The Day

DOWNTON ABBEY: A NEW ERA

- — Katie Walsh,

★★ 1/2

PG, 125 minutes. Started Wednesday at Mystic Luxury Cinemas, Waterford, Stonington, Westbrook, Lisbon. Starts Friday at Niantic.

The new “Downton Abbey” film proclaims that it’s “A New Era,” but in actuality, it’s a real throwback. It’s not just that “Downton Abbey: A New Era” is a shiny replicatio­n of a world that’s nearly a century old, but it’s also a reminder of the world that we lived in when we loved “Downton Abbey,” those heady days of the 2010s when we gulped down seasons of the wildly popular, award-winning historical TV drama created by Julian Fellowes. Watching it feels like double escapism: to early 20th-century England, as well as to a pre-pandemic time. The series “Downton Abbey” did engage with political and cultural issues of the post-Edwardian time period in which it was set, including the First World War, the Spanish flu pandemic, as well as other social issues and political upheavals. It’s strange then, how the films spun off from the series, including 2019’s “Downton Abbey” and now “Downton Abbey: A New Era” are so divorced from any barbed relevance or commentary. In 2019’s “Downton Abbey,” the plot revolves around a royal visit from the king and queen of England, which sets the Crawley family and their servants into a tizzy, and in “A New Era,” there’s a new set of visitors to the estate, a film crew, which adds a touch of cheeky self-reflection to the proceeding­s. Headed up by director Jack Barber (Hugh Dancy), the crew takes over the estate to shoot a period piece on location with stars Guy Dexter (Dominic West) and Myrna Dalgleish (Laura Haddock). Lady Mary (Michelle Dockery), who has taken over running the estate, agrees to the shoot because they need money to fix the roof, but she finds that she’s got a knack for guiding Jack through some of the inevitable bumps of filming a movie, marshaling the Downton staff to help. Meanwhile, her parents, Lord and Lady Grantham (Hugh Bonneville and Elizabeth McGovern) take off for the south of France with a delegation of Downton inhabitant­s to investigat­e a villa that’s been willed to the Dowager Countess Violet Grantham (Maggie Smith) by a mysterious former lover.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States