Don’t Miss Out! Sign Up for the Moviefone Newsletter Today.
Highlights
Thunderbolts* - Official Behind the Scenes Clip
Thunderbolts*
Black Bag - Cate Blanchett Exclusive Interview
Black Bag
Foundation Season 4 - Teaser Announcement Clip
Foundation
Monster: The Ed Gein Story Season 1 - Lesley Manville as Bernice Worden
Monster: The Ed Gein Story
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere - Official Teaser Clip
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere
Five Nights at Freddy's 2 - Official Poster
Five Nights at Freddy's 2
Cleaner - Daisy Ridley Exclusive Interview
Cleaner
The Family Plan 2 - Kit Harington and Mark Wahlberg
The Family Plan 2
Stick Season 1 - Pool Party Prep Clip
Stick
Barrio Triste - Tainy, Stillz and Bad Bunny at the NYFF Screenings
Barrio Triste
Elio - Communiverse Clip
Elio
Shrinking Season 3 - First Look at Jason Segel and Harrison Ford
Shrinking
Words of War - Sean Penn Exclusive Interview
Words of War
IT: Welcome to Derry Season 1 - Bill Skarsgård as Pennywise
IT: Welcome to Derry
The Fantastic Four: First Steps - Pedro Pascal at Berlin Fan Event
The Fantastic 4: First Steps
Tyler Perry’s Finding Joy - Shannon Thornton and Tosin Morohunfola
Tyler Perry’s Finding Joy
Empire

Empire (2012) - Season 1 Episodes and Ratings

Audience Score
62

Season 1 Episodes

1. A Taste for Power

February 27th, 20121 hr

Jeremy Paxman traces the story of the greatest empire the world has ever known: the British Empire. In the first programme, he asks how such a small country got such a big head, and how a tiny island in the North Atlantic came to rule over a quarter of the world's population. He travels to India, where local soldiers and local maharajahs helped a handful of British traders to take over vast areas of land. Spectacular displays of imperial power dazzled subject peoples and developed a cult of Queen Victoria as Empress, mother and virtual God. In Egypt, Jeremy explores the bit of Empire that never was, as Britain's temporary peace-keeping visit turned into a seventy year occupation. He travels to the desert where Lawrence of Arabia brought a touch of romance to the grim struggle of the First World War. As Britain came to believe it could solve the world's problems, he tells the story of the triumphant conquest of Palestine by Imperial troops - and Britain's role in a conflict that haunts the Middle East to this day.

2. Making Ourselves at Home

March 5th, 20121 hr

Jeremy Paxman traces the story of the greatest empire the world has ever known: the British Empire. He continues his personal account of Britain's empire by looking at how traders, conquerors and settlers spread the British way of doing things around the world - in particular how they created a very British idea of home. He begins in India, where early traders wore Indian costume and took Indian wives. Their descendants still cherish their mixed heritage. Victorian values put a stop to that as inter racial mixing became taboo. In Singapore he visits a club where British colonials gathered together, in Canada he finds a town whose inhabitants are still fiercely proud of the traditions of their Scottish ancestors, in Kenya he meets the descendants of the first white settlers - men whose presence came to be bitterly resented as pressure for African independence grew. And he traces the story of an Indian family in Leicester whose migrations have been determined by the changing fortunes of the British empire.

3. Playing The Game

March 12th, 20121 hr

Jeremy Paxman traces the story of the greatest empire the world has ever known: the British Empire. He continues his personal account of Britain's Empire by tracing the growth of a peculiarly British type of hero - adventurer, gentleman, amateur, sportsman and decent chap - and a peculiarly British type of obsession - sport, the empire at play. He travels to East Africa in the footsteps of Victorian explorers in search of the source of the Nile; to Khartoum in Sudan to tell the story of General Gordon - a half-crazed visionary who 'played the game' to the hilt; to Hong Kong where the British indulged their passion for horse racing by building a spectacular race course; and to Jamaica where the greatest imperial game of all - cricket - became a battleground for racial equality.

4. Making a Fortune

March 19th, 20121 hr

Jeremy Paxman continues his personal account of Britain's empire, looking at how the empire began as a pirates' treasure hunt, grew into an informal empire based on trade and developed into a global financial network. He travels from Jamaica, where sugar made plantation owners rich on the backs of African slaves, to Calcutta, where British traders became the new princes of India. Jeremy then heads to Hong Kong, where British-supplied opium threatened to turn the Chinese into a nation of drug addicts - leading to the brutal opium wars, in which Britain triumphed and took the island of Hong Kong as booty. Unfair trading helped spark the independence movement in India, led by Mahatma Gandhi; in a former cotton spinning town in Lancashire, Jeremy meets two women who remember Gandhi's extraordinary visit in 1931.

5. Doing Good

March 26th, 20121 hr

In the final part of his personal account of Britain's empire, Jeremy Paxman tells the extraordinary story of how a desire for conquest became a mission to improve the rest of mankind, especially in Africa, and how that mission shaded into an unquestioning belief that Britain could - and should - rule the world. In Central Africa, he travels in the footsteps of David Livingstone who, though a failure as a missionary, became a legendary figure - the patron saint of empire who started a flood of missionaries to the so-called 'Dark Continent'. In South Africa, Paxman tells the story of Cecil Rhodes, a man with a different sort of mission, who believed in the white man's right to rule the world, laying down the foundations for apartheid. The journey ends in Kenya, where conflict between white settlers and the African population brought bloodshed, torture and eventual withdrawal.