In Flanders Field (TV Series 2014) Poster

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7/10
Good Flemish Drama
postvoorberti2 March 2014
Warning: Spoilers
As a Dutch I am very interested in WWI. In Holland we do not know much about this war as we were not in it.

This series follow the family Boesman from Gent.

The 2 sons are fighting in the war. They are very different. One is a bit of a hustler, the other is in love with a girl he has never met.

The daughter escapes from occupied Gent to England to become a nurse. During the series their paths cross.

Father is a gynecologist who seems to make all the wrong choices.

Mother is trying to get through the war as good as she can with 2 Germans living in her house and all her children at the front line.

Overall this is a good series. Good story lines with some decent action.

I enjoyed it, although I found the end a bit daft.
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7/10
Adequate
riwolsink28 May 2019
Good companion piece to for example a collection of eye-witness accounts of the First World War, or a bundle of Trench Poetry. It provides sound and footage. All relevant departments have done their homework, costuming, setting and decor look and feel quite authentic.

However, as a series on its own it is somewhat lacking. The characters remain vessels for all the different aspects of the war in Flanders that the writers felt must be nice included. It's as if they had made a list of the developments they wanted to include in a series like this and then proceeded to logically assign them to characters. It's not bad writing, as it does tick all the boxes. If you are interested in a general story, you'll be fine. However, if you deeply want to invest in your characters, you will be disappointed; they do not have enough substance for that. While there is some development and tension, this element of the series is underdeveloped.

From a linguistic point if view, this is also an interesting series as it is set in a very multi-ethnic part of Belgium. People in this region (Gent) seem to be used to 3 or 4 different languages and that is reflected in the dialogue and storyline. This element makes for a satisfying extra layer for language nerds such as myself.

All-in-all, an ok sort of thing. I caught this on Netflix. Not binge-worthy, but when fine watched over a couple of days, as a distraction from other activities and combined with an interest in the First World War or Belgium in this era.
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10/10
Don't agree at all with the low ratings
hansejr20 June 2021
This is a great series depicting a Belgian context for WWI that is mostly neglected and underappreciated. I found it believable and compelling.
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10/10
Must see
stefanodbc7 October 2021
I really don't understand all the bad comments here.

A part of local Flemish history in this great series.
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6/10
Great potential, but ultimately flawed
frotty199121 April 2014
Warning: Spoilers
As a WW1 buff I'm always excited to see the Great War featured on the screen. The historical accuracy of the costumes, weapons, props and the general atmosphere of the fighting of In Vlaamse Velden were much to my liking. However, the series is a bit lacking in emotional depth. The many characters of the series don't really develop much emotionally throughout the 10 episodes, and never really emotionally 'attached' themselves to me. Overall the cast seems like a sterile bunch. The one moment that typifies the series' lack of emotional realism was the part where the Boesmans' most gung-ho son enlists in the Belgian army and shoots a fellow Belgian soldier in a friendly fire incident on his first patrol. He doesn't seem horrified or shocked at all at what happened; he just sort of goes "gosh darnit, I should not have done that" and seemingly forgets about it 10 minutes later. The overarching theme of Flemish oppression and nascent nationalism is also not given the proper nuanced treatment that it deserves, in my opinion, although political issues such as these will always offend some viewers no matter how they're portrayed.

Although this series was long in the making and had great potential as a testament to the period now known as the First World War, it is tragically flawed due to lack of emotional depth and development of its characters, and its simplistic portrayal of political themes and events.
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4/10
A huge disappointment
jarne-van-vooren6 May 2014
Warning: Spoilers
When I first watched "In Vlaamse Velden", I was a bit curious what the creators would do. It has been 100 years since WW1 and naturally, it would be time to commemorate it. The channel "één" wanted to make a series about WW1 in Belgium, since it had a major role in the war. What I wanted to see in this show, was if they could do that particular piece of history justice and that this would become a good show. But since the first episode, everything after that became more and more disappointing.

