The Far Pavilions (TV Mini Series 1984) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
19 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
MM Kaye's novel of India brought to the screen
didi-519 April 2005
This miniseries came hot on the heels of 'The Jewel in the Crown', 'A Passage to India' and a fascination with all things Indian.

Ash (played by Ben Cross, best known for 'Chariots of Fire') and Wally (played by Benedict Taylor, who had featured in children's TV series 'Barriers') were the main players in this drama. Ash had been brought up to think of himself as Indian rather than officer class, and so falls in love with the sultry Anjuli (played by Amy Irving, at that time I think Mrs Steven Spielberg).

The other characters are stock faces from the glory days of the British Raj - while big name actors appear in the more adventurous parts (Christopher Lee, Omar Sharif, Rossano Brazzi). Look out for a young Rupert Everett (post-Another Country) in the cast as well.

Bits of the The Far Pavillions will stay in your mind. The futility of war. The ceremony of suttee (the burning of a living widow on her husband's funeral pyre). The forbidden love across castes and classes.

Recently revitalised as a big budget West End musical, The Far Pavillions is well worth your time. Brilliantly cast, scripted, and directed, it was a definite plus point of 1980s British TV.
20 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
I agree with previous comment
vladitoapd29 December 2006
I agree with the previous comment. When the miniseries aired, I was dating an Indian girl, and with her whole family we would watch every episode. I read the book years later, and was impressed at how accurately the miniseries followed the book. When it came out on video, it had been years since I saw the original, but I knew something was missing. I hope it is re-released in its entire length.

While it is hard to believe Amy Irving as an Indian princess, the acting is superb, the sets are magnificent and the camera work captures it all. This set a standard for TV-miniseries that has never been equaled.
10 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
A great romantic tale against a historical backdrop; a visual feast
Vash200124 September 2006
Warning: Spoilers
The Far pavilions is based on M.M.Kaye's book 'The far pavilions'. It is a good but not completely faithful adaptation of a 1200 page novel condensed into a 5-hour miniseries, on a two-disk set.

It is a visual feast depicting the British period in India, in the 19th century. The central character Ashton/Ash Pelham-Martyn spends first 11 years of his life in India, as an Indian (Ashok), after his birth parents who are British, are dead. Upon his return to India (from England), as a member of the British Army, Ash meets again the love of his life- Princess Anjuli- who was his childhood friend. She is about to be married to an old man who is a ruler of a princely state (Bhithor) in India. Anjuli is doing this only to help her younger sister, while sacrificing her own love. Anjuli, a Rajput woman with one-fourth Russian blood in her, would keep her word even though it means sacrificing her love for Ash/Ashok. While narrating their struggle against a society that strongly believed in caste and race, the movie paints a picture of the British and the Indians in that period of history quite well. The art direction, background music, and cinematography are excellent, showing the richness of the land. Many scenes were filmed in Rajasthan, a western state, that is rich in history of its people. The snow capped peaks of the Himalyas are lovely.

Ben Cross does a superb job of expressing the inner struggle of Ash (Ashok/Ashton) as "two persons in one body" and the passionate but disappointed lover of the princess Anjuli. Amy Irving succeeds in showing the quiet strength, pride and sadness of Anjuli. Many well known actors have added to the characters- Christopher Lee as Rao Saheb (the uncle of the two princesses), Omar Sheriff as Koda Dad- the horse expert, and others.

Where the movie/miniseries comes up short is toward the end.

SPOILERS AHEAD...........

About three fourth of the miniseries stays faithful to the book. However, the last 300 pages have been condensed considerably, and the events are shown in a different order. The fight in Afghanistan and the death of Wally Hamilton (and others) takes place earlier in the movie.

