DVD
Cousin Bette

Starring: Margaret Tyzack, Helen Mirren, Edward de Souza and Thorley Walters
Acorn Media UK
RRP: £19.99
AV9427
Certificate: 12
Available 10 July 2006


Bette is a poverty stricken French spinster and a frequent visitor to her cousin Hulot's home - who has blown most of his family fortune on his mistress. Hortense, his daughter, amuses herself by teasing Bette about her supposed lover, Count Stienbeck, but it is a cruel jest, as Bette feels that she loves him in a more maternal way. However, things turn ugly when Hortense determines to meet the Count and the two fall in love. Though they are to be married they keep the relationship a secret from Bette, and as it turns out, for a very good reason. As soon as Bette learns of the forthcoming marriage she is furious, not just because she has been lied to but because the family treat her as if she were an inferior. Furious at this state of affairs she engages the help of Madam Valerie Marneffe in a plan to completely destroy the Hulot family...

The nineteen-seventies were halcyon days for BBC drama, a storytelling idyll that died a death from a thousand budget cuts. It was an era that spawned the excellent Survivors, The Forsyte Saga, I Claudius and many other adaptations of literary classics. For the most part the acting was exceptional with many of the actors and actresses either coming from or heading to The Royal Shakespeare Company.

Cousin Bette, produced in nineteen seventy-one was a well-received adaptation of La Cousine Bette by Honore deBalzac. Written in eighteen forty-eight Cousine was one of a string of successful novels, which plumped the depths of the French bourgeoisie. In this deBalzac, along with Flaubert, is generally considered one of the fathers of the new realism that was sweeping European literature at the time.

The BBC version of Cousin Bette wasn't the first version committed to film. In nineteen twenty-seven France produced a film version directed by Max de Rieux and again in nineteen sixty-four a television version directed by Yves-Andre Hubert. The most recent version was the nineteen ninety-eight American film which stared Jessica Lange, directed by Dec McAnuff.

Cousin Bette stared a plethora of stunning talent. Margaret Tyzack, who plays Bette, is a deservedly well respected actress who had stared as Antonia in I Claudius as well as appearing in such diverse productions as 2001, A Clockwork Orange and a varied range of television. Helen Mirren appears as Valerie and her work is likewise distinguished, having appeared on both stage and screen displaying her versatility in comedies, drama and Caligula - Not the greatest film but Mirren's beauty makes up for the films shortcomings. Other notable actors to look out for are Colin Baker as Count Wenceslas Steinbock, Sally James of The Railway Children fame as Marie and Harriet Harper as Hortense.

This production was also nominated for an Emmy for Tyzacks excellent performance and was only piped to the post by Susan Hampshire's performance in Vanity Fair.

Given the age of the show the picture is surprisingly good with a 4:3 aspect ratio and a stereo soundtrack. Bette runs for an impressive two hundred and twenty minutes spread over two discs. The extras are not as extensive as one would wish to see but there is a very reasonable writer's biography and bibliography as well as cast filmographies and a picture gallery.

If nothing else Bette proves that hell really has no fury like a woman scorned. The length of the show allows a level of depth that the most recent film adaptation couldn't hope to match. With flawless acting from the whole cast, it was nice to see Colin Baker doing something other than Doctor Who; the disc will be a welcome addition to the collection of any lover of historical dramas.

Charles Packer

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£14.99 (Amazon.co.uk)
   
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All prices correct at time of going to press.