Sadly Bramwell Series 3
and 4 Go Downhill Fast
by
Kristin Battestella
Doctor
Eleanor Bramwell (Jemma Redgrave) continues to run the Thrift Street
Infirmary with anesthetist Joseph Marsham (Kevin McMonagle) in the
uneven 1997 ten episode Season Three of Bramwell.
Despite personal tragedies and household upheavals, Doctor Robert
Bramwell (David Calder) courts the wealthy Alice Costigan (Maureen
Beattie), leaving Eleanor free for more romance as the series
whimpers on with two faulty feature length episodes in Year Four.
Already
Bramwell
is
off
on the wrong foot with “The Overnight Stay” as drunkards and
burning accidents at the local brewery begat pain, shouting,
hysterical mothers, and emergency hectic. If one didn't see the
previous series, you wouldn't know what's happening, and all the
screaming, poisoned patients, and alcoholism heavy handedness are
forgotten once the romance returns for our eponymous lady doctor. The
statements and forced melodrama remain uneven as the rekindled but
over the top sappy drags on at the expense of everything else.
Although it's immediately clear that ten hours is entirely too long a
season, the second episode is much stronger and Bramwell
improves
greatly when focusing on the ensemble's personal and professional
drama instead of this contrived, dead end love affair. Spending time
without Eleanor in Episode Five ironically makes the show better, and
it makes the audience wonder if she could have been written off or
replaced as Year Three continues to fall apart with “The Beaten
Wife.” Festive jubilee preparations contrast the downtrodden
streets and shanty town house calls, however the severe split skulls
and abusive bloody are cut short when the doctor once again ditches
The Thrift for her boyfriend. Paralleling a truly terrible situation
with her la dee da and the perceived problems of her subsequent break
up is an embarrassing juxtaposition. Bramwell
remembers
it's medical premise with goiters, boils, infected abscesses, and
dubious diagnosis in “The
Faith Healer,” but patients are turning to religious healers and
what the doctors call mumbo jumbo. Everyone is shouting, irrational,
and angry at the perceived backward superstition against science.
Sick patients who really need a doctor are walking out of the clinic,
but Bramwell
doesn't
handle multiple medical issues per episode for most of this season,
and the religious healing versus fatal fire and brimstone quackery
never makes a stand either way in an
aimless entry indicative of the season's unnecessary pains.
Jemma
Redgrave's Doctor Eleanor Bramwell shouts at her staff and talks back
to her father over her latest high horse cause, yet she's the one who
isn't seeing to her patients because she's too busy getting some
steamy. Our intelligent, hard working woman is once again ready to
dump The Thrift for her marriage plans. Eleanor's angry at everyone
else, but when she says another is strong in medicine but weak and
foolish in the heart, we know she's talking about herself. The
character shines much, much more as a woman and a doctor in a time
ruled by men when only she is able to comfort an ill mother with a
feminine gravitas. However, Bramwell
spends
most of its time with Eleanor moping, embarrassing herself in public,
and threatening to close her clinic because a man didn't rescue her
from being a spinster doctor. She runs
away to stay with a friend for “The Mercenary Expecting,” but
Eleanor isn't happy with any country idyllic or matchmaking and yells
at the maid. Her friends are so, so tired of it, but she picks a
fight with the local school and sick townsfolk, critical of lesser
conditions and telling teachers how to handle ignorance and neglect.
She accuses everyone high or low of being so smug, wrapping a
situation that should be handled with forgiveness, food, and rest in
a terribly uncomfortable attitude and over the top whining. Bramwell
regresses
its independent woman with nothing but mistakes, turning her into a
bitter biddy who takes over The Thrift again only when it suits her –
and when the clinic seemed to do better without her complaining.
Eleanor calls her father selfish when he invests in his own practice
rather than Thrift Street, and he counters that she needs to consider
how
other people have dreams and professional ambition beyond her little
world. She also says it is for the best when things fall apart for
him, which is totally
rude,
and it is obvious she's jealous of him getting remarried before she
is wed. Bramwell
becomes
even more tone deaf when Eleanor says she's tired of reminding all
the bleeding hearts around her of who they are and what they do, but
she quickly realizes she is the one backed into a corner and
dependent upon the nearest man. She even suggests she and Marsham
marry because of how convenient it would be for her – out of her
father's house and near East End with her own money – never
considering his feelings for her when she steps out with yet another
louse instead. Eleanor insists she is calm, able to deal, and not
some silly girl, but we have seen every evidence to the contrary, and
the character is completely unlikable by the end of the season.