In the book Anjuli, after escape from Bhithor, goes through a period of recovery. She has been emaciated due to starvation and torture. There are few signs of this in her appearance when she escapes Bhithor with Ash and his companions. In the book Ash marries her on a boat, because no one would perform religious rights for them. Although married, it is too dangerous for them to openly live as a couple. They eventually decide to move to a valley in the Himalayas -their Far Pavilions. The miniseries ends after escape from Bhithor, when Ash and Anjuli are finally together for good. Some of the earlier scenes (the wedding, the Suttee ceremony) are long drawn out. They could have been shortened to include the rest of the story, in its original order (the Afghan war takes place after the escape from Bhithor in the book).

I had a problem with making Koda Dad such a major character in the movie. In the book, although an important influence on young Ash, he was not on that trip to Bhithor. He had long retired. Including him took away from some of the other characters like Sarji and Ash's favorite horse Dagobaz.

The first disk is much more entertaining and more faithful to the book than the second one.

The end in the miniseries seems sudden, compared to the slowness of earlier parts, and has less impact than in the book, which takes the time to show the struggles and strengths of the two main characters.

Other than that, this is a good adaptation of the book. It fits in the 'movie' format. I like the book better for its details, but the movie is a feast for the eyes. It created in me the desire to read more about this period in history. Definitely recommended.
8 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Caveat Emptor!
coulombe7 December 2005
Someday, a distributor will make the complete miniseries available for the consumer. Any release of about 300 minutes has about 2 or 3 episodes cut from the original. The opening scenes of the current releases showing flashes of Ash's youth are pieces of these episodes which have been dropped since they would be considered nothing more than superfluous exposition to most Western viewers. But in order to fully appreciate M.M Kaye's story, they are vital and should be restored. These lost episodes impress the viewer with the customs of India, the background of Ash and Anjuli, the treachery of Biju Ram, the love of Sita and the wisdom of Koda Dad. Without them you don't really fully appreciate why Ash and Juli are so close, why Ash is torn between two cultures, and his relationship with Gulkote. The exposure to life in an Indian royal court contained in the lost episodes adds so much to the experience. So until you see a release that has a running time of about 400-500 minutes, let the buyer beware -- you are not getting the complete original of the mini-series.
29 out of 29 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Gorgeous and spectacular mini-series with marvelous production design and being colorfully photographed
ma-cortes10 September 2019
Set against the revolution for India's freedom from England , it deal with marvelous adventures , tragic love stories and British/Indian battles during the second Afghan war . An India adventure with all the usual ingredients , including glowing colour , wonderful settings , spectacular scenarios and distinctive photography . After his true identity is discovered at the age of 11, Ashton Pelham-Martyn is sent to England to complete is education. At the age of 5, his daddy was killed in the Mutiny and Ash was rescued and raised by his Indian nanny and an adoptive father (Omar Shariff) . He returns to India as a young man (Ben Cross) , he becomes an appropriately noble British officer in a Regiment stationed on the Northwest Frontier . He is assigned by his stiff-upper-lipped Commandant (Robert Hardy ) to a risked mission with his infantry : to custody two princesses (Amy Irving , Sneh Gupta) who have been promised in an arranged marriage to a tyrannical governor . As he is reunited with a infancy friend, Anjuli (Amy Irving) , nowadays a gorgeous young woman and he falls in love with her , then things go wrong . He is forced to accompany her and her sister to their wedding and although they are very much in love, they are forced to part company. When Anjuli's husband, the Rana of Bhitor (Rossano Brazzi) dies , there takes place a horrible fate . Along the way the brave protagonist faces off the violent attack on the British delegation in Kabul and other warring events .

