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The Mill (TV series)

The Mill
Genre Period drama
Based on Quarry Bank Mill
Written by John Fay
Directed by James Hawes
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 2
No. of episodes 10
Production
Executive producer(s) Dominic Barlow
Julian Ware
Producer(s) Caroline Levy (Series 1)
Johnathan Young (Series 2)
Running time 60 minutes (inc. adverts)
Production company(s) Darlow Smithson Productions
Release
Original network Channel 4
Picture format 16:9 1080i
Audio format Stereo
Original release 28 July 2013 (2013-07-28) – 24 August 2014 (2014-08-24)
External links
Website

The Mill was a 2013 period television drama broadcast on Britain's Channel 4. It was is based on real-life stories and people of the textile mill workers at Quarry Bank Mill in Cheshire, England, combined with fictional characters and events. The program is also filmed in Cheshire.

The first series, written by John Fay, is set in 1830s Britain during the Industrial Revolution. It was directed by James Hawes and produced by Caroline Levy.

The second and final series, which began airing on 20 July 2014, is set between 1838 and 1842, four years after the first series. The series was cancelled by Channel 4 in 2014, leaving the story unfinished.

The Mill tells the story of life in Quarry Bank Mill in Cheshire during the 1830s through the eyes of central characters, Esther Price and Daniel Bate. Esther is played by Kerrie Hayes and is a young millworker who risks her own position to stand up for justice. Daniel is played by Matthew McNulty and is a progressive young engineer with a troubled past. Based on the extensive historical archive of Quarry Bank Mill in Cheshire and real people's lives, the series depicts Britain at a time when the industrial revolution is changing the country beyond recognition. The series deals with themes of worker's rights, safety in millwork, child labour laws and the political movement to improve these conditions.

The cast include:

Lucy and Esther are convinced that Mr Timperley is responsible for Catherine's disappearance. They're determined to expose him but are blocked at every turn. Meanwhile, in Liverpool, Esther's sister Martha finds one of the notes

The first episode of Series 1 was aired on the evening of 28 July 2013. The series was well received among UK viewers but received mixed reviews due to its controversial storylines and characters.

Grace Dent of The Independent described it as "so bloody serious, so dry, so gritty Bafta, so bang-you-around-the-head worthy" that she could not describe the first 10 minutes "without laughing". Arifa Akbar, also at The Independent, compared its social realism with the BBC's The Village but noted the plot nevertheless had sufficient intrigue and promise to keep an audience interested. Ceri Radford in The Telegraph summarised it as "Take every cliché you can think of about the Industrial Revolution, mix them all up into one gloomy morass of woe, and that’s pretty much last night’s opening".


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