To all the critics out there...
I really loved this movie, and I watched it the first time with the expectation that it would be different from the book, which we should all do when watching a movie adaptation of a book. Here is my take on some of the criticisms of the movie: 1: No William. I find that adaptations of novels need to trim down the number of characters so as not to confuse the audience. When reading a book, you can go back and review at your leisure who's who, while a film moves faster and you could be lost before you know you're lost. I actually liked how this movie fused William and Susan together as a symbol of the life Fanny left behind in Portsmouth and then later a marriage of her two lives when Susan comes to live at Mansfield Park. 2: Miss Crawford's character. True, she was not so obviously evil in the book, but Jane Austen made references as an omniscient narrator about some of her darker thoughts, e.g., Tom's possible death and Edmund's ascendancy to heir, which would have been lost if the screenplay did not have Miss Crawford actually speak those thoughts at some point. Again, the subtleties and complexities of the writing in a novel can get lost in a film that needs to keep moving to entertain an audience, so a film generally needs to be more to-the-point than its novel counterpart. The audience is invited to hate Miss Crawford and cheer on Fanny and Edmund, and my guess is that the director doesn't want anyone feeling sorry for Miss Crawford in the end. 3: Fanny's ambiguity over Mr. Crawford's proposal. This irritated me at first, but when I thought about it, I think it was necessary to the rest of the movie. I think the audience needs to see Mr. Crawford really angry, and a good reason for that, to understand why he shacks up with Maria later on. Once again, movies need to be more obvious than novels. To keep the story tight, Fanny needed to really piss off Mr. Crawford with her yes-I-mean-no attitude rather than just continuing to reject him and leaving the door open for hope in the future. 4: The slavery agenda. My thought here is, what else do you expect. Is anyone surprised at this point about a movie that takes a firmer stance against slavery than complacency and/or indifference? I think it also adds a bit of depth to Tom's character and makes him more likable than he was in the book, as the movie emphasizes that Tom, in spite of all of his follies, has noble motivations. 5 The nudity scene. Aside from the obvious sex-sells pitch, I think that this too, not surprisingly, to those of you who have read this far, is a symptom of a director choosing not to leave anything up in the air. By having Fanny walk in on Mr. Crawford and Maria, the movie makes a direct link between Fanny angering Mr. Crawford and Mr. Crawford returning to his scummy ways. Stylistically, there is a parallel in the way the two of them see each other the last three times: when she rejects him in her family's kitchen, when she sees him in the hall at Mansfield Park, and when she sees him last with Maria. I thought it was interesting how the look on his face stays the same, but hers is different each time, mirroring the change she sees in him with his growing resentment of her. At any rate, I've strayed far from my point, but the bottom line is that I think the emotional impact of the last scene with Fanny and Crawford was designed to finally answer the question of what kind of person is Mr. Crawford and what place does he have in this story. 6: Anything I've missed. It's a movie. It's not the novel. I highly doubt it was designed to be exactly like the novel. I will never tell anyone to watch this movie instead of the novel, as Mansfield Park is one of my favorites, but I will tell people to watch this movie for its own merits. I know I shouldn't try to push my philosophy on others, especially hardcore Austenites, but I really believe that you should watch a movie because you like the story and not because you want to see
2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback.
Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.
Overview
Freely adapted from a novel by Jane Austen, this period drama is set in the early 1800s, as a girl named Fanny Hannah Taylor Gordon is being raised by loving but desperately poor parents. Wanting a better life for Fanny, they send her away to live with her aunts, high-minded Mrs. Norris Sheila Gish and drug-addicted Lady Bertram Lindsay Duncan, who share an estate called Mansfield Park. Fanny joins the family at Mansfield Park, which includes Lady Bertram's husband Sir Thomas Harold Pinter, who made his money in slaves and West Indian plantations; Sir Thomas's son Tom James Purefoy, an alcoholic; Tom's intelligent younger brother Edmund Jonny Lee Miller; and his two sisters, Julia Justine Waddell and Maria Victoria