HBO's first mini-series formed by three parts , set in 19th century British colonial India about a story of forbidden love in 1800s involving an ethnic romance between a British cavalry officer and an Indian princess, along with war battles , betrayal and emotion as well as intense drama and honor . Enjoyable adventure movie that brings me back to my childhood, when I loved to see the Oriental movies because of the magical happenings and wonders around abound . This adventure movie contains thrills , frantic action , exuberant outdoors , luxurious interiors and a complicated love story. The film is essentially a romance story and in the midst of fighting , treachery , impressive action and surprising outdoors . A delightful Naive Adventure , as the film is fairly entertaining and, as can be expected from a grade-A European production of the eighties , handsomely mounted but it mainly survives today on its high quotient of nostalgia . The Far Pavilions is a rousing , moving , stirring tale , above average , and adding action as well as thrills with a great sense of wonder , including attractive scenarios . It is an entertaining and brilliant mini-series, plenty of noisy action , thrills , glamorous cinematography with wonderful camera work , luxurious costumes , catching score ; all meld together under Peter Duffell's nice direction . Although the story has been told before , tight filmmaking and nice acting win out . This lavish production was budgeted at thirteen million dollars and it was considered to be one of the most expensive at the time . Belonging to a cycle of British productions set in India , shot early 1980s , many of them based on E.M. Forster novels , though this one is based on the romantic bestseller written by M.M. Kaye . Being a perfect combination of overwhelming landscapes and palace battles , fights and full of villainy , romance , and heroism . The picture is enjoyable , exciting and thrilling right up with climatic final when our hero has to rescue his lover when she is expected to join her deceased husband on his funeral pyre so it is left to Ash to save her . Lavish spectacle and good casting overcomes the somewhat sluggish storytelling that combines a number of familiar Oriental fares . In any case, this satisfactory viewing has brought back fond childhood memories of similar costume pictures and has certainly whetted my appetite for more . Main cast is franky excellent , such as : Ben Cross , Benedict Taylor and the beautiful Amy Irving who at the time married Steven Spielberg . They are well accompanied by a pretty good support cast , such as : the always great Christopher Lee , the Italian Rossano Brazzi who is miscast as despotic ruler Rana of Bhithor , Saeed Jaffrey , Sneh Gupta , Omar Sharif , John Gielgud , Robert Hardy , Mary Peach , Anthony Sharp , Felicity Dean , Peter Arne , John Forbes-Robertson , Art Malik and a young Rupert Everett .

This Technicolor adventure fantasy is well adorned by stunning cinematography by the prestigious Jack Cardiff . Shot on location in Samode Palace, Samode, Rajasthan, India and North Wales, Wales, UK . Striking and evocative musical score by Carl Davis . This British/India spectacle was glamorously directed by Peter Duffell . Although there are two versions : the complete version aired on television whose runtime is 315 min and another rendition about one hour and fifty minute cut of this mini-series was theatrically released as a movie . The good craftsman Peter Duffell directed various mini-series and several TV episodes from notorious series , such as : The Bill , Space precinct , Tales of the Unexpected , Inspector Morse , The Waterfall , The famous five , Journey to the Unknown , Man in a Suitcase , The adventures of Black Beauty , Strange report and The Avengers , among others . Rating : 7/10 . Better than average . Essential and fundamental watching . Well worth seeing .
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
The Far Pavilions is a good saga for a mini series.
emurray-27 February 2002
The Far Pavilions is a very long movie made for a mini series (I expect) and its length is the one major drawback to the film. The acting, especially of the principals and more particularly of Ben Cross, is quite fine all around. The cinematography is beautiful of the Indian countryside. This is one of the better mini series made.

I recommend it to you.
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Haunting Suttee Ceremony
pmitsi-11 March 2011
This mini series was an unexpected eye candy one summer, for the lazy Sunday afternoons when we didn't expect something special to be broadcasted.

I was fascinated with the fairytale-like story and the wind of adventure blown into it. Amy Irving was (as always) likable but I found Ben Cross too stoic and a bit cold. Omar Sharif brought an air of nobleness to an otherwise cruel environment.

