Ellis Island

1984
7.1| 0h30m| en
Synopsis

Ellis Island is a television miniseries broadcast in three parts in 1984 on the CBS television network. The screenplay was co-written by Fred Mustard Stewart, adapted from his 1983 novel of the same title. The series tells the story of several immigrants from the late 1800s until the early 1910s, trying to achieve the American Dream and arriving on Ellis Island, hoping for a better life. Ellis Island highlighted numerous important events which occurred up to and during World War I, and many of the characters are based on real persons, such as Irving Berlin.

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Reviews

Holstra Boring, long, and too preachy.
Dotbankey A lot of fun.
Hulkeasexo it is the rare 'crazy' movie that actually has something to say.
Tobias Burrows It's easily one of the freshest, sharpest and most enjoyable films of this year.
mark.waltz During the golden age of the television mini-series (1975-1988), network TV produced dozens of epic dramas covering everything from the plight of slaves in the Civil War to the plight of Jewish prisoners of the Holocaust. "Ellis Island" was promoted as a tribute to all of those brave people who came to the United States from Europe to pursue the American dream between the late 1800's and the start of World War I. The story focuses on two men and two women who come to America to pursue their dreams and find more than they've bargained for. Jake Ruben (Peter Riegert) is a Russian Jew who escaped from his burning village and has arrived in America, hoping to become a popular composer; Marco Santorelli (Greg Martyn, now known as Greg Martin), an Italian immigrant and former gardner to famous actress Maude Charteris (Faye Dunaway), has arrived in New York, hoping to become educated and move up in the business world. Feisty Bridgette O'Donnell (Alice Krige) and her more innocent sister Georgie O'Donnell (Judi Bowker) come to America to escape the law after Bridgette helps Irish rebels in a kidnapping scheme. Circumstances bring them together on the ship to America where Marco falls for Georgie but circumstances beyond his control prevent him from pursuing her.Over the course of about six hours, we are introduced to other characters who cross their paths: Bridgette and Georgie's aunt and uncle (Milo O'Shea and Lila Kaye); Senator Phipps Ogden (Richard Burton in one of his final roles), the man who marries Maude Charteris and leads Marco into a political career by marrying him off to his rebellious plain jane daughter, Vanessa (Kate Burton, his real-life daughter); Ragtime piano player Roscoe Haines (Ben Vereen) and music agent Abe Shulman (Stubby Kaye) who assist Jake in pursuing his dream of becoming a Broadway composer; and finally, musical comedy star Nellie Byfeild (Ann Jillian) who marries Jake to further her own career. There are others who come into the storyline later on (such as Emma Sams as a dance teacher, Claire Bloom as her mother, Cherie Lunghi as a Bohemian artist, Melba Moore as a Cotton Club type performer), but these are the main characters who handle the majority of the plot. Then, there are also some surprise appearances as well. Liam Neeson, way before he became famous, plays an Irishman who knows about Bridgette's past, and even more briefly, Natasha Richardson as a prostitute.While the first half of the mini-series focuses on the struggles of the immigrant's first years in America, the second half quickly moves into the area of where their successes take them. We only see briefly the squalour these immigrants lived in, and before you can say "Upper East Side", they have moved not only up past middle class, but into the lap of luxary. There are glimpses of some of the real-life celebrities of the time (brief appearances by actors portraying Al Jolson and Florenz Ziegfeld, plus one funny bit involving an up and coming real-life Broadway composer), and there are also some nice little musical numbers sung by Melba Moore and Ann Jillian. (Her "Ziegfeld Follies" production number seems small compared to what the real "Follies" really were like, and her spoof of the bad Florence Nightingale musical brings on groans, not chuckles; Moore fares better with her "Raggedy Ragtime Man" number, although Jillian is outstanding in her dramatic scenes, a performance which won her an Emmy Nomination.)More fascinating is the Marco Santorelli storyline; Faye Dunaway, who won a Golden Globe for her performance, proves that she can do more than just be melodramatic; She plays all sides of the spectrum of this character. We get to see her love, her lust, her greed, her hunger, and her own ambition. She obviously decided to underplay the part to take away some of the bad press she had with "Mommie Dearest" and such clinkers as "Supergirl" and "A Wicked Lady". This should have taken her career into better parts, but it would be a decade before her career would begin to recover. Richard Burton is perfectly matched with Dunaway; They are a class act. Kate Burton, now a respected Broadway veteran, brings a complexity to the troubled Vanessa who goes from plain jane artist to shy politician's wife to reformed alcoholic, and ends up in a scandal of her own that could destroy Marco's career. The scenes involving Burton and British actress Cherie Lunghi are a fascinating look at a part of early 20th Century New York that has not been dealt with. Lunghi may be more familiar to audiences with her brief bits in films such as "The Mission" and "Mary Shelley's Frankenstein", but will definately always be remembered for her showy performance in this and as Guenevere in "Excalibur".Judi Bowker and Alice Krige are perfectly cast as sisters. They are as different as night and day, but seem like they could be related. As their aunt and uncle, Milo O'Shea and Lilla Kaye offer excellent performances; O'Shea plays a character obviously influenced by real-life New York crook Boss Tweed from 50 years earlier, while Kaye reminds me of the lovable 30's film star, Marie Dressler. It is too bad she wasn't featured more, but there was already too much going on and too many storylines to follow. Also wasted were Ben Vereen and Melba Moore, fine with what material they have, but placed so far in the background, they are almost impossible to remember when they do show back up. Emma Sams and Claire Bloom also seem out of place here, as does 1950's British film star Joan Greenwood as an aging dance instructor. Riegert's character goes through far too many changes in a period of a decade to be believable; He does the best he can with it, but it would have been more realistic to see more of Jake and Marco's struggles rather than their quick rise to success.When "Ellis Island" focuses on political drama and the struggles of the immigrants, it succeeds very highly; When it lapses into soap opera (Jake's affair with Sams' Violet; Bridgette's past catching up with her), it lags. There were simply too many ingredients to make it totally come together. All of the production design is outstanding; The period costumes and sets make the viewer feel they are in pre-war New York. Some of the musical numbers seem a bit silly to represent the hits of the era, but do manage to capture the innocence of the times. If one can overlook the shortcomings I mention above and take it as just one aspect of the immigrant lifestyle of that time, it can be an interestingly nostalgic look back at something many of our grandparents might have experienced. It also reminds us of how much has changed in such a short time in history. Films like "Gangs of New York" and stage musicals like "Ragtime" delve into different aspects of their lives.
dinky-4 Here, from the Golden Age of the Mini-Series, is one of those big, multi-star affairs which spans decades and which blends a number of sub-plots into a kind of historical panorama. True, it's all a bit superficial and there's more than a touch of soap-opera in the proceedings, but when one says, "They don't make 'em like this anymore," one says it with regret. The story-line runs from just after the turn-of-the-century through World War I and it centers on a Jewish immigrant from Russia who becomes a successful Broadway songwriter, a handsome Italian who moves from gigolo to politician, and two young women from Ireland, one of whom becomes blind and one of whom has a dark secret in her past.Curious is the case of the actor billed as "Greg Martyn" who plays the Italian immigrant. He's a tall, good-looking man with a lot of presence and he has one of the show's more memorable scenes: he's tied shirtless to a hot radiator by a loan-shark angry that his money hasn't been re-paid. Who can forget that "sizzling" sound made when the Italian's naked, sweaty back is pressed against the scorching metal?Yet, despite all this, Greg Martyn's career went absolutely nowhere after "Ellis Island."Performances are uniformly good throughout but notwithstanding his prominent billing, Richard Burton has little to do and seems to be running on "auto-pilot."
Lo-Baby When I saw this mini-series in 1984, I was a high school kid who was absolutely blown away by its sheer magnificence. The cast was phenomenal, and the storyline seemed to be somewhat of a romance story with a lot of history thrown in.I hope this mini-series will one day be re-released onto video or DVD. "Ellis Island" taught me a lot about what my ancestors probably went through when they came to this country to start a new life, as just about ALL of our ancestors did.If given the opportunity, watch this one. It's worth your time.