Continuing in my pursuit of viewing all things “Pride & Prejudice“, I offer two more tangential movie reviews: “Pride & Prejudice & Zombies” and “Austenland” and a third made for TV series: “Lost in Austen“. The reviews are in the order I watched them, not in preference or year of release. Because this post covers three “films”, it will be considerably longer than normal. Feel free to skip it and come back another time if you’re not “into” P&P. | |
“Lost in Austen” (2008) – TV Series 4 part on YouTube | |
This is a four part TV mini-series for a privately owned (not-BBC) channel in England called ITV. The movie is a rom-com adaptation of Jane Austen’s “Pride & Prejudice” book, but is really kind of a “Back to the Future” (back to reality?) feel. Basically, the lead (Amanda Price, played by Jemima Rooper) is so in love with the book, she stumbles into it through a portal in her bathroom. She retains all of her knowledge of the book and Elizabeth Bennet (played by Gemma Arterton) “replaces” her in our time. Basically, what happens in a romance story if you know all the story but as soon as you join the story, the story is irrevocably altered. Mostly, comedy (and romance) ensues. | |
The rest of the main characters are: Elliot Cowan as Fitzwilliam Darcy, Tom Mison as Mr Bingley, Morven Christie as Jane Bennet, Tom Riley as George Wickham, Hugh Bonneville as Mr. Claude Bennet, and Alex Kingston as Mrs. Bennet. | |
Once you know the premise, the TV-series is 70-80% predictable. Given that, I still enjoyed it. Rooper is not brilliant, but she carries the load and does it more than adequately. Cowan is not “my” idea of Mr. Darcy, but he’s not bad. Strike that. He is better than most. He is stern and formal without being Hollywood handsome. And then he comes out of the pond… LoL! Adequate is true with the rest of the cast with the exception of Bonneville. For whatever reason (mostly “Downton Abbey“, I think), I really like him as an actor and I thought he is very good as Mr. Bennet adding depth which is not always in some of the other portrayals in other versions of P&P. | |
The series uses the characters from P&P and kind-of follows the novel’s plot, but has (and ends with) significant variance. Final recommendation: strong. If you are a “P&P” fan, I think you’ll enjoy this series as an addition / alternate universe to Austen’s P&P. If not, it is at least tolerable as rom-coms go. I found it better than “tolerable”, but that may just be my taste. If you are not a “P&P” or rom-com fan, why are you even bothering to read this review? (Just kidding…) | |
I watched this on YouTube for free and I would definitely consider buying it if it ever came out in my price range ($5). Each episode is about 40-45 minutes, so you are looking at almost three hours of viewing commitment. | |
“Pride & Prejudice & Zombies” (2016) | |
I know that “everything” goes better with Zombies these days, but I really didn’t know what to expect before viewing this version of P&P. I need to preface this review with a comment: I am not a horror or slasher film watcher. Mostly, I find them repetitive, boring, or offensive. I stopped watching them about 1977 or so. I very occasionally will touch base with one if it becomes a “societal” touchstone, but even then, it’s rare. I have never seen a Jason, 13th, Halloween, Hellraiser, Saw or any of those series. I have seen and do like some of the classics: “Wolfman“, “Psycho“, “Jaws“, etc and I also enjoy “monster / SciFi” films: “Predator“, “Alien“, “The Birds“. I’m not sure why I like some and not others. I guess it’s just me. | |
Anyway, this is actually a rom-slash / martial arts / action film. It is a “take-off” on P&P, so I thought I’d give it a chance. | |
Lily James plays Elizabeth Bennet, Sam Riley plays Mr. Darcy, Lena Headey plays Lady Catherine de Bourgh, Matt Smith plays Mr. Collins, Jack Huston plays Mr. Wickham and Charles Dance plays Mr. Bennet. I like Lily James and love Lena Heady. James makes a surprisingly good martial artist actor. I don’t know how much is actually James doing the fighting, but “her” portions looked great. Headey plays her typically serious role, even when it’s in a ridiculous role, like this one. (I love the eye-patch.) Dr. Who, I mean Matt Smith is outstanding as the incompetent and obsequious Collins. Riley is handsome and gallant enough as Darcy, but seems (to me) a bit too young (and movie handsome, not really ruggedly handsome). He looks like he should be in a boy band instead of on a parapet killing zombies. And, finally, I liked Dance as Mr. Bennet. I haven’t cared for him as much in other roles (GOT and “The Imitation Game“), but I thought he fit in this role. | |
