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Flippitygibbit's rating
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Flippitygibbit's rating
I watched the new Netflix take on Persuasion on the day of release and found the whole film charming, funny and original. The backlash on social media - and the one star trolls on the IMDb, who claim to be Austen fans but can't even spell her name correctly or identify which era she was writing in - have me flabbergasted, to be honest. Why the targeted campaign to make one adaptation among many bomb in the ratings? Does the existence of this version take away from the original text, or the other, faithful and bland, adaptations? No. Grow up.
Austen adaptations are churned out with regularity, and I love that Carrie Cracknell and the screenwriters have tried to find a new take on an old story. The 'goofs' listed on this page - seriously, doesn't anyone have a sense of humour? - are not goofs but a deliberate choice to make this a lively mash-up of Austen and modern romcoms, and I love Anne's sarcastic asides to the camera. To be honest, Anne Elliot needs all the help she can get - if I were an Austen heroine, I would probably be Anne, dutiful, caring and completely sidelined by more demanding personalities, but I don't want to read or watch characters like myself. Dakota Johnson presents a fun take on the character, and the wine, for me, is but one visual trope from romcoms which represents her silent desperation. I cringed, but in a good way, when she couldn't find a seat after trying to avoid Wentworth and then overheard his views about her while trying to relieve herself outside! The bath tub scene, and being told about 'Louisa and her Captain', were heartbreaking. Kudos to Nia Towle for making Louisa a sympathetic character for once, too!
I have read the book and, although not my favourite Austen title, still enjoyed this quirky adaptation. Perhaps because I care more about engaging with the characters and story rather than the accuracy of Regency fashion and etiquette - the costumes were amazing, on that note, and I would wear some of Anne's linen creations today! Is this the perfect, definitive screen translation of Persuasion? No. Those reviewers who actually admit to not having watched more than the trailer before hating on this version can go back to the book and the standard adaptations, if that makes them happy. But this is an amusing, emotional, well cast and yes, aesthetically pleasing addition to the many, many varied takes on Austen's work, which does not deserve such a backlash.
Austen adaptations are churned out with regularity, and I love that Carrie Cracknell and the screenwriters have tried to find a new take on an old story. The 'goofs' listed on this page - seriously, doesn't anyone have a sense of humour? - are not goofs but a deliberate choice to make this a lively mash-up of Austen and modern romcoms, and I love Anne's sarcastic asides to the camera. To be honest, Anne Elliot needs all the help she can get - if I were an Austen heroine, I would probably be Anne, dutiful, caring and completely sidelined by more demanding personalities, but I don't want to read or watch characters like myself. Dakota Johnson presents a fun take on the character, and the wine, for me, is but one visual trope from romcoms which represents her silent desperation. I cringed, but in a good way, when she couldn't find a seat after trying to avoid Wentworth and then overheard his views about her while trying to relieve herself outside! The bath tub scene, and being told about 'Louisa and her Captain', were heartbreaking. Kudos to Nia Towle for making Louisa a sympathetic character for once, too!
I have read the book and, although not my favourite Austen title, still enjoyed this quirky adaptation. Perhaps because I care more about engaging with the characters and story rather than the accuracy of Regency fashion and etiquette - the costumes were amazing, on that note, and I would wear some of Anne's linen creations today! Is this the perfect, definitive screen translation of Persuasion? No. Those reviewers who actually admit to not having watched more than the trailer before hating on this version can go back to the book and the standard adaptations, if that makes them happy. But this is an amusing, emotional, well cast and yes, aesthetically pleasing addition to the many, many varied takes on Austen's work, which does not deserve such a backlash.
Autumn de Wilde's Emma, with Anya Taylor-Joy and Johnny Flynn, is not my cup of tea, I'm afraid. My review might be influenced by how much I love Jane Austen's novel and how many times I've watched the 2009 miniseries, but I always give every adaptation a try. And I can't really judge if what I was watching would make sense to an Austen virgin, shall we say, so what seemed disjointed and rushed to me might work perfectly for others.
