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Churchill travelogue hardly the finest hour

Fri Jul 18, 2008 12:49am EDT

Chasing Churchill: In Search of My Grandfather , 10-11 p.m., PBS. Check local listings

Television  |  Media  |  Cuba

By Laurence Vittes

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - "Chasing Churchill: In Search of My Grandfather," Celia Sandys' three-part portrait of Winston Churchill, kicks off on PBS Monday with an episode entitled "Wanted Dead or Alive."

The hourlong opener, a slow-moving, affectionate travelogue based on her experience and writings, is shot beautifully and enhanced by occasionally interesting interviews with the descendants of men Churchill met in his youth.

But the excitement quotient is kept slumbering as the meandering footage does little more than move casually from moments of great beauty and genuine historical interest to yawning bits of mundane filler. If the idea is to capture the thrills of Churchill's youth, it's way too laid back.

Despite her intimate knowledge of Churchill, Sandys ranks below average as a raconteur and has that kind of upper-class British yen for the good old days of Empire that smacks unintentionally of Monty Python.

The voyage begins with some brief background, the great man's life at Sandhurst military academy, and then on to New York where Sandys meets with Rudy Giuliani and makes the point in no uncertain terms that she and Rudy consider Rudy to be a latter-day Churchill.

After the Big Apple, it's on to Cuba and recollections of the Cuban revolution against the Spanish and Havana cigars, as well as South Africa, where the Boers were murderously at war.

The two subsequent episodes will air on successive Mondays: "The Other Country" deals with Churchill's love affair with the United States, the birthplace of his mother. "Worth Doing Once" takes viewers to Morocco and the south of France.

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter



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