House of Cards Trilogy, Vol. 1 - House of Cards (2003)
House of Cards Trilogy, Vol. 1 - House of Cards Image Cover
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Studio:BBC Warner
Rating:4.5 (25 votes)
Date Added:2009-07-04
ASIN:B00009MGGP
UPC:9780790777610
Genre:Art House & International
Release:2003-08-26
Location:0789
Duration:225
Aspect Ratio:1.33:1
Languages:English
Custom 1:iMac24
  ...  (Director)
  ...  (Writer)
 
Ian Richardson  ...  
Susannah Harker  ...  
Miles Anderson  ...  
Colin Jeavons  ...  
Damien Thomas  ...  
Summary: Connoisseurs of political chicanery will relish "House of Cards", the mordantly funny story of Francis Urquhart (Ian Richardson), a British politician with his eye on the top job. Urquhart is the chief whip of the Conservative Party and his job is to maintain party discipline, or, as he likes to say, "put a bit of stick about." This means that he has intimate knowledge of his colleagues' foibles, knowledge that he uses to further his own political ambitions. Aided by his equally ruthless wife and drawing on a network of accomplices, Urquhart manufactures a crisis that forces the prime minister to resign. He then sets out to discredit each of his rivals for the party leadership, clearing the way for a rapid and apparently inevitable rise to power. The only possible flaw in Urquhart's master plan is his affair with Mattie Storin, a young journalist who is drawn into his web when he decides she might prove useful.
Although it is strongly cast throughout, "House of Cards" belongs to Ian Richardson. Without his perfectly balanced performance, Urquhart might have become no more than a two-dimensional villain, but Richardson finds exactly the right tone to make his character as attractive as he is wicked. Like his illustrious predecessor Richard III ("House of Cards" is filled with references to Shakespearean villains), Francis Urquhart is an irresistible bad guy with a nice line in witty asides to the audience. Even when he is calmly committing murder Urquhart is so charming, so much more clever than his rivals, that it's impossible not to root for him. Thanks to Richardson, and a superb script by Andrew Davies, this brilliant political satire is sure to delight anyone who has wondered what might be going on in the darker corners of our democratic institutions. "--Simon Leake"