Mary Seacole in the Crimea. While downgrading Florence Nightingale, Mary Seacole was elevated to the position of battlefield saint. Wrong, she ran a bawdy drinking house for the troops. That said, it's not bad and worth the 8 out of 10 stars I'd like to give it.

Just read the review from AquamanUK. Hmmm, he obviously doesn't understand the difference between Mediterranean and African. Sorry pal, the Romans were definitely not black. They were olive skinned. Whether you like it or not, the British did invent the modern world and to rip apart a series that covers the salient points of 2000 years of history is a bit silly, but having read your other critiques, I can see why. I guess the only movie that would pass muster for you is one you wrote, produced, directed and starred in all by yourself.
2 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Politically correct garbage. Fiction over fact.
ToneBalone6026 January 2024
A ridiculous romp through thousands of years of history punching and choosing events that suit a narrative, ignoring thousands of years of early history.

The entire Anglo Saxon prod is skipped The Celts are incorrectly referred to as druids and Welsh.

The Welsh didn't exist at that time they were all Bretonic Peoples before the Romans and the Anglo Saxon arrived.

The series is about the British yet we keep bouncing back to Ireland. We have s whole segment on st Patrick but nothing about st George or St Augustine who brought Christianity to Britain.

The entire Plantagenet era is ignored.

So much factually incorrect information.

Racing to get to slavery and evil empire the main political goal of the series, completely ignoring thousands of years of British servitude and slavery to 4 invading forces resulting in death and cultural annihilation far greater than the slave trade of the 18th century.

Actors, leftist historians, comedians and footballers brought in for the reading of scripts for a few seconds pretending it's their own thoughts.

Its an insult to every British person.

Please don't believe this subjective, revisionist, progressive nonsense is the true history of these isles.

It isn't.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed