wahlee: (Emma/Knightley)
[personal profile] wahlee
I wasn't quite sure where to go next with my series-- should I go to the other end of the spectrum? Or follow in the same comedic vein? And then this movie showed up on TV the other night. Ta da! It was decided.




PDVD_003
Emma (2006)

It will come as no surprise to most of you that I like movie adaptations of Jane Austen’s works (well, some of them. Others make me want to throw things at the television/movie screen). What may surprise you, though, is that this enjoyment extends to my whole family—and not just my mom and my sisters. My father and brother are both extremely cultured men, and enjoy a good “chick flick” as much as any of us women in the family (we’re slowly converting my brother-in-law as well). My brother always says that movies that most men would consider “chick flicks” were just good movies to him when he was growing up. So don’t be too shocked when a number of romantic films show up on this list.

One of the most quotable of the recent Austen adaptations is Emma, starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Jeremy Northam (mmmm, Jeremy Northam . . .). Many an Austen purist would disagree with me, but I much prefer this adaptation of the novel to the Kate Beckinsale/Mark Strong version, which was aired on TV the same year, and which in many ways is truer to the spirit of the novel. I would argue, however, that the Miramax version is a perfectly valid reading of the novel, if a bit more of a surface reading than the A&E version. And besides, Jeremy Northam is a million times hotter than Mark Strong. Just sayin.’

Also, the Miramax version is just funnier, at least in a verbal sense. Many of the best lines weren’t necessarily written by Austen, but they feel like they could have been. The lines my family quotes are mostly uttered by Miss Bates, played with considerable panache by Emma Thompson’s sometimes-overlooked sister, Sophie Thompson (although one could argue that the best performance of the movie belongs to Phyllida Law, mother to both Emma and Sophie, who plays Mrs. Bates absolutely perfectly without ever saying a word), but not all of them. For every time we quote “Hungry, Mother” (spoken by Miss Bates completely off-screen), or “It left us speechless, quite speechless, actually; and we have not stopped talking of it since”, you’ll also find us uttering “The Coles are nice people, but we should have to go outside to get there” or “How interesting, Miss Smith,” or “He offends me. Deeply.” Good, good, stuff.

One of the things I like best about the film is the way it combines the dialogue with brilliant cinematography. Watch the sequence directly after Mr. Elton leaves for Bath, where the scenes flow together seamlessly through bridging dialogue and voice-overs, clear up until the Cole's party--where worlds of emotions are conveyed through close-ups alone. Or one of my favorite scenes (which is the one I screencaped above), where Emma and Knightley are discussing the upcoming ball at the Weston’s. At first, all you can see is that Emma and Knightley are standing on a lawn somewhere—and then the camera flips around to reveal the enormous Donwell Abbey in the background as Knightley utters the line “I just want to stay here where it’s cozy.” Fabulous.

My absolute favorite moment in the film, however, is so subtle that many people completely miss it. You can see it in this clip:



When Knightley and Emma dance at the ball, on their first do-si-do, they're supposed to move around each other without touching. But Knightley reaches out and puts his hand around Emma's waist. It's a perfect moment. And Emma's confused face throughout the rest of the dance is so. . . just. . . *sigh* I love it.

Next time: something completely different.

Date: 2008-10-17 04:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] connielane.livejournal.com
Something else I love about this movie is the use of authentic period music. Not in Rachel Portman's wonderful score - one of my favorite films scores, and an Oscar-winner, by the way - but the songs played and sung at the parties. I'm sure you recognize the music in the clip you shared as the exact music that Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy dance to in P&P (the real BBC one, not the recent atrocity :P). I took an 18th Century British Novel course in college, and one of our texts was (despite not being technically 18th Century) Emma. We listened to recordings of some of the music of the period, and I was pleased to recognize the tune from the dance above, as well as the song that Emma and Frank sing together.

Date: 2008-10-18 02:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wahlee-98.livejournal.com
Mr. Beveridge's Maggot! :D And yes, the songs that they sing and dance to are authentic. I almost wrote a paper about the song that Jane and Frank sing together, because it's quite an interesting choice-- it's from the Beggar's Opera, and is about what happens to girls who give up their virginity (they end up as prostitutes). It's originally sung by a girl who's secretly gotten married. Interesting parallel, no? :P

Date: 2008-10-17 07:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cambryn.livejournal.com
OMG! I LOVE THAT MOVIE SO MUCH!!!!!
I also love 'What's up Doc?' I just watched it the other day XD
But yeah, Emma is a classic that I NEVER get tired of, no matter how many times I watch it.

Some of my favorite moments:
-"Who are you going to dance with?" awwww

-"Is your horse just washing his feet or are the darker forces at work here?"... "You'll just have to live here then! Buhbye!"

-"Try not to shoot my dogs."

-"There is only one thing I can do with someone as impossible as she... I must throw her a party!"

-"I tried not to think about him in the garden where I thrice plucked the petals off a daisy to acertain his feelings for Harriet. I don't think we should keep daisies in the garden, they really are a drab little flower."

-Another fave moment is when the Elton's come into the room and everyone disperses lol! So well done!!!

Or when she puts up that picture of a dog in harriet's portrait's place! Or when Knightly comes up and says 'You've made her too tall!'

Gawd I love that movie!

Date: 2008-10-17 10:35 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] divinemum.livejournal.com
Great movie. The DH likes it as well.

Edited to use my Emma Icon! :P

Date: 2008-10-17 10:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] miss-eponine.livejournal.com
PORK!

I adore this adaptation. It might not be completely faithful to the novel, but I love it the best out of all the Emma movies. I love the dance scene you posted too. The look on her face is just wonderful.

Date: 2008-10-17 12:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] doctoraicha.livejournal.com
I almost didn't click on this because I adore this movie and I was afraid you might say mean stuff about it, because you know, Austen, and English major. But I LOVE it! The other one is hilariously BAD. Every time she swoons off into one of those dream sequences I laugh.

But the lines! Perfect. (Most of the time, people tell me that the reason they don't like the movie is Gwynneth. It's kind of too bad someone else wasn't in the title role.)

Date: 2008-10-18 02:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wahlee-98.livejournal.com
I almost didn't click on this because I adore this movie and I was afraid you might say mean stuff about it, because you know, Austen, and English major.

No need to worry about that sort of thing with this particular series-- all the movies I'm posting about are ones that I love. :) I think in some ways I like this movie because it's the one that made me decide to read Austen in the first place-- and because I read Austen first as a fan and then as a scholar, I see this movie as the kind of reading that a first-time reader who's reading for pleasure would see. Subsequent readings will see the social commentary, etc., but a first-time reader is going to see it as a love story, and that's what this movie focuses on. And since I'm a hopeless romantic, that's just fine with me. :)

Date: 2008-10-19 02:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mystic-jade.livejournal.com
I love this version of Emma too. My Mom and I had to drive all the way to Bakersfield to see it when it first came out. And my Mom begged Blockbuster if she could have the movie poster when they were done displaying it. My younger brother Michael somehow managed to get it, and after all these years he still has it on his wall:0) So many things to love, but what struck me was how beautiful the film is. I love the way the cinematographer plays with light.

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