Pasatiempo

Mannered melodrama

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DOWNTON ABBEY: A NEW ERA Michael O’Sullivan I The Washington Post Trailer youtu.be/wN0Spmq610­Q

Shameless fan service seems to be the defining characteri­stic of this summer’s biggest franchise films, with Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness setting a high (or is that low?) bar in its effort to cater to die-hard fans of the Marvel Cinematic Universe at the expense of more casual viewers. The long-delayed sequel Top Gun: Maverick, which opens Friday, May 27, will follow suit in its desire to give devotees of the 1986 original exactly what they crave: naked emotionali­sm and fighter jets.

Similarly, the just-released Downton Abbey: A New Era — the second movie spin-off to the long-running TV soap about the ups and downs, romantic and otherwise, of a family of British aristocrat­s and their servants — opens with a double-wedding scene that sets the tone for several crowd-pleasing couplings that will soon follow.

These unions between sentimenta­l-favorite characters will come as no surprise to anyone who saw the last film. And for those who didn’t, there’s a helpful prologue that accompanie­s A New Era, courtesy of footman-turned-schoolteac­her Mr. Molesley (Kevin Doyle), who efficientl­y recapitula­tes the events of the tumultuous 2019 drama, in which a visit by the king and queen of England caused all manner of commotion, upstairs and downstairs, at the titular

Downton. (All sequels should be so — there’s no other word for it — considerat­e of their audience.)

But these introducto­ry love stories are mere appetizers to the main course of romantic intrigue on the menu of this savory, 1928-set souffle, which concerns the possibilit­y of a week of passion, some 60 years earlier, between everybody’s true favorite, matriarch Violet Crawley, aka the Dowager Countess of Grantham (Maggie Smith), and a mysterious French marquis. No sooner has Molesley dispensed with his preamble than the Crawley family’s lawyer (Jonathan Coy) arrives at Downton with the revelation that the countess has been bequeathed a villa on the French Riviera by a recently deceased nobleman, apparently someone once besotted with Lady Grantham in the early days of her marriage.

Speculatio­n runs rampant as to the nature and extent of this secret relationsh­ip, and whether the dowager countess’s son Robert (Hugh Bonneville) might really be — quelle horreur! — half French. This bombshell precipitat­es a trip to the South of France by most of the Crawleys; it’s an utterly prepostero­us plot contrivanc­e by series creator Julian Fellowes — necessary only as an excuse to vary the scenery. (And, by that measure, it’s a smashing success.)

Meanwhile, back at home, Robert’s daughter Mary (Michelle Dockery) is left to oversee a movie crew that has rented Downton for filming, in exchange for a fee that will cover repairs to the manor’s leaky roof. This also affords director Simon Curtis the opportunit­y for some comic relief: Minor characters wander onto the set as the camera is rolling, and the gorgeous leading lady (Laura Haddock) is discovered to have the squawking Cockney speaking voice of an Eliza Doolittle when the production switches gears from a silent film to a talkie. Flirtation­s occur, between certain members of the Crawley family and staff and two members of the film crew: its handsome director (Hugh Dancy) and the debonair leading man (Dominic West). The action of the story switches back and forth between the two locales, Downton and France.

The film’s subtitle refers most explicitly to the advent of talkies, which were just becoming a thing in the late 1920s. But A New Era has multiple other meanings as well, including the film’s message of gay tolerance (arguably somewhat anachronis­tic for the time). To the gay butler Thomas Barrow (Robert James-Collier), whose storyline of unrequited love featured prominentl­y in the last film, comes, at long last, the prospect of bliss. “I wish you all the happiness this cruel world can afford,” Lady Mary tells him, without acknowledg­ing that she’s not really saying a lot.

But there are other dramatic closures, too, that signal not just the dawn of a new age but, inevitably, the end of an old one. The subtitle refers not only to the twilight of the 1920s but to a changing of the guard in this entertainm­ent franchise as well. In that sense, maybe Downton Abbey isn’t really giving its fans what they want, but what they have always needed to accept in this epic saga: that time doesn’t stand still.

Drama/comedy, rated PG, 124 minutes, Regal Santa Fe Place 6, Regal Stadium 14, Violet Crown, 3 chiles

 ?? ?? In the second Downton Abbey spinoff movie, the Crawleys visit the South of France, and a film crew sets up shop in Downton.
In the second Downton Abbey spinoff movie, the Crawleys visit the South of France, and a film crew sets up shop in Downton.

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