The series focuses on the Boesman Family. Phillipe Boesman, the pater familias, is a Flemish gynecologist. He has a wife, Virginie, two sons, Guillaume and Vincent and one daughter, Marie. When the war breaks out, his sons are summoned to their duty and have to go the front. The series focuses on these five characters, everyone on a different field of the war.

One of the major problems was that every episode feels dense. There happened a lot in one episode and I had the feeling that I watched a recap episode. It is clear that the makers had a lot of material, but did not get enough episodes to spread it out. Which is unfortunate, as the characters, the setting and the history don't get time enough to develop enough since it wants to do every aspect of the war (the trenches, the deserters, the situation in the cities,...). Everything feels rushed. It loses any impact if a side character dies, because we don't get time to know them better.

For example, a sub-plot became victim to this problem. In this scene, Marie was running away from the Germans and stayed at a farm in the Netherlands. The scene begins when she discovers she's pregnant and doesn't want to keep the baby. Later in the episode, she uses a primitive form of abortion with a red-hot piece of iron wire. This subplot wasn't spread out over a couple episodes, but was over in the span of 20 or 30 minutes. It was a very heavy scene but nobody mentions it anymore in the series nor does it have any impact on the show or the character. It was quickly discarded and was never spoken of.

Even the famous parts of WWI fall victim. I was looking forward to the Christmas-bit, where the soldiers celebrate Christmas with the enemy. The scene started, but ended in five minutes after that and isn't mentioned again, which is a real shame. Sometimes it is laughable how quickly it goes. Shell shock is not shown but it and its symptoms are read out by Phillipe in an article he's reading. Again, a real shame, because that was one of the interesting parts of the war that they should have shown.

Another problem is if the show doesn't know if it wants to be a family drama, set in WWI or a historical fiction. Sometimes it feels like we are given a history lesson due to the fact that the major characters encounter famous historic landmarks from the war like the opening of the sluices in order to flood the land so that the Germans are halted from marching further. But some of the historic parts aren't given any context like why the trenches were build or why the sluices where opened, or why the war started in the first place. On a side note, the scene with the sluices felt like the land was flooded in one day, while it took a couple of days in real life.

However, it was not all disappointment galore. The setting was accurately represented, the clothing felt right and sometimes the director managed to shoot something really well. The aforementioned Christmas-scene, short as it was, was perhaps the best shot scene of the series. The soldiers peeping over the trenches, cautiously going to the enemy while walking over ice where dead soldiers were underneath it with their faces frozen in horror,... it was beautifully shot and was unfortunately over in five minutes. Another example is where Phillipe is walking in a corridor of a university when he is appointed as a teacher. He walks proudly next to a row of busts of scientists while he is rehearsing his college. This scene shows where his ambitions lay, using only the visuals.

Overall, I'd say that if there were more episodes, the creators could have had enough time to flesh things out, it would have been a great show. But as it is, situations come and go and don't have that many impact. A pity it's a missed opportunity.
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1/10
So depressing
susansundaisy28 August 2020
I know it's WWI, but it's so dark and sad and I can't help but think, "why would anyone want to feel this way when watching TV?". It's pretty generic in that every war is sad and young men die but I don't feel like I know more or even had a good time watching it.
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5/10
Interesting story but told in a confusing manner
qui_j18 February 2024
This Belgian series is interesting in that it uses a well-worn theme of WW1, but tells it from a Belgian perspective. Unfortunately, like many Belgian series, the story is told in a confused manner with the scenes appearing like vignettes that have been randomly stitched together. This destroys the chance for the viewer to have any story continuity. As has been pointed out by another reviewer, the story seems to be agenda driven, and each agenda item then assigned to a character. There is little character development and at times, the script and dialog is very childish. Unlike so many other European series that sets the story in a particular non-English speaking country, then has everyone speaking English while surrounded by signs written in the language of the country, this series uses the many languages of the region, and emphasizes the attention paid to authenticity. The language switching abilities of the actors is just amazing to see and hear. While the acting itself and the makeup techniques used are really not that great, the series remains engaging and watchable.
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