A
newfound courting of a wealthy widow, however, has David Calder's
Doctor Robert Bramwell recapturing his youthful adventurousness.
Naturally, Eleanor's stubbornness and petty disapproval embarrasses
him, and he rightfully tells her to catch some manners before giving
her her mother's jewelry when she plots her ill-advised engagement.
Robert still wants to be there and comfort her, but he's having his
own awkwardness in “The Entrenched Rival” thanks to pompous
competition and high society formalities when he's visiting his
lady's country house. Robert doubts his walks in the moonlight will
do, but he realizes it's worth vying for the lady. Ironically, dad
does the courting right when his daughter falls for all the wrongs –
it's almost as if he
should be Bramwell's
lead.
Robert also does a risky surgery
on an infant while Eleanor supports him, and he confesses how he lost
his wife during an operation he performed on her. He takes new
offices at a well to do address in “The Change of Life” and
intends to ask Alice to marry him, but an infatuated young lady
patient is making excuses with pains in delicate places. Robert
remains professional, focusing on his charming proposal instead of
the increasingly delusional hypochondriac. Who knew accusations,
fanatical patients, and gunshots were exactly what Bramwell
needed?
Wedding announcements are in the newspaper by “The Short Chapter,”
and Robert's laughing like he's twenty as The Thrift goes all out
with a humble little party and sentimental gifts. Dad still worries
about Eleanor in East End alone and wants her in the country with
them, and Maureen Beattie as widowed brewery heiress Alice Costigan
asks Eleanor to be her bridesmaid. She's a strong business woman
supporting The Thrift, sticking to the rules without being cruel and
helping her injured workers. Alice enjoys Robert's company and
invites his simpler tastes into her world despite some haughty
medical arguments – she is perhaps set in her ways and chooses the
more eminent opinion instead of what's best for the patient. Alice
gets knocked down from her social grandstanding, but admits when she
is wrong, bringing Eleanor frocks and trying to suggest suitors or
more help at the clinic. She's proud of Robert's work and happy to
marry him but wishes he'd confide in her without worrying about
money, status, or impressing anybody. She prefers mutual trust to
doctor confidentiality and offers her finances to save his
partnership in a tender, progressive equality again done better than
her step-daughter's romances.
Kevin
McMonagle's Doctor Joe Marsham remains the voice of reason on
Bramwell despite saying he is rarely sober. He never seems to
leave the clinic yet talks of taking a promotion with a real salary
elsewhere. His wife, unfortunately, becomes ill in “The Diagnosis”
and uses a fake name to see Eleanor by appointment. She has had
miscarriages and they lost a child, but now there is swelling in her
breast and she can't tell her husband. Marsham is angry his wife
doesn't confide in him personally or professionally over such a
serious illness, and the story balances the husband being unable to
handle the severity and the timid woman in pain seen more as a
specimen by an elitist specialist. Their choices for healthcare are
impeded by his Scottish accent and cheap suit, and the entire Marsham
family moves in with the Bramwells during the grim diagnosis for one
of the series' finer episodes as the emotional ensemble shines amid
grief, time wasted, and loneliness. Andrew Connolly, however,
returns as Doctor Finn O'Neill in the Series Three premiere, still
wooing Eleanor between lecture stops – dropping by to ruin her rep
and she falls for it every time! Though ambitious, he wants assurance
of her love before sounding like an abuser with excuses on why it is
Eleanor's fault he returns from America with another bride. Everyone
sees Finn coming – how can we believe he really loves Eleanor when
all he's ever done is wrong her? It's
a chore to watch “The Vaccination Experiment” late in the season
when these same old moon eyes embarrass the Bramwells amidst would be
provocative medical committees debating influenza and
vaccinations. Eleanor justifies his work, too – dismissing his
wife's ill health, letting the girl faint, and mistreating her out of
romantic spite. Finn insists Eleanor knows he wouldn't experiment on
people...but that's how they met!
She's
terribly embarrassed by suggestive drunken ravings but Ruth Sheen's
Nurse Carr sticks up for Eleanor against Finn's crap and isn't afraid
to tell off a patient's abusive husband. Although a wonderful dancer
tiring out all the men, she can still be found working in The Thrift
at three in the morning and comes when the Bramwells call at home.
She remains forgiving despite her priggish gruff, but when she tells
the doctors she can't be in two places at once, they yell. Everyone's
entitled to a bad day except her! Sadly Ethel's mother has begun
wandering and stealing in “The Medical Hopeful” and both stubborn
ladies refuse help even if Nurse Carr can't take care of her mother
alone and won't think of putting her in an asylum. She steals opium
from the clinic, spooning it to her mother to keep her calm before
escalating to more upsetting elder abuse. The difficulties here are
nobody's fault and that's the saddest part, but it's frustrating that
the supporting tenderness is torn with severe personal troubles while
the titular star has a sappy romance. Ben Brazier as young porter
Sidney Bentley is barely there but for a quip or wisdom from the
adults. He stands up for Nurse Carr when she teaches him to dance and
says he's sorry for the way Finn treats Eleanor and he'd propose if
he could. Keeley Gainey's maid Kate is also used for passing along
exposition, an absent-minded girl sneaking out for stolen kisses and
trying to use a typewriter. Thankfully, she stands up for herself
against the jerks and accepts that she has no secretarial skills –
humming, reciting poetry, and off to jubilee parties while remaining
much needed kindly support.
Bramwell
has plenty of turn of the
century Victorian bustle with all the balloon sleeves,
bonnets, feathers, and frocks needed for proper British formality.
Bicycles, carriages, fancy manors, and period clutter set off the
candles, crystal, cameos, pearls, and newfangled electric lights
while medical gruesome, surgery knives, and blood provide gritty. Our
faithful must make their jubilee flags themselves, but they play
instruments, sing, and dance to make their own music, too. Be it
funeral decorum or church wedding, the Gibson Girl hats and big
plumes are ready – leaving the gowns and shining gems reserved for
the evening parties amid marble ballrooms, fine china, and English
gardens. Rain and blue lighting accent scandalous rendezvous, and
overhead shots or point of view editing mirror emergencies with
vintage microscopes, period medical equipment, big needles, and huge
IV tubes. Bramwell shows the
bloody burns and sores upon the breast in bitter contrast to the
often quaint atmosphere. However, every time there is a
hysterical shock, foul insult, or any kind of upset, ever – someone
always inevitably suggests they have a cup of tea! Of course,
stateside we would have called Bramwell canceled
after Season Three and named the two 100 minute episodes following it
television movie specials rather than a Series Four. New
credits, military drums, black and white archive footage, absent
characters – you would have no idea “The Brave Boys” is
supposed to be about a lady doctor if you started here with redcoats
and muckrakers shouting in the streets. The always delightful but
barely there Jenny Agutter (Logan's Run)
is shoehorned in amid busy back and forth editing trying to
set the wartime scene, hectic camerawork, and poor outdoor
cinematography. It's Eleanor Takes on the Army as
sergeants object to her being a recruit doctor. Marsham says
he isn't being paid by Her Majesty's Service, so he just lets his
future wife do the grab and cough on all these ready and waiting bare
butt soldiers instead? There is no sign of romantic affection between
the colleagues, and if Robert Bramwell objected to his daughter being
called a cunt by patients on Thrift Street, I wonder what he thinks
of her military cajoling? Useless scenes and annoying music add to
the confusion for anyone unfamiliar with the Boer Wars and Dutch
prejudice, leaving characters to take surprisingly racist turns.
Nobody's on the same side, and instead of tying up the loose ends
from Year Three, this episode throws enemy patients and friendly
barracks into the messy mix. Once again, Eleanor drops everything for
a Major she doesn't even really like who gets her hot and bothered,
because as independent as she claims to be, all the men are still
telling her what to do. Apparently there's some kind of marriage and
pregnancy scandal in the second feature “The Loose Women,” but I
just can't go on anymore.
Bramwell
shoots itself in the foot with squandered time on round and round
romantic melodrama. Despite stronger stories yet to be told with
other characters, plenty of period toils, and more medical
possibilities, the series looses its way amid both too many episodes
and bizarre format changes. There is still some fine Victorian drama
from the tormented ensemble, but unfortunately Bramwell is
best left after the Second Season thanks to an increasing
unlikability untrue to its original premise.