Between the two threads, P&P and the zombies, this movie is 90% predictable. The 10% which was unpredictable was whether James, Headly and the other ladies could pull off the martial arts scenes. They do and quite well, too! | |
As a P&P fan, my final recommendation is: moderate to strong. I liked the sets, the costumes and the martial art set pieces. I enjoyed this movie as a different “parody / take” on P&P even though I didn’t care for any of the zombie portions of the film. They were merely action figures inserted to give the main characters moving targets to slice and dice. I watched this on my “On Demand” TV service. I’m not sure if I enjoyed it enough to actually buy a copy if ever comes in to my price point (yeah, still $5). Despite James and Headey, I’m not sure I’d pay for this P&P theme movie. And the movie ends as a setup to a sequel (which I will probably miss). | |
Austenland (2013) | |
This movie is supposed to be a “rom-com” about a late-20’s young lady who visits a theme park dedicated to re-enacting Jane Austen period life, social settings and romance. The problem is while there is romance, there is almost no comedy. | |
So, who’s in this movie? It stars Keri Russell as Jane Hayes (the Austen fanatic), J.J. Feild as Henry Nobley (kind of a Mr. Darcy who looks vaguely like Tom Hiddleston), Bret McKenzie as Martin (the love interest for Russell’s character in the park), Jennifer Coolidge as Miss Elizabeth Charming (I thinks she was meant to be the comedic character, but she is an offensive “rich, unread, ugly American” instead – but with a kind heart), Georgia King as Lady Amelia Heartwright (another offensive rich guest – also American), and Jane Seymour as Mrs. Wattlesbrook (the proprietor of the resort). There are also a number of other characters who aren’t really worth bothering to mention. | |
Russell is a “girl-next-door” version of Michelle Pfeiffer. To be honest, I thought Russell might be Pfeiffer’s daughter or much younger sister. She is the second best thing in this movie. Feild is the first. He makes both an interesting Nobly (Mr. Darcy) and a likeable history teacher. The only other “interesting” actor was Seymour playing a manipulative park director. The camera (or director or makeup crew) was not kind to her in this film. She looks old in her closeups – much more than the early 60’s she would have been when this was filmed / released. And not, evil / craggy / old – just old. Like I said, “interesting”. | |
Final recommendation: moderate (at best). I did like Russell and Feild and thought there was pretty good chemistry between them. So, “rom” is the limit of this rom-com. As a P&P fan, at least I can say I gave it a shot and watched it. | |
Thanks to any of you who made it all the way through this post / these reviews… | |
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On This Day In: | |
2018 | Dead Red |
You Ain’t Done Yet | |
2017 | Just Because |
2016 | As Close As They Can Get |
2015 | And So I Blog |
2014 | Take Flight |
2013 | Contributing Joy |
2012 | More Than A Race |
2011 | Institutionalized Leadership |
Posts Tagged ‘Elizabeth “Lizzy” Bennet’
Austen Stalking
Posted in Movie Review, Movies, Reviews, tagged Alex Kingston, Alien, Amanda Price, Austenland -- movie review, Bret McKenzie, Charles Dance, Downton Abbey, Elizabeth "Lizzy" Bennet, Elliot Cowan, Gemma Arterton, Georgia King, GOT, Henry Nobley, Hugh Bonneville, ITV, J.J. Feild, Jack Huston, Jane Austen, Jane Bennet, Jane Seymour, Jaws, Jemima Rooper, Jennifer Coolidge, Keri Russell, Lady Amelia Heartwright, Lady Catherine de Bourgh, Lena Headey, Lily James, Lost in Austen -- movie review, Matt Smith, Michelle Pfeiffer, Miss Elizabeth Charming, Moderate Movie Recommendation, Moderate To Strong Movie Recommendation, Morven Christie, Mr. Bennet, Mr. Bingly, Mr. Collins, Mr. Darcy, Mr. Wickham, Mrs Wattlesbrook, Mrs. Bennet, P&P, Predator, Pride & Prejudice, Pride & Prejudice & Zombies -- movie review, Psycho, Sam Riley, Strong Movie Recommendation, The Birds, The Immitation Game, Tom Hiddleston, Tom Mison, Wolfman on June 24, 2019| Leave a Comment »
