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TV Shows & Series: Best "expatriate" TV Shows/Series


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4 TV shows/series found (page 1/1):

The Durrells(2016-2019)

46min per episode | Drama, Comedy, Kids & Family
3.7/5 (with 45 votes)

In 1935, financially strapped widow Louisa Durrell, whose life has fallen apart, decides to move from England, with her four children (three sons, one daughter), to the island of Corfu, Greece. Once there, the family moves into a dilapidated old house that has no electricity and that is crumbling apart. But life on Corfu is cheap, it's an earthly paradise, and the Durrells proceed to forge their new existence, with all its challenges, adventures, and forming relationships.

Welcome to Sweden(2014-2015)

30min per episode | Comedy
3.1/5 (with 18 votes)

The fish-out-of-water story of New York accountant Bruce, who falls in love with a Swedish girl named Emma and follows her to Sweden.

French Fields(1989-1991)

30min per episode | Comedy
3.6/5 (with 3 votes)

- No description / details available yet. -

With Karen Ascoe, Victoria Baker, Philip Bird, Nicholas Courtney, Liz Crowther, Philip McGough, ...

Eldorado(1992-2002)

30min per episode | Soap / Telenovela, Drama
2.5/5 (with 3 votes)

Eldorado was a British soap opera that ran for only one year, from 6 July 1992 to 9 July 1993. Set in the fictional town of Los Barcos on the Costa del Sol in Spain and based around the lives of British and European expats, the BBC hoped it would be as successful as EastEnders and replicate some of the sunshine and glamour of imported Australian soaps such as Home and Away and Neighbours. A co-production between the BBC and independent production company Cinema Verity, Eldorado aired three times a week in a high-profile evening slot on the mainstream channel BBC1, filling the slot vacated by Terry Wogan's chat show Wogan, on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 7.00pm. In spite of a high-profile advertising campaign on television, radio and in the press preceding the launch, the programme was not initially a popular hit with viewers and critics. Ratings improved with a radical overhaul, but it was eventually cancelled by the new controller of BBC1, Alan Yentob.

Directed by Stephen Butcher - With Jesse Birdsall