The most breathtaking scene was the suttee ceremony that haunted me for weeks after. Even though I know now that some women did it voluntary, it is the cruelest custom I ever heard...
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
I have read this book and seen the mini series. It is worth a good read and a good see.
missparkers24 April 2004
I really love this movie. I, at variously times, read books which I think would make a great movie or mini-series. I was most pleased at the time to see they did make it into a mini series. The Actors (Ben Cross & Amy Irving) did a great job of portraying the main characters and even the lessor characters were portrayed well. The movie left out none of the appeal of the book. I strongly encourage anyone to read this book or see the mini series version of it. Please Read. Please See. *smiles* If you are a history buff, this will interest you as well; as it is set in the 1900's during the later day occupation of the English crown of India. A most romantic period in my eyes of that country.
8 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
THE FAR PAVILIONS {TV Mini-Series} (Peter Duffell, 1984) ***
Bunuel197615 November 2019
I recall this star-studded epic being broadcast on TV during my childhood; in fact, it was one of a number of such efforts intended for the small screen that emanated at the time (others like it were THE JEWEL IN THE CROWN {1984}, THE SECRET OF THE SAHARA {1988} and THE MYSTERIES OF THE DARK JUNGLE {1991} - the last two were actually Italian productions and I was enough of age to catch them when new). Such exotic and intrinsically old-fashioned fare may have been borne from the Oscar triumph that was GANDHI (1982) but, needless to say, the various TV mini-series took a more romantic and action-oriented approach (especially since they were often derived from best-selling novels to begin with)!

Still, THE FAR PAVILIONS' five hour-plus running-time sensibly also encompasses numerous intrigues, plenty of local colour and even a smidgen of philosophy (particularly with respect to the conflicted protagonist, raised as an Indian only to discover that he is really English and, later, serving as a soldier - his knowledge of the country and its customs coming in handy for undercover missions - is entrusted with the protection of the woman of royal lineage he loves on her journey to be wed to a much older man from a neighbouring state). Being one of the most expensive made-for-TV projects up to that time, the production values were unsurprisingly top-notch: it was lensed (in evocative auburn hues) by the great Jack Cardiff and scored by the renowned Carl Davis, no less; among the more striking set-pieces, then, are the massacre at the Afghan fortress and the climactic funeral rite.

Casting is generally effective, with both veterans (notably Rossano Brazzi, John Gielgud, Christopher Lee and Omar Sharif) and newcomers (Ben Cross, Rupert Everett, Amy Irving, Benedict Taylor {lead of the recently-viewed 1982 TV adaptation of BEAU GESTE} and Art Malik) ably filling their roles and given their due amid the expansive, episodic proceedings. Finally, it is worth noting that this was eventually condensed (to a mere 110 minutes!) and renamed BLADE OF STEEL for theatrical consumption.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
the truth about the movie
muzzi_12322 December 2008
This miniseries came hot on the heels of 'The Jewel in the Crown', 'A Passage to India' and a fascination with all things Indian.

Ash (played by Ben Cross, best known for 'Chariots of Fire') and Wally (played by Benedict Taylor, who had featured in children's TV series 'Barriers') were the main players in this drama. Ash had been brought up to think of himself as Indian rather than officer class, and so falls in love with the sultry Anjuli (played by Amy Irving, at that time I think Mrs Steven Spielberg).

it was not a bad plot and had some brilliant dialogs i would say good acting overall
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Great story
montrose77uk1 August 2002
I watched this film as a kid and thought it was excellent. I was living in the Sub-Continent at the time, and thought it portrayed life there very well.

