Jack Holborn
Jack Holborn
| 21 December 1982 (USA)
SEASON & EPISODES
  • 1
  • Reviews
    Evengyny

    Thanks for the memories!

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    Vashirdfel

    Simply A Masterpiece

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    Pacionsbo

    Absolutely Fantastic

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    Janis

    One of the most extraordinary films you will see this year. Take that as you want.

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    Dan

    It's easy to forget just how old this series is. I remember watching this on TV in 1984, being the same age then as the principal character. Back then I concentrated on Patrick Bach's extraordinary performance as Jack, to this day it's impossible to see anyone else achieving what he did.Viewing the DVD 30 years later on a wide screen TV there is so much more there that I missed first time round. Anyone who thinks being an actor is glamorous should watch the shipboard scenes. You can literally smell the dirt, grime and salt water. Contrast with the Hornblower films where everything is implausibly clean. Glorious performances by the adults, Monte Markam as Solomon Trumpet being the best of a great cast. Plus of course a superb music score by Christian Bruhn.Even back as a 13 year old I appreciated the intelligent way the film makers treated the audience. For example, they didn't shrink from showing us close-ups of Judge Sheringham's injuries. Patrick Bach looks as if he really did want to be sick in that scene, rather than it being just an act. Not surprising - back in the day I felt queasy watching it. At its heart Jack Holborn is a morality tale, the message being keep your humanity whatever the situation. Jack has his life threatened at every turn yet never speaks roughly to anyone else, or acts in a morally questionable way. Unrealistic you might think, but intentional. The stress of doing this while surrounded by pirates finally snaps in a very powerful scene where out of earshot Jack screams "I'm not a criminal !!" while smashing everything he can find.All the episodes are great but the final one packs a series of emotional punches so powerful it is still hard work to watch.

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    Joseph Santamaria

    I still do not know of anyone personally who remembers this brilliant series except me. It is a classic swashbuckling affair set (mostly) on a pirate ship, the central character being a young stow-away called Jack Holborn.I have long wished to track down a copy of the series and have finally been successful in finding it for sale on DVD from Amazon Germany and Amazon France! The only problem is that there is no English Soundtrack and I don't speak German or French! However, it was amazing to see it again as what had mostly stuck in my mind was the imagery and scenery and the music. Watching it was like going back in time to the days of childhood TV on days off school with not much to do. I have also purchased the original book on which the series is based, by Leon Garfield.Reading the book shall hopefully fill in all the gaps in my memory and also serve as a means of translation for me and all those who speak not in the Germanic or Franco tongues.

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    Bryher-2

    This is, quite simply, wonderful. Just before I stuck the first DVD in my player, I was a little worried that "Jack Holborn" would look dated and silly in my jaded adult eyes. It did not, even for a moment. The occasional historical blooper that went completely over my 12-year-old head somehow seems endearing now, and the only mildly embarrassing moments are caused by a very cheesy piece of background music intruding at an inappropriate moment - but this happens perhaps twice in the course of the series. This is still the same piece of television that kindled in me an enduring fascination with and interest in all things nautical, the Age of Sail, and the 18th century, and even engendered some enthusiasm for my German lessons, which have stood me in immensely good stead in later life."Jack Holborn" is, vaguely, an adaptation of the Leon Garfield young adults' novel of the same name. I say "vaguely" because, although the main idea is still there and some details have been preserved, very important aspects of the story, as well as a lot of the characterisation, have been changed. For my money, however, the series plot works out better and makes far more sense than the book one. The title hero is a plucky 13-year-old foundling, whom we meet as his fate is being decided by Lord Sharingham, a magistrate in 1787 Bristol. Jack wants to be ship's boy, but he's assigned to work for a local family of sail-makers and cobblers instead, despite the magistrate's twin brother, the privateer Captain Sharingham, offering to take him aboard his ship, the "Charming Molly." The magistrate accuses his brother of dealings with pirates and vows to bring him to justice and clear the family name; meanwhile, Jack is plagued by a recurring hazy memory of a foggy night at sea ten years previously that appears to hold the key to who he is and to what happened to his parents, and in which Captain Sharingham and his ship seem to play an important part. The plot thickens thereafter, with never a dull moment in the roughly five hours the series is long. To reveal more would be spoilerific - suffice it to say that, as in any decent story containing twin siblings, mistaken identity comes to play a huge part in the plot, and there's rousing adventure in spades, both on land and upon the high seas: betrayals, loyalty, swordplay, pistols, muskets, belaying pins, stowing away, ruses, disguises, broadsides, boarding, spying, a duel, storms, shipwrecks, mutinies, flogging, romance, revenge, cruelty, mercy, courtroom drama, a mysterious lady, moral ambiguity, fraternal angst, swamp fever, hostile natives, transportation, slavery, escapes, a cynical parrot, dungeons, hangings, treasure... hooray! I will never forgive the script writers for what happens to my favourite character at the end, though. Twenty-two years on, I am still traumatised. I know Mr. Garfield wrote it that way, but the book character is a blood-thirsty psychopath with no redeeming features, whereas... Sigh. I suppose it adds to the dramatic strength and poignancy.The casting is uniformly excellent, with not a single bad performance. Matthias Habich (Captain and Lord Sharingham) is not only phenomenal as always, but manages to look extremely attractive while wearing what is essentially a German footballer's mullet with a bow stuck in. Patrick Bach (Jack Holborn) is surprisingly good for his age, never slipping into preciousness. The exteriors were done in Croatia and on Rarotonga (one of the Cook Islands), and work very well, even the shots of Dubrovnik pretending to be both Bristol and the island of Nautia! For the "Charming Molly" and several other vessels they used an actual sailing ship, and it shows. The music by Christian Bruhn is, apart from the cheesy bit mentioned above, actually very good, in particular the haunting harpsichord theme. I understand it's even available on CD now.The DVD picture quality is fine, perhaps even a little better than one would have expected of a TV-series from 1982. My only beef with the German edition that I own is the complete lack of any bonus features and subtitles, even German ones, so there are still little bits of dialogue that I don't understand completely. But I am immensely grateful this is on DVD at all! Unreservedly recommended.

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    ImTylerDurden

    They don't make children's series like this anymore and they might never again. It's a truly international production filmed on location in New Zealand and former Yugoslavia as a 5 hour movie split into 12 parts. There's a great plot with mystery, betrayal, mistaken identity, friendship and the odd bit of swashbuckling here and there. You see it all through the eyes of orphan Jack Holborn, nicely played by Patrick Bach as a kind-hearted boy who wins over everyone he meets with his honesty and bravery. It's not watered down like most kids series and despite the drawbacks of dubbing it still comes across as pretty real on the human level even 20 years on (recent French DVD release). The final moment never fails to bring a lump to my throat. Just terrific from start to finish.

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