I'll start with the good: I loved the costumes and the interiors, which were sumptuously beautiful. The wood-shaving ringlets on the women and the high collars on the men were distracting, though. And of course Anya Taylor-Joy made for a quirky and regal Emma (Austenites will be pleased to note that she has perfect posture.) I also loved how Anya Taylor-Joy and Amber Anderson as Jane actually played the pianoforte during the Coles' party (but could have done without Mr Knightley's contribution, when Frank Churchill is supposed to be singing with Jane). BUT. The music was horrendously jarring, alternating between Hanna Barbera cartoon incidentals and freakish folk music. The supporting characters suffered once again - I couldn't honestly tell the difference between Mrs Weston, Mrs Knightley and Mrs Elton, except that Isabella was for some reason a complete cow in this version, and Mr Elton and Frank Churchill were also interchangeable (perhaps that's why Elton never seemed to be without his dog collar, to help tell them apart). Bill Nighy's Mr Woodhouse was a weird combination of fusspot and Edwardian fop, and Johnny Flynn's Mr Knightley strayed way off character by stripping off in his first scene and never really recovered for me. (Apparently, that was a way of 'humanising' the character because he is always 'mansplaining' - very woke.) Anya wasn't kidding when she talked about the focus being on 'bodily functions', by the way - not only are we 'treated' to Knightley's backside, but Emma hitches up her skirts to warm her bare arse by the fire, and the 'cannot make speeches' proposal scene is a bloody mess. Literally. The script leans so heavily on lines from the novel that I think Eleanor Catton thought she was writing an essay for an English Lit exam - Austenites will be happy, but there was no feeling behind any of the grand words. When Emma and Mr Knightley argue, they constantly shout over each other, for instance, instead of the usual playful back and forth.
The whole film felt like a weird mashup between a stage musical and a Victorian farce, with choreographed servants and slapstick humour. There was also a lot of 1996 Emma in there, taking pastel and pastoral scenery from the film and Andrew Davies' wearisome obsession with wealth from the television two-parter. Not on a sliding scale of Emma and Miss Bates, but in how Mr Knightley's strawberry picking party turns into a National Trust promotional video for Wilton House, Salisbury. There's also a lot of emphasis on servants dressing their masters and mistresses, presumably to fit in more scenes of 'natural nudity'.
I went, I watched, I did my duty to Emma. But I think I'll stick with the 2009 miniseries.
I'll start with the good: I loved the costumes and the interiors, which were sumptuously beautiful. The wood-shaving ringlets on the women and the high collars on the men were distracting, though. And of course Anya Taylor-Joy made for a quirky and regal Emma (Austenites will be pleased to note that she has perfect posture.) I also loved how Anya Taylor-Joy and Amber Anderson as Jane actually played the pianoforte during the Coles' party (but could have done without Mr Knightley's contribution, when Frank Churchill is supposed to be singing with Jane). BUT. The music was horrendously jarring, alternating between Hanna Barbera cartoon incidentals and freakish folk music. The supporting characters suffered once again - I couldn't honestly tell the difference between Mrs Weston, Mrs Knightley and Mrs Elton, except that Isabella was for some reason a complete cow in this version, and Mr Elton and Frank Churchill were also interchangeable (perhaps that's why Elton never seemed to be without his dog collar, to help tell them apart). Bill Nighy's Mr Woodhouse was a weird combination of fusspot and Edwardian fop, and Johnny Flynn's Mr Knightley strayed way off character by stripping off in his first scene and never really recovered for me. (Apparently, that was a way of 'humanising' the character because he is always 'mansplaining' - very woke.) Anya wasn't kidding when she talked about the focus being on 'bodily functions', by the way - not only are we 'treated' to Knightley's backside, but Emma hitches up her skirts to warm her bare arse by the fire, and the 'cannot make speeches' proposal scene is a bloody mess. Literally. The script leans so heavily on lines from the novel that I think Eleanor Catton thought she was writing an essay for an English Lit exam - Austenites will be happy, but there was no feeling behind any of the grand words. When Emma and Mr Knightley argue, they constantly shout over each other, for instance, instead of the usual playful back and forth.
The whole film felt like a weird mashup between a stage musical and a Victorian farce, with choreographed servants and slapstick humour. There was also a lot of 1996 Emma in there, taking pastel and pastoral scenery from the film and Andrew Davies' wearisome obsession with wealth from the television two-parter. Not on a sliding scale of Emma and Miss Bates, but in how Mr Knightley's strawberry picking party turns into a National Trust promotional video for Wilton House, Salisbury. There's also a lot of emphasis on servants dressing their masters and mistresses, presumably to fit in more scenes of 'natural nudity'.
I went, I watched, I did my duty to Emma. But I think I'll stick with the 2009 miniseries.