More Prejudice
Posted in Movies, tagged Aishwarya Rai, Amritsar, Bollywood, Bride & Prejudice - movie review, Chandra Lamba, Charlotte Lucas, Colin Firth, Elizabeth "Lizzy" Bennet, India, Jane Austen, Jennifer Ehle, Keira Knightley, Lalita Bakshi, Martin Henderson, Matthew Macfadyen, Mr. Darcy, Pride And Prejudice, Sonali Kulkarni, Strong Recommendation on November 18, 2015| Leave a Comment »
Bride & Prejudice – movie review | |
I recently watched the Indian / Bollywood adaptation of Jane Austen’s novel “Pride and Prejudice“, slightly retitled as “Bride & Prejudice” (2004). To demonstrate my lack of culture, I first became aware of Austen and “Prejudice” when I saw the 2005 version with Keira Knightley and Matthew MacFadyen in the lead roles of Elizabeth “Lizzy” Bennet and Mr. Darcy. I don’t remember when I first saw the movie, but I believe it was somewhere around 2010. I have since watched it at least a half dozen times. I’m not sure what it is, but I find the whole story and setting fascinating. I have also watched the 1995 version made for BBC TV starring Colin Firth and Jennifer Ehle as Darcy and Elizabeth. I must admit Ehle doesn’t hold a candle to Knightley, but Firth is every bit as good as MacFadyen, even though he doesn’t have the physical presence of MacFadyen. In any case, because this is a series instead of a movie, I must say I prefer the series because there is more time to develop the characters. | |
Okay, enough background. Back to the actual movie review… | |
In this version of the Jane Austen novel, Mr. William (aka Fitzwilliam) Darcy is an American played by Martin Henderson and Lizzie Bennett becomes Lalita Bakshi who is played by Aishwarya Rai. The unmarried sisters (Lalita is the second oldest) and their family are plugged into a modern plot that spans London, Los Angeles, Bombay / Mumbai and Goa. The family and four daughters live in Amritsar, India (a country town) — which is trying to be true to original Austen story, but which has its own airport, so I’m not real sure how “true” that is. | |
The movie has the most problems because it can’t make up its mind whether it wants to be a romantic drama or a musical-romantic-comedy. It tries to be both and therefore doesn’t really succeed at either. To be honest, most of the numbers made no sense and I would have preferred they went for more drama. Having said this, I have seen a few other Bollywood movies and I think they were just trying to sell to their home market. Other than that, the big problem was how to bring the story up to modern day times. The plot device here was to make the characters international and hence the side trips (LA and London) being used to demonstrate the wealth of the Americans and the Londoners. | |
How is the acting? Sadly, just so-so. Henderson fails to strike the right notes (for me) as Darcy. Darcy is the character which most draws me to the story (and I’m not sure why), but Henderson lacks the physicality of MacFadyen or British style of Firth. Aishwarya is obviously the most beautiful of the Lizzie’s, but she seems wooden in this role. I have not seen her in anything else so I don’t know if beauty is all there is or not, but from this role I’d judge it is. Strangely enough, I didn’t even find Aishwarya to be the most camera “friendly”. I thought that honor went to the actress Sonali Kulkarni as Chandra Lamba (Charlotte Lucas – Lizzie’s best friend in the British versions). | |
Does the movie work, though? Is it entertaining? Yes and yes. I liked the dancing and most of the songs. The colors and the energy of India are very attractive. Even though the acting wasn’t quite what I thought it could be, the movie is another Austen happy ending. Final recommendation: strong recommendation as the Indian version of P&P, particularly if you are a “Prejudice” fan – as I am turning out to be. | |
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On This Day In: | |
2021 | Misunderestimated |
The Sincerest Form Of Flattery | |
Four Fifths Of Music | |
2020 | Doctor’s Orders |
Make That Seven Orders… | |
2019 | Innocent |
2018 | Ripost |
2017 | Just Asking… |
2016 | And 4 |
How Tall Do You Stand? | |
2015 | More Prejudice |
2014 | Say What? |
2013 | Daring Errors |
2012 | Are You Comfortable? |
I Just Have To | |
In Flux | |
2011 | True New |
2010 | A Job Well Started Is A Job Half Done |
I See With My One Good Eye | |