Genres:
Drama
Romance
Release Date: 09/12/2000
Dubbed: English
Flags: Violence, Adult Situations, Suitable for Children
Distributor/Studio: Acorn Media
The lavishly produced three-part telemovie
The Far Pavilions was adapted from the best-selling novel by
M.M. Kaye. Set in colonial India during the second Afghan war, the film concerns the exploits of Ashton Pelham-Martyn (
Ben Cross), a British officer. Born and raised in India, Pelham-Martyn finds himself a victim of his own divided loyalties as he leads a campaign against the rebellious tribal leaders on the northwestern frontier. The meat of the drama is Pelham-Martyn's "forbidden" romance with his lifelong friend, half-caste Hindu princess Anjuli (
Amy Irving). The supporting cast includes the illustrious likes of
Omar Sharif and
Christopher Lee. Filmed on location on a budget of $12 million (the most costly made-for-cable movie up to 1984),
The Far Pavilions originally aired over the HBO service on April 22, 23 and 24, 1984.
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Set in the India of the maharajahs at the beginning of British military occupation in 1858, this miniseries portrays a love affair that struggles for survival against deep ethnic and cultural prejudice. Served up in five hours and 21 minutes of pomp and circumstance, the production regales the eye with bejeweled royalty, ornate palaces, processions of elephants in full ceremonial brocade, and knightly heroes wielding swords and six-guns against a backdrop of sky-scraping mountains and blood-red sunsets. The forbidden romance between lower-caste Indian
Princess Anjuli (
Amy Irving) and British officer
Ashton Pelham-Martyn (
Ben Cross), an orphan reared by Indian parents, presents a familiar literary and film motif: Love knows no boundaries -- family, ethnic, political, or cultural. The purity of their love, which is blind to social and cultural taboos, preaches a message that India, Britain, and all the world should heed. Unfortunately, minor details flaw the production. For example,
Amy Irving -- browned with splotchy makeup -- looks more like a roasted chestnut than an Indian princess. In addition,
Pelham-Martyn's ability to kill with a revolver shot from hip level at distant targets (à la
Roy Rogers and
Gene Autry) ruins the sense of realism.
Cross and
Irving perform capably, but it is the supporting actors who carry the day. For example,
Rossano Brazzi is surprisingly good as the hedonistic
Raja of Bhitour. His accent, his superior air, and his makeup all work. In addition,
Omar Sharif -- who is protean in his ability to portray ethnic characters -- is superb as
Koda Dad, a Muslim master of horses who was a father figure to
Pelham-Martyn when he was growing up. Throughout the film, the cinematography captures the wondrous Indian landscape, including the "far pavilions" -- the lofty mountain ranges that allow history to play out beneath them.
~ Mike Cummings, All Movie Guide