maraleia July 5, 2014 Share July 5, 2014 "Trust no man living with power to endanger the public liberty."- John Adams, 1772 John Adams, David McCullough's Pulitzer Prize-winning book and one of the best-selling American historical biographies of all time, comes to the screen as a seven-part HBO Films miniseries. John Adams chronicles the life of this remarkable historical figure, a man whose fiercely independent spirit, reverence for the rule of law and commitment to personal liberty profoundly influenced the values on which our country was founded. The miniseries also explores the extraordinary relationship between Adams and Abigail, his wife of 54 years, a partnership regarded as one of the most moving love stories in American history. This Playtone Production stars Academy Award® nominees Paul Giamatti and Laura Linney as John and Abigail Adams. Directed by Emmy® Award-winner Tom Hooper (HBO's "Elizabeth I" and the recent Golden Globe-winner "Longford"); Tom Hanks and Gary Goetzman executive produce; Kirk Ellis (Emmy®-nominated for "Into The West" and "Anne Frank: The Whole Story") writes and serves as co-executive producer with Frank Doelger; David Coatsworth and Steven Shareshian produce. The miniseries also stars Stephen Dillane as Thomas Jefferson, Academy Award® nominee Tom Wilkinson as Benjamin Franklin, Danny Huston as Samuel Adams, David Morse as George Washington, Sarah Polley as Nabby Adams, Ebon Moss-Bachrach as John Quincy Adams, Rufus Sewell as Alexander Hamilton, Justin Theroux as John Hancock, Guy Henry as Jonathan Sewall and Zeljko Ivanek as Pennsylvania delegate John Dickinson. Since this miniseries is currently available on HBO OnDemand I thought I'd start a thread. I could watch this every year of my life it's that good. My favorite part other then when Laura Linney's Abigail was on the screen was the scene where Adams, Jefferson and Franklin discuss the Declaration of Independence because it imparted two big pieces of information: how the Declaration was altered and Franklin marveling at Jefferson's swivel chair invention. Information found on the web...see below. Conversation between Thomas Jefferson and John Adams, regarding who should be the author of the Declaration of Independence. (This is how Adams remembered it occurring, years later. Jefferson had no such memory.) John Adams insisted that the author be Jefferson. Jefferson: You should do it. Adams: Oh no. Jefferson: Why will you not? Adams: I will not. Jefferson: Why? Adams: Reasons enough. Jefferson: What can be your reasons? Adams: Reason first: you are a Virginian and a Virginian ought to appear at the head of this business. Reason second: I am obnoxious, suspected and unpopular. You are very much otherwise. Reason third: You can write ten times better than I can. Jefferson: Well, if you are decided, I will do as well as I can. 2 Link to comment
88Keys July 8, 2014 Share July 8, 2014 We have the DVD of this, and my husband does indeed watch it every year. You're right; it's fantastic. I felt so connected to John and Abigail that I literally cried at the end, even though they've been dead for like 200 years. How weird is that? Link to comment
StatMom July 8, 2014 Share July 8, 2014 Thanks for the on demand alert! I haven't seen this since its original run, and I've always wanted to have another look. At the time, it inspired me to read a couple books on the founding fathers. Now if I can only find the hours in the next day and a half to watch it! (My on demand has it until the 10th.) Link to comment
CherryMalotte July 10, 2014 Share July 10, 2014 Still love Stephen Dillane's performance as Jefferson...absolutely sublime. 4 Link to comment
mbutterfly July 11, 2014 Share July 11, 2014 (edited) John Adams is also free if you have Amazon Prime. I just used a clip in a sermon this past Sunday where they are all arguing while writing the Declaration of Independence. Love the series! Edited July 11, 2014 by mbutterfly Link to comment
jah1986 April 16, 2015 Share April 16, 2015 So I just signed up for HBO Now and found this. I'm just at the second episode but I'm hooked. It's very good, I'm looking forward to catching the rest. 1 Link to comment
pandora spocks April 19, 2015 Share April 19, 2015 Still love Stephen Dillane's performance as Jefferson...absolutely sublime. Dillane is such a versatile actor. His Thomas Jefferson portrayal was such a contrast to Stannis Baratheon in Game of Thrones. He is an underrated talent to be sure. 2 Link to comment
CherryMalotte June 19, 2015 Share June 19, 2015 Just had to go to the HBO site to make sure - we are getting our annual July 4th showing of the series - hooray! Link to comment
pasdetrois June 20, 2015 Share June 20, 2015 I adored this series and wish there were more of its stature. 1 Link to comment
