"Downton Abbey" Episode #6.4 (TV Episode 2015) Poster

(TV Series)

(2015)

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9/10
A wild flower
jpismyname10 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Daisy's fierceness shows as she tries to confront Lady Cora when she thinks Mr. Mason is not going to keep the farm. She is a modern woman, unafraid to speak her own mind, just like Mrs. Crawley, Mary and Edith.

Meanwhile, the Dowager Countess fails to have alliance with Lady Shackleton. Another man enters Lady Mary's life. A dashing and handsome car enthusiast Henry Talbot. However, Mary is fearful that Henry will have the same fate as Matthew, who got killed in a car accident.

Then a housemaid from Season 1 returns. It's Gwen, the housemaid who dreamed of being a secretary, and she is now living a comfortable life and she even eats lunch with the Crawleys. The despicable Thomas tries to embarass her, but fails. I wonder if Thomas has a personality disorder, something that his mind tells him to destroy/humiliate people's lives without any reason at all. As Miss Baxter says, he is his own enemy. Then I pity him.
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9/10
Some New Scenarios
Hitchcoc13 September 2020
I liked this episode because it gets at some of the pain some are feeling. To begin with, Carson and Hughes are on their honeymoon and are expected to return. Since Thomas is the under butler, he takes Carson's job in their absence. Of course, he is harsh and tyrannical. There is a scene where he tells Baxter that he cares what people think. But he does nothing to gain that image. We have the return of a young woman from the first season that shows how distant things were at that time. Thomas tries to betray her. The fight over the fate of the hospital continues, only the factions expand. Daisy goes a bit nutty in her personal campaign. Baxter is asked by the courts to perform an ugly task. Branson is almost too nice right now. I hope they have something for him to do in future episodes. Finally, there is something serious in Anna's (and hence in Mary's) life. Well done.
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10/10
Next time trailer scene changes slightly
jmacca58-uk14 January 2021
In the next time trailer at the end, Lord Grantham says "Edith has a date" and Lady Edith replies "No I don't" and she says it very demurely, but in the actual scene in Episode #6.5 (2015) she says it slightly differently. Spot the nuance.
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10/10
New Stories????
Aunt Rosamund is on the board of Hillcroft, the college for clever women, which is really great because she has given such terrific advice to her nieces over the years. And she recommended Edith for the board as well because, why not? At first it sounded like Rosamund wanted to set Edith up with the treasurer, Mr. Harding, didn't it? By coincidence, he lives near Downton and he comes for luncheon with his wife, GWEN!!! We haven't seen this former housemaid her since that summer lawn party that was interrupted by WWI. Mary says all she learned in school was French, prejudice, and dance steps. Did Mary attend the Arthur Murray School for Toffs? At first Mary is suspicious, she maybe has her sussed, and tries to wrong-foot her, though in her semi-genteel way. Thomas, on the other hand, drops her right in it, announces to the table that she used to work there, and a hush falls over Jerusalem. Maybe it is that lack of reason he spoke of that led him to pull a Classic Thomas right out in the open. Sergeant Willis (who is always such a harbinger of impending doom that his entrance should be accompanied by the theme from Jaws) turns up at Downton with questions for Baxter. She is instantly nervous. She trembles. It's about Mr. Peter Coyle, the man who seduced her back when she thought dreams would never die and God would be forgiving, then left her holding the (empty) bag of jewels. He's done it to yet another woman and Willis wants Baxter to be a witness to his bad character. Coyle has left a trail of broken lives and Willis is trying to build a case against him, but Baxter fears coming face to face with the man who killed the dream she dreamed. Molesley tries to change her mind with a pep talk, 'All that is needed for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing.' (He read that somewhere.) Yes, thank you, Molesley. That's true, though much easier to say when you've got no skin in the game. Carson and his true love Mrs. Carson return from their honeymoon to liberate the servant's hall and there is much rejoicing. Truthfully, the welcome home party isn't about their wedding so much as everyone is just glad to get out from under the oppressive thumb of Dear Leader Thomas. On a side note, we get to see what Robert's idea of a wedding reception in the Servant's Hall would have looked like (minus the pin the tail on the donkey that he, no doubt, would have chosen as entertainment, to save money on a band). Everyone is having trouble with the whole Carson and Mrs. Carson tongue-twister name change. It's yet another upheaval they will all have to adapt to. Lord Grantham was so thrown by it, that he had briefly toyed with the idea of calling them Thing 1 and Thing 2, but was brought to his senses by Branson.
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