Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
kitewithfish: (serious lizzie; pride and prejudice; aus)
Inspired by [personal profile] jerakeen , I thought I would give the 2005 Pride and Prejudice a rewatch, as part of discussion of whether Austen can really be adapted in the space of a conventional film, or if miniseries are always going to be the way to go.  Since I re-watched the 1995 miniseries less than a month ago when I was home sick, this felt like a fair comparison.

Short Version: Oh, god, miniseries all the way. 

Long Version: The 2005 film does have some great things to recommend it - Keira Knightly is awesome and certainly nothing to sneeze at. Judy Dench as Lady Catherine De Bourgh is finally an imposing figure, instead of just a self indulgent rich lady pissing and moaning about how people do things she doesn't like. 

But the 2005 film simply doesn't have enough time to actually get into who Lizzie is - things happen at a breakneck pace, compared to the novel. There's almost no space for the characters to do the kind of careful, Austenish reflection on the people around them and the social implications of people's actions. The B plot of Jane and Bingley seems pretty shallow. 

For example - the scene where Lizzie gets the letter from Jane that Lydia has run off with Wickham - shortened immensely.  Instead of having a private moment with Darcy where they can both feel privately and deeply the impact of their mutual choice not to expose Wickham suddenly turning horribly against them, as in the novel and the 1995 miniseries, the 2005 adaptation merges that scene with Lizzie telling her aunt and uncle. So Lizzie and Darcy don't get their private moment together, where Lizzie imagines that Darcy is going to give up on a relationship with her forever with this news, and Darcy leaves to immediately go find Lydia and save the Bennets without telling Lizzie what he's going to do. That moment of horrible emotion and guilt and regret that they share is just sort of made weird and stilted because it's not private anymore - the Gardners are there watching the whole thing. It feels less like shared grief and more like just a recitation of "This is where the plot goes next, folks!" 

In general, I feel like the film does a good job getting the stuffed into the film, so if you are familiar with the book, you can fill in the blanks without too much trouble. But it's not doing the book any favors, and it makes for a more trite and less interesting story. By the end of the film, I just kind of missed Lizzie Bennet. 




kitewithfish: (Default)
Venom:
intra-personal negotiation by Wildehack (tyleet)
Author's Summary: How fucked is that, that a compromise that ended with eating raw shark liver under the Golden Gate Bridge in the dead of night is probably the most interpersonally mature he’s ever been? Intra-personally, Venom corrects, not really paying attention.

Why I love it: I adore stories that are about actually making relationships work, and giving and taking and paying attention. I also love stories in which people try to do this and fail badly, and try again and fail better. And this does all of that, plus Venom eats a shark and makes reference to theories about cultural differences. 

Pride and Prejudice:
An Ever-Fixed Markby AMarguerite (This is locked to AO3 users, I have invites if you need an account!)

Author's Summary: One would think that having the name of one's soulmate appear on one's wrist on one's sixteenth birthday would make matrimony much less complicated. It mostly does not. And not at all for Miss Elizabeth Bennet of Longbourne. (A deconstruction of the "soulmate identifying mark" trope, using "Pride and Prejudice." Trigger warnings in the tags.)

Why I love it: This fic takes the idea of visible soulmate marks as trope and then just decides to take it apart and put it back together slantwise. It's also has 'Bisexuals in History: Pretty Normal, Actually', as a minor plot thread about why Colonel Fitzwilliam's family were weird about him for years, beautiful thoughtful romance, considerate and kind reactions to grief, and British politics of the Regency period as a major plot threads.
Content warnings: some non graphic discussion of 19th century battlefield medicine and nursing injured people. 

 

Profile

kitewithfish: (Default)
kitewithfish

May 2025

S M T W T F S
    123
456 78910
111213 14151617
181920 21222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Style Credit

Page generated May. 22nd, 2025 06:31 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios