Film Review
Hollywood has always had something of a reputation for taking great
works of literature, chewing them up and spitting out something that is
the meanest approximation to the original, as often as not sacrificing
artistic integrity for the sake of a snatchy tagline and a quick
buck. MGM's big budget adaptation of Jane Austen's perennial
favourite,
Pride and Prejudice,
evinces a fair degree of advanced liberty taking but the end product is
surprisingly faithful to the original and is a good natured romp which
only the most diehard of Austen enthusiasts would disdain. Yes,
we can justifiably cringe at the decision to forward the story by at
least three decades just so that prettier costumes could be worn, and
the scene in which Elizabeth Bennet proves her archery skills is
downright ridiculous, but these indulgences are easily forgiven as the
film's authors somehow managed to distil Austen's complex social satire
into a pleasing romantic comedy.
With both Greer Garson and Laurence Olivier looking frankly dull and
uninspired as the romantic leads it is left to the supporting actors to
liven things up and bring a little colour into the proceedings.
Mary Boland's Mrs Bennet is the star attraction, her incorrigible
matchmaking exploits providing a rich vein of humour which the film
mines to death. Edmund Gwenn is just as entertaining as the
put-upon Mr Bennet, his deadpan humorous asides articulating the quiet
despair of a tired old man overwhelmed by a household of hyperactive
women who are pathologically obsessed with the mating ritual.
Edna May Oliver's arrival on screen is long overdue but when she does
finally turn up, as the psychotically fastidious Lady Catherine de
Bourgh, she steals the show and makes us wish Austen had made hers the
central character in the narrative.
One surprising name in the screenwriting credits is that of Aldous
Huxley, the celebrated British writer who is best known for his 1931
novel
Brave New World.
To support himself after his move to America in the late 1930s, Huxley
turned his hand to screenwriting on a few Hollywood films and
Pride and Prejudice was the first
film for which he received a credit in this capacity. Previously,
his script for Mervyn LeRoy's
Madame
Curie (1943) had been rejected by MGM on the grounds that it was
'too literary' and he quickly realised that the life of a Hollywood
screenwriter was not for him.
Whilst it is put to shame by some subsequent screen adaptations
(notably the impeccable 1995 BBC television series) this good-natured
version of
Pride and Prejudice
has a great deal to commend it. Beautifully photographed by Karl
Freund, a master of German expressionism who had worked on Fritz Lang's
Metropolis
(1927), the film is visually stunning, its impressive art design
winning an Oscar in 1941. The script sparkles with wit and is
performed with relish by a remarkable ensemble. Jane Austen has
endured far worse treatment than this over the years and for once
Hollywood has done her proud.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In England of the early 1800s, Mrs Bennet's constant worry is the fate
of her five daughters, each of whom has yet to acquire a suitable
husband. Naturally, Mrs Bennet is anxious that her daughters
should marry into money, as the prosperity the Bennets presently enjoy
will be taken away from them when Mr Bennett dies and his estate passes
to Mr Collins, under the terms of an earlier inheritance. When
two eligible young men - Mr Bingley and Mr Darcy - take up residence at
Netherfield Mrs Bennet sees an opportunity to marry off her two eldest
daughters, Jane and Elizabeth. Whilst Jane falls for Mr Bingley,
Elizabeth is repulsed by Mr Darcy, seeing him as an proud and arrogant
man. Elizabeth's prejudice against Darcy appears to be vindicated
when he dissuades Bingley from marrying Jane. When Darcy later
offers to marry her Elizabeth rejects him in an instant but later comes
to realise that she may have misjudged him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.