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    Prime Video might have just found its Bridgerton

    By Andy Meek,

    6 days ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1OfRAN_0u1FRw5d00

    History remembers Jane Grey, England’s so-called Nine Days Queen from the 16th century, as the ultimate “damsel in distress.”

    That’s according to the narrator in Prime Video’s new historical drama My Lady Jane , who goes on to lament that she’s known today “for her death, rather than her life” — before adding a bit of a jarring aside to let viewers know we’re not exactly in Masterpiece Theater territory with this new series: “F*** that!”

    What if, the narrator continues, the story of the real-life Lady Jane had turned out different? Such is the foundation of Prime Video’s delightfully addictive new eight-episode drama — which, as an aside, I have to confess looks like it has at least an outside shot of becoming the streamer’s Bridgerton .

    This new Netflix show is so good, I binged 24 episodes in a week

    Just like Netflix’s similarly revisionist and bodice-ripping hit drama, My Lady Jane plays very fast and extremely loose with historical events and takes place in an alt-fantasy Tudor world — one that not only radically upends English royal history, but adds mysterious and magical creatures. The net effect is a swashbuckling romp wherein King Henry VIII’s son Edward doesn’t die of tuberculosis after all, and neither Jane nor her scoundrel of a husband are executed.

    Also, bonus points for the saucy narrator, who’s so good that he frequently threatens to upstage events onscreen with his foul-mouthed musings (like opining that everyone knows King Henry was an “absolute s**t” and that sometimes “life gives you a real kick in the t*ts”).

    The TV shows people can’t get enough of right now on Apple TV+, Max, Prime Video & more

    My Lady Jane — which is adapted from a novel by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows — debuts in its entirety on June 27. I, for one, got an absolute kick out of what I’ve screened of the show thus far, which stars Emily Bader in the title role.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3awleR_0u1FRw5d00

    Netflix Top 10: The most-watched shows in the world right now

    Jordan Peters as King Edward in “My Lady Jane.” Image source: Prime Video

    The actual, historical Jane Grey was an English noblewoman and the de facto queen of England for nine days in 1553. She was a highly-educated woman, fluent in multiple languages, and ultimately executed as a result of political machinations outside her control. Bader’s portrayal of the character, though, is a ridiculously fun middle finger to all that.

    Here, Lady Jane is the kind of noblewoman who dreams of publishing her own book about plants, so that the money then allows her to live life on her own terms. She chafes at her mother’s strictures and the suffocating patriarchy; she’s beautiful, headstrong, and quick-witted. In other words, she’s the perfect heroine.

    New on Netflix: July 2024

    Gird your loins, Prime Video triumphantly teases, “for the tragic tale of Lady Jane Grey, the young Tudor noblewoman who was Queen of England for nine days and then beheaded in 1553 … We’re retelling history the way it should have happened: The damsel in distress saves herself.

    “This is an epic tale of true love and high adventure set in an alt-universe of action, history, fantasy, comedy, romance, and rompy-pompy.”

    In other words, eat your heart out Lady Whistledown.

    Don't Miss : New on Prime Video: June 2024

    The post Prime Video might have just found its Bridgerton appeared first on BGR .

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