Took daughter to see Charlie and the Chocolate Factory last night--was largely unimpressed. Definitely got the same "What theme park is working on the Wonka ride?" vibe
mehitobel_ny mentioned to me. However my problem concentrating on the movie had less to do with the quality of said movie, but the fact I was subjected to one of the most disturbing movie
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I seem to recall that there was another movie made of an Austen novel (Mansfield Park?) that made my cousin K, Austen aficionado, weep tears of blood. Still, that's fandom for you - your Austen fans still can't manage the dizzy heights of HP :)
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It's not you, I guess the line now is, "Get me GurlPowah! Get me Knightly! Or maybe she's sold her soul to the devil and will forever be the only actress ever again allowed to play any character named "Elizabeth" in any costume drama ever made ever again.
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They're all inept at acting, plus they have, liek, gurl power!11!
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Apparently, what the filmmakers are going for a 'more gritty, more realistic' adaptation of P&P. They will emphasise the grime, the messiness of living in the English countryside at the turn of the 18th century. Oh, and they intend to move teh action back ten years, because the director does not like Regency dresses- they make everyone look like 'balloons'.
Sigh.
This is not going to be a good film, for many reasons:
1) Although P&P is a wonderful, realistic novel- the observations of people in their element is dead on- it is also a comedy. A comedy, about two rather unremarkable people whose charms and goodness are revealed gradually to each other. Yes, money is very much at stake here; that does not mean that the Bennet family is any less funny ( ... )
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*smirks*
Oh, this is going to be just awful!
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But still, during that time period, there were dissolute gentry who lived in relative filth, but becaus eof name and connection, they were welcomed in homes. What teh filmmakers are being coy about is the fact that society is run on connection and money, an dthat it is perfectly ridicolous and limiting- which is what the BBC version did so well.
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