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Back in 1964, a British television station set out to make a documentary showcasing the class differences in Great Britain. Their various teachers handpicked the lucky ones featured. There are kids in a state-provided boys home, from a crowded public school in a working class neighborhood, a farmer's boy in a school house, and upper class kids in posh boarding schools. You see what these kids think about eachother, love, and life at seven years old. Then seven years later they were revisited by Michael Apted (an assisstant on 7 Up) to see how they have changed and how they have stayed the same. And Apted kept coming back every 7 years until they were 49 in the latest installment, 2005's 49 Up.
For a society fascinated by reality T.V., The Up Documentaries present reality in its purest form. The thing that makes these so interesting is that these are just real people living their lives. There are no superficial scenarios that put them in competition for money or trapped with strangers or looking for love. They are regular people; you watch them go through puberty, go to college, start a family, get divorced, lose hair, get fat, and have grandchildren. Yet you can always see a little bit of the seven year old at each of them during any age.
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4 out of 5 stars (very interesting individually but as a whole... amazing!)
*on a sidenote; the other day I watched my first episode of the latest season of The Simpsons, and the entire episode was a parody of The Up Documentaries! A British documentary director visited Homer, Marge, Wiggum, Professor Frink, and Moe every eight years for his films "Growing Up Springfield." The episode even had the exact same music playing over the end credits. Needless to say, I was very excited about the coincidence.
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