GHScorpiosRule June 22, 2015 Share June 22, 2015 I missed this the first time it came around, and until I saw this thread, hadn't realized HBO made it available On Demand every year! So, I plunked my ass down and watch the first four back-to-back. I love the music, the acting, just everything about it. Just color me shocked, that I saw a regular bad guy (rapist/murderer/drug dealer) Ritchie Coster from Law & Order, playing Preston in the first episode. And another veteran from that show--playing the guy who cleared Preston. I'll definitely have to read the book. Though I can't recall if the author is the same one who wrote "Culloden" and if so, I think the reason why I didn't read the book when it first came out, because Culloden was just so damn dry in its telling. (I'd just come from visiting Scotland when I read it). Link to comment
Yokosmom June 24, 2015 Share June 24, 2015 I wish that someone would do a miniseries on Hamilton--he had an extremely dramatic life, filled with highs and lows. Of course, there's always the new musical. Rufus Sewell did a good job in John Adams, but he didn't look anything like the historical figure. I enjoyed the scene where Hamilton had to explain the basics of economics to a supercilious Jefferson. I agree about Dillane. Best Jefferson that I've seen. I quite enjoyed Giamati's performance as well. 2 Link to comment
zoey1996 June 27, 2015 Share June 27, 2015 The best Jefferson I've ever seen is Bill Barker, who portrays Jefferson at Colonial Williamsburg. Parts of the Adams miniseries were filmed at various locations at Colonial Williamsburg. I was able to watch some of the filming, which was interesting to watch (patience is a virtue useful to have when watching filming). I have the DVDs, so I have watched this several times, but I'm thinking it's time for another watching! Link to comment
ABay June 27, 2015 Share June 27, 2015 I really wanted to like this and watched the first episode when it aired, but Giametti was just too...not the Adams for me. Another actor with the same script, I might've loved it. Link to comment
Phebemarie June 28, 2015 Share June 28, 2015 (edited) Yokosmom, if you're a theater fan and live near NYC, there is a musical coming to Broadway soon based on the life of Alexander Hamilton. It's written by Lin-Manual Miranda who wrote the Tony-winning musical, In the Heights. On topic: I am a big fan of John Adams, but I couldn't get past the tar and feathering scene in the first episode. HBO doesn't pull any punches where violence is concerned. Edited June 28, 2015 by Phebemarie Link to comment
Darian July 6, 2015 Share July 6, 2015 I really wanted to like this and watched the first episode when it aired, but Giametti was just too...not the Adams for me. Another actor with the same script, I might've loved it. Me, too. I'm attached to Adams and family. Grew up in Quincy, MA, which meant passing the church where he and Abigail (and John Quincy and Louisa Catherine) are interred, and walking past the statues of John and Abigail in our little downtown (they are across the street from each other to emphasize how often they were apart. It meant multiple field trips to the Adams homestead and learning lots and lots of Adams history. That said, Giamatti was the only actor who bothered me. Link to comment
maraleia July 4, 2016 Author Share July 4, 2016 One of the things that struck me while watching this over and over again is the irony of John Adams being the first president to move into the White House (which was built by slaves) when he was one of the few founding fathers and the only founding father president never to have owned them. I'll never tire of this miniseries. It's one of the few that I re-watch twice a year. 3 Link to comment
ombre November 2, 2021 Share November 2, 2021 I'd be curious to hear if others think this still stands up. I've recently watched the first two episodes. The first was okay - Adams was a bit shouty, but otherwise mostly fine - but I found the second quite dreadful. Adams, Washington, Franklin are all so painfully stiff. Let Franklin talk, for heaven's sake, not just spout Poor Richard's! And the effort to weave the dialogue with quotations directly from primary source material means it feels simultaneously stuffed-shirt and inaccurate. (in that time the term "revolution" still meant a turning back to former ways rather than a break from the past, for example, so every time they use that word it clashes disastrously to my ears.) overall, for me it felt like a history-shaped version of a living creche. A necessarily simplified (talk a little faster, a little more concisely and you could get in a little more nuance!) celebration of a founding myth that is much, much more interesting when it's complex than when it's simple. I'm very curious about whether others who've found it recently enjoy it or whether it also feels painfully dated to them. Link to comment
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