I'm still trying to get ahold of a copy of it to relive the experience once more.
7 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Hard to believe, but there it is: The lead actress in black face
petersgc1 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
COVID-19 had me looking for sweeping sagas set in exotic locations, and I remembered that this had been a big deal when it first came out. Yes, it's lush, and the story moves along well enough. Still, I cannot forgive the black face. And I am astonished that the review from the past three decades fail to mention it.
3 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Great romantic miniseries
stieric13 October 2004
I saw this one on television shortly after it was made, in the 80s, and I was happily surprised when it appeared on DVD. Like the book, the series doesn't have any deeply intellectual hidden layers (as far as I know), but it's a quality product in its kind and a great romantic story with some action too. The English are played by top English actors and the Subcontintent people by Indians or people who could more or less pass of for them, which is a nice change if you're used to seeing ancient Greeks or early Christians played by surf dudes. The odd one out seems to be blue-eyed Amy Irving as the Indian Princess Anjuli, but if you pay attention, you'll know she's supposed to be half-Russian in the series and she looks splendid in a saree anyway. Looking at British costume-dramas I often get the feeling that they enjoy making them even if it's only for the fun of walking up and down a muddy street in a silly 19th-century costume, and this movie has some of the same gusto. Throw in the breathtaking Rajastan scenery and you have a feast for the eyes.

The Far Pavillions is not a series cut down in size to get a movie, but a miniseries, period. Like India itself, it takes its time. Don't expect to sit through it in one evening but relax, settle down with a chai or a whisky and who knows, you might find yourself watching the end credits at 3 AM anyway.
22 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
A handsome miniseries
Petey-1030 March 2012
This miniseries is set in the 19th century British colonial India.It tells about the battles of a young man named Ashton Pelham-Martyn and his forbidden love with the princess Anjuli.The Far Pavilions (1984) is directed by Peter Duffell.It's based on M.M. Kaye's novel from 1978.The actors are all good.Ben Cross does very good job as Ash.Amy Irving is terrific as Anjuli.Christopher Lee, who turns 90 this year, is great as Kaka-ji Rao.Omar Sharif is brilliant as Koda Dad.Benedict Taylor is excellent as Wally.Great job by John Gielgud, who plays Cavagnari.I just saw this miniseries on a DVD.It looks very good.The battle scenes are very well made.I liked the love story.And you learn a little bit of India's history while you're watching it.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Love it
curse-of-egypt29 April 2019
I cannot tell you how many times I have watched this movie. I saw it when they first aired it on HBO and have also seen it on regular tv and on dvd. Its a very lovely story and the acting is great. Although the younger girl was spoiled rotten, just like in the book. I've read all about the making of this movie and I know for a fact that they had to get permission from the Indian government to actually film the Sutte scene as it is now forbidden in that country and has been for years now
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
They don't make them like this anymore
gcsman24 April 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I first saw this shortly after its TV release in 1984, but didn't ever get back to it again till this year; you can get it on DVD of decent quality and it's definitely worth the price. I really recommend it. The 1000-page epic novel by M.M.Kaye, set during the height of the British Raj (late 1800's India), is given lavish treatment though with some appropriate condensations to make it fit into the 5-hour run time. It was one of several big-budget historical miniseries with international casts produced at the time (e.g. Shogun, or The Jewel in the Crown).

Stories like this never go out of style. In terms of plot, The Far Pavilions is like a really high-level Harlequin romance -- forbidden love, heroes and villains, plot twists and coincidences, military adventure, intrigue and betrayal, daring rescues, lives lost and saved, and finally victory snatched from the jaws of defeat. What would an epic fantasy romance be without all of those? But at its most basic it's the Boy Meets Girl, Boy Loses Girl, Boy Gets Girl story (when in doubt, go with the classics!). Full credit to the production for using settings spotted throughout western India, which by themselves make this worth seeing: gorgeous palaces, ancient ruins, towns, citadels, massive processions and crowd scenes that are impressive and authentic - no special effects nonsense here.

So, the story is that English soldier Ash (the ruggedly handsome Ben Cross) and half-blood Indian princess Anjuli (Amy Irving, who is stunningly beautiful here) knew each other as young children in the northwest India palace of Gulkote, but tragic circumstances (what else?) carried them apart. While Ash grows up in England and trains for the military, Anjuli endures a rather sad and lonely upbringing as an unwanted 'half-caste' in her own home. Many years later fate brings them together again and they fall deeply in love, but (of course) must surmount apparently impossible obstacles having much to do with the Western/Indian cultural divide. Ben Cross is fine if unexceptional, playing Ash as a slightly hot-headed idealist. He gets most of the screen time and the military sections in which he features are all well done. But the true center of this epic is the love story, and that's controlled by Irving's character. She quietly dominates every scene she is in, giving Anjuli deep wells of emotion but also a kind of unshakable spiritual nobility that would do credit to an angel. In fact, she's too loyal and self-sacrificing for her own good, particularly in relation to her jealous half-sister Shushila (Sneh Gupta).

