SummaryCamille (Alice Englert) is being mentored by the current Marquise de Merteuil (Lesley Manville) when she meets Pascal Valmont (Nicholas Denton) in Paris before the French Revolution in this series created and written by Harriet Warner.
SummaryCamille (Alice Englert) is being mentored by the current Marquise de Merteuil (Lesley Manville) when she meets Pascal Valmont (Nicholas Denton) in Paris before the French Revolution in this series created and written by Harriet Warner.
It’s hard to create a new story for 230-year-old characters and make it seem like it was part of those characters’ stories the whole time. But Harriet Warner and her staff have been able to do that with Dangerous Liaisons.
You’ve got a whole chessboard of polyamorous rivalries that play out at breathless pace.
Yes, the subtle deeps of Hampton’s work are absent. But six episodes in there’s a sense that this moreish rondo could go on and on.
For all that it is about love, sex and the deceits that come with it, this Dangerous Liaisons resists becoming encumbered by any deeper messages about the damage people are willing to do to each other to get ahead. It’s about watching Camille learn the manipulative ropes from a mistress of them and seeing how far she can get on her wits alone.
Creator Harriet Warner spins the central characters of the book into a dull, plodding prequel that simultaneously apes the camp appeal of the 1988 film while also stretching it into a dour tale of destiny and conspiracy.
It shows no interest in plumbing their personalities or psyches beyond the basic motivations required by the narrative, and no curiosity about their quirks or inconsistencies or senses of humor. ... For all the time Englert and Denton spend snuggled up together in various states of undress, they struggle to conjure any real sparks.