PBS’s Delightful All Creatures Great and Small Season 2 Finds Cozy Romance in the Yorkshire Dales
Photo Courtesy of PBS
It’s actually very difficult to write a review of All Creatures Great and Small Season 2, because everything I said in my initial review of the show remains true. Now, there’s just more of it: six episodes and a Christmas special, to be exact. And what a wonderful gift to chase away the winter doldrums once again as the Channel 5 series, airing in the US on PBS Masterpiece, returns us to a bucolic pre-war Yorkshire and the inhabitants of Skeldale House, the preeminent veterinary practice in the region. (Or so its lead surgeon, Samuel West’s Siegfried Farnon, likes to say—and it is most likely true.)
The series once again finds a way to capture the spirit—if not abide by the letter—of James Herriot’s books, giving us a wholesome and cozy setting that can nevertheless be emotionally intense when it comes to the hardships of farm life. It’s also never saccharine, though it can flirt with the overwrought as the music swells grandly when our young James Herriot (Nicholas Ralph) drives through the countryside or gazes upon his little stone village. Then again, who among us would have a different reaction in such a setting? All Creatures knows we’re here to admire the best of rural 1930s England, and it relishes in it.
What is different about this second season is that All Creatures finds its characters, and the larger world, on the precipice of change. Those changes are largely two-fold, and the first is about the shifting face of veterinary work. When James goes home to Scotland for a family visit, he spends time at a forward-facing practice that has x-ray machines, nursing assistants, and a new focus on pets rather than farm animals; it’s cutting-edge. When he returns to Yorkshire the old tools, methods, and haphazard systems that rule Skeldale House leave him frustrated.
But James is also feeling the emotional pull of his parents, his mother especially, who are hoping he might stay with them permanently. Though helping out as best he can from afar, James knows his parents would benefit from him being there. While he highly respects Siegfried and has found a friend in Tristan (Callum Woodhouse) and a second mother in Mrs. Hall (Anna Madeley), the real anchor keeping James in Yorkshire is the confident and beautiful Helen (Rachel Shenton), with whom he is finally able to begin a sweet if stumbling romance.
Romance is really in the air in All Creatures Season 2, and while sometimes it can feel a little like the show doesn’t know what to do with these characters without giving them romantic interests, I will be the last to complain. Every furtive glance or longing look is a joy to behold, because that’s what All Creatures has done so successfully from the start: made us care deeply about each of our leads. And when they have misunderstandings or try to save their pride by covering up their mistakes (often poorly), the eventual relief of that tension is deeply satisfying.