The middle section 'Journey to Bhithor', where the major characters and plot lines are drawn together, is excellent. But the final section of the story is the one that really sticks in the mind -- particularly the masterful staging of the suttee ritual, in which Ash must rescue Anjuli from being burned alive (or as it turns out, something even worse). The dramatic tension slowly ratchets up to excruciating levels as we see it played out from beginning to end (and I don't know of any other TV or movie production in which this horrific ceremony is shown so completely).

If this were filmed today we'd rightfully expect that all the many non-English roles would actually be filled by Indian actors. That wasn't so much the custom 30+ years ago for Western productions, so here we see name-value Westerners fill some of the prominent Indian parts (Omar Sharif, Christopher Lee, Rossano Brazzi, as well as Irving). Nevertheless, they all do pretty well with their roles.

The Far Pavilions has characters you want to root for who will ultimately win through to a happy ending -- just what we want out of an epic romance.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
One of the greatest love stories ever written
clanciai2 November 2020
M.M.Kaye's final novel is one of the greatest ever written about India, actually vying with masterpieces on the same scale like Tolstoy, Pasternak, Dickens and others, and the screening of it for television renders it full justice, although of course some adjustments had to be made together with some additions. Some who know India well would at first sight discard it as a postcard version of the novel, but it is not. All the characters are brought forth perhaps even more alive than in the novel, and the players have been chosen with perfect accuracy and sensitivity, especially of course Ben Cross and Amy Irving, but you find among the characters several old favourites, like Omar Sharif, Christopher Lee, Robert Hardy and other outstanding actors, making this TV series as prominent as Kipling's "Kim" of actually the same year, with Peter O'Toole as the lama. Also the music by Carl Davis is perfectly suited to this great romantic story, which actually is based on a true event: the great wedding march with hundreds of people through half of India did occur in reality, and that became the basis of M.M.Kaye's last and greatest novel and the central piece of the story. I was lucky enough to see it when it was new on television, but seeing it again after 35 years makes it even better, especially since I have been to India so many times since then, and if anything could make me long for a return, this film would be principal in inspiring and promoting the intention.

A few curious details: the mountains symbolizing "the far pavilions" that Ashok and Anjuli watch from their palace and constantly dream about are actually the Annapurna range (6 peaks) above Pokhara in Nepal. Ben Cross, who plays Ashton Pelhan-Martyn, passed away this year in August, only two months ago, at 72. He also made a fabulous lead as Barnabas in the TV series "Dark Shadows" 1991 among many other performances.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
flavor as sign
Vincentiu14 April 2013
after years, basic virtue is flavor of this series. a mixture between love story and fascinated India, force of feelings and strong rules of a society, magnificent images and precise acting. it is an exercise to explore the nuances of impressions about India and it remains an inspired exercise. in same measure, it is a definition of East with the instruments of European vision. slices of magic, drama isles, a beautiful princess and a hansom knight, air of music and sacrifices. window to an universe, it is delicate and tender. romanticism is its key. and the heart of its shadow - flavor. a good option for a Sunday afternoon.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
beautiful
Kirpianuscus7 June 2017
romanticism. and the change of history. exotic landscapes, traditions and rules. and beautiful cinematography. a love story touching not only for its ingredients but for status of reflection of clash between two different cultures and for the last period of British India. the right word for define this series could be delight. not exactly as entertainment but as support for reflection and inspired definition of a period of fundamental transformation. not only social.
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