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Series Five
Will Ye No Come Back Again / Joke Over
Will Ye No Come Back Again / Joke Over
There’s some nice location work in both these episodes, with the first episode featuring the Scottish Highlands, some 640 miles from Eaton Place. According to the info, Gordon Jackson was the only series regular who did the location work. I can’t say this affected the way I viewed it, since it still felt very much like a change of scene. But it does explain the rather curious “Scottish” accents used by some of the guest actors, one of which sounded decidedly East European.
Something Will Ye No Come Back Again has in abundance is atmosphere. The gloomy, moody large interior spaces look very established, but also creaky and old. With the lack of electric lighting most of the time, oil lamps cast long shadows and add to the gothic tone. Many of these interiors feel rather Christiesque. There’s even a ghost story thrown in.
And there’s an honest-to-goodness mystery, with strange noises and occurrences and characters behaving oddly. All of which turns out to be due to a salmon poaching business going on.
This being UpDown, the most interest comes not from the mystery itself but from the response to it - specifically Hudson’s. He investigates single-handedly and so it becomes a collusion between Hudson and viewer, though we still don’t know what he’s going to do with the information. At End Of Part Two, he alone walks in and catches the poachers red-handed and it seems almost foolish for him to have done this without having someone with him (if not Richard or James, then Edward). But it's worth it for the following scene, in which he gets to the bottom of it, and speaks one-to-one with McKay, sternly berating him for his lack of loyalty to his master (Hudson's measure as consistent as ever) before presenting his terms and reaching a gentleman’s agreement.
The entire arc shows Hudson at his most resourceful and assertive, and it feels truthful because behind it is his unwavering ethic of loyalty to one’s household. In one fell swoop, he all but blackmails McKay into doing the right thing and suddenly Mrs Bridges has power and light in the kitchen (as well as a suddenly-willing local woman), James is catching salmon and the Bellamys are once again enjoying the refinements they are used to. It’s another of those episodes where the other characters don’t know what Hudson has done, leaving us to appreciate his unsung efforts. It’s even more impressive given that he and McKay end up respecting one another and there’s a genuine warmth between them that gives the viewer, too, a warm glow.
The episode also brings the James/Georgina (damn it - I’m still writing “Elizabeth” and having to change it) business to a head, with James putting his romantic feelings on the table only for Georgina to tell him she simply hasn’t those feelings for him anymore. Once again, there’s secrecy involved. Since they can’t tell anyone else, their conversation has to halt whenever Richard walks into the room. By episode’s end, James has fled, first back to London and then overseas, ostensibly to visit Elizabeth. Only Georgina knows that he’s running from her.
By the next episode, though, Georgina is back in full carefree flapper mode, partying all night with her chums and stealing policeman’s helmets and parlourmaid’s caps and suchlike for a giggle. The scene in which they all drunkenly ransack the servants’ hall really gets across the entitlement and lack of care with which at least some of these people view those who work for them.
Hudson, having been disturbed by them in the wee smalls, is then required to dress and serve them all drinks, and there’s a delightfully awkward scene in which Georgina tells him he can go to bed and they’ll serve themselves. He dutifully says that he’ll be happy to continue and goes to open the second bottle of champagne, only for Georgina to bark at him again to go to bed. There’s a sense that Georgina does this out of guilt that he is up, and out of concern for him, but the way in which she does it makes things worse.
Edward’s in it even deeper. Having offered to drive Elizabeth and her friends when she’d woken him at 3am demanding the car keys, she and her friends pull rank and order him to hand over the keys for Georgina to drive. Then she knocks a man off his bike and he ends up dying.
That Georgina doesn’t seem to consider the full gravity of the situation, even as she goes to a hearing, is perhaps as much a sign of the times as it is her entitled position. While a Criminal Justice Act relating to operating mechanical vehicles while drunk was introduced in 1925 - some three years before this episode’s time setting - it would be another two years before the 1930 Road Traffic Act relating to driving under the influence. The legal drink driving limit was still four decades away. What’s more, Richard, Virginia and Sir Geoffrey shield her from the implications. The potential charge of manslaughter is mentioned away from Georgina’s ears.
There’s something of an arc for Georgina at episode’s end, with her bursting into tears back at home as the consequences of her actions begins to sink in (the verdict is “accidental death”, but Georgina is still reprimanded for her part in things), but once again it feels rather retrogressive, almost as though her growth during Series Four has been forgotten. But perhaps that’s the point. People’s growth isn’t always linear and, frustrating as they are, setbacks and not learning from experience are simply part of the journey.
Downstairs, this is another cracker of an episode for Edward who is initially held responsible by Richard and then considers giving notice and leaving. Perhaps most eyebrow-raising isn’t that Edward is prepared to walk out of his job, but that he is also prepared to leave Daisy behind. There’s a reprieve when Richard is enlightened by Georgina and apologises to Edward for his error, but I wonder where Edward and Daisy will be by series’ end.
Lady Dolly was supremely irritating in this episode. I found the writing a little extreme around her here. I appreciate someone needs to represent the entitled, irresponsible heiress, but her conduct in court - laughing as they discussed the incident in which they killed someone, and treating her time on the stand as a joke - just seemed OTT. Even if she was coked-up or whatever, it seemed rather caricature-like. But then, Rosemary Anne Sisson is a writer I trust to know her subject matter well, so perhaps it’s a case of truth being even more extreme than fiction.
There were a couple of other notables among the wags. Anthony Andrews made his debut as the dashing hero of the hour - the only one who stood by Georgina in her hour of need. The image on the DVD menu tells me exactly where this is going (fancy spoiling one of the series’ last big stories on every disc in Series Five), but it’s good to see him. He feels very familiar, and I suppose it’s from Brideshead. Even though I’ve never actually watched a full episode, it’s just one of those things that’s so well-known even those who’ve never watched will know the faces. Also present was a very young charmer, Nigel Havers.
Just three episodes remain, which feels rather exciting.