Reviewed by: Jim O'Neill
CONTRIBUTOR
Moral Rating: | Average |
Moviemaking Quality: |
|
Primary Audience: | Young-Adults |
Genre: | Comedy Drama |
Length: | 2 hr. 4 min. |
Year of Release: | 2020 |
USA Release: |
March 6, 2020 (wide release) DVD: May 19, 2020 |
Life in the nineteenth century
Matchmakers
Youthful hubris
A young woman who greatly overestimates her own matchmaking abilities
What does the Bible say about HUMILITY and pride?
Being blind to the dangers of meddling in other people’s lives
Marriage issues
Issues of social status and age
Romantic misunderstandings
Allowing one’s misperceptions and imagination to lead one astray
Relationships among people from a small number of families
TRUE LOVE—What is true love and how do you know when you have found it? Answer
For a follower of Christ, what is LOVE—a feeling, an emotion, or an action? Answer
Featuring |
Anya Taylor-Joy … Emma Woodhouse Johnny Flynn … George Knightley Bill Nighy … Mr. Woodhouse Mia Goth … Harriet Smith Myra McFadyen … Mrs. Bates Josh O'Connor … Mr. Elton Callum Turner … Frank Churchhill Rupert Graves … Mr. Weston Gemma Whelan … Mrs. Weston Amber Anderson … Jane Fairfax Miranda Hart … Miss Bates Tanya Reynolds … Mrs. Elton See all » |
Director |
Autumn de Wilde |
Producer |
Working Title Films [United Kingdom] Blueprint Pictures [United Kingdom] Perfect World Pictures See all » |
Distributor |
Focus Features, a subsidiary of Universal Pictures, a division of NBCUniversal/Comcast |
Autumn de Wilde’s film adaptation of Jane Austin’s 1815 novel Emma opens with the same lines that the novel begins with:
“Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever, and rich, with a comfortable home and happy disposition, seemed to unite some of the best blessings of existence; and had lived nearly twenty one years with very little to distress or vex her.”
That sentence, besides being one of the best opening lines of any book or movie, is as concise and exquisite a definition of a brat as one is ever likely to find. Emma Woodhouse is, indeed, spoiled and selfish, but her self-assurance, fueled as much by self-delusion as by keen intelligence, is tempered by reserves of innocence and good will that make her as alluring as she is aggravating. Like Natasha in War and Peace, Scarlett in “Gone With the Wind,” or Holly in “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” her self-absorption, and her confidence that those around her will behave as willing chess pieces to be moved about on her own board of life, make her a formidable opponent, and a prized conquest.
Emma (Anya Taylor-Joy) lives with her widowed father on a wealthy estate. Her governess, Miss Taylor (Gemma Whelan), has just married Mr. Weston (Rupert Graves), and to Emma’s and Mr. Woodhouse’s chagrin, Miss Taylor will be moving out of their manor.
Emma consoles herself by taking credit for introducing the newlyweds, and now believes she has a talent for matchmaking. She wastes no time applying her new trade, most notably with a friend, Harriet Smith (Mia Goth), who was born of lesser circumstances than Miss Woodhouse, but has a good marriage prospect in the respectful, if not rich, and gentlemanly, if not gentry, Robert Martin (Connor Swindells). Emma’s attempts at raising Harriet’s status by pairing her first with Mr. Elton (Josh O'Connor), the town vicar, and then with Frank Churchill (Callum Turner), the errant son of Mr. Weston, prove wayward and wasteful, more hot messes than cozy pairings.
Emma’s taste for meddling, fueled by pride and made dangerous by an inability to take note of danger signs, wreaks havoc in the lives around her. The only moral compass in her life is George Knightley (Johnny Flynn), her neighbor and brother-in-law, who incessantly chastises Emma, imploring her to use prudence, temperance and a bit of common sense in order to better navigate the treacherous waters she is trying to steer her friends, and herself, through.
The arguments between Emma and Mr. Knightley make the novel sparkle with wit, danger and passion. He is as buttoned-up as she is flighty—as much a stick in the mud as she is a will of the wisp. They are a tea-sipping, parlor-room Punch and Judy, attentively seated at their battle stations and dressed for serious warfare: he in tailored waistcoat and high necked collar, she in V-necked day dresses with delicate flower inlay. They go at each other with such gusto that you look forward to the next round, and yearn for it never to end. But, alas, it does.
Johnny Flynn, a capable actor and a proficient Mr. Knightley, is too young and too uncombed to fit the stately, almost fatherly character he is meant to portray, and having him appear naked early on detracts from the essence of what he represents. The storytellers, in their attempt to update this latest in a long line of film and television adaptations of the novel, perhaps feel a need to “dress down” their leading man in an effort to make him more modern or more human, but being groomed and dressed by a servant is not modern, and revealing one’s backside is not revealing of anything essential to the character, or to the truth that the character is meant to represent.
Anya Taylor-Joy, so splendid in Robert Egger’s 2015 film, “The Witch,” is charming, and quite funny in some scenes, but she often loses her focus, which may be the fault of the film’s director, a music-video maker prior to this, her first feature film. A comedy of manners, encased in enchantment but propelled by calamity and near-farce, should proceed with delicacy and forthrightness. It should not bounce down stairs, as Mr. Woodhouse so incongruously does, or run across fields and down hallways as many of the characters senselessly do.
All the actors, even Bill Nighy, the most experienced of the lot, but a surprisingly annoying, and even weird, Mr. Woodhouse, seem lost and in frantic pursuit of something. DeWilde never gives them the time or the guidance to find that something. She pushes her actors from one escapade to another as if they were playing a game of musical chairs instead of a chamber piece.
The only impressive performance is given by Miranda Hart as the garrulous Miss Bates. She is, in equal measures, absurd and endearing, an unstoppable cackler that you would want to run a mile from if you weren’t consumed with the desire to put an arm around her.
And speaking of music, the soundtrack to “Emma.” has to be one of the most intrusive in recent memory. There is everything from choral pieces to symphonic interludes to folk ballads; even “The Last Rose of Summer” is thrown in; none of it has the bewitching charm of the Rachel Portman’s 1996 Oscar winning score of Douglas McGrath’s version of “Emma” starring Gwyneth Paltrow. The music in the deWilde version is as disconnected, and discordant, as the action itself.
The sets and the costumes are marked by a similar pomposity. For the most part, I liked the lush costumes, but I cannot get a particular scene out of my mind, the one in which Emma has what looks like a tiny round Christmas ornament hanging from her head. That still confounds and bothers me. The interiors, which boast walls with colors such as canary yellow, robin’s egg blue and Provencal lavender, look as though they were not so much painted as layered with fondant.
“Emma” is a delight on the page, and on screen it can work as a tenderhearted confection as well as a morality play about the dangers of tampering in others people’s affairs, about placing our own wills above the will of God, and in failing to listen to the one Voice that matters above all others. This energized and au currant version may fit today’s fashion, but it does not forge a style, one evocative of Jane Austen’s time, or emblematic of our own.
“Yet they did not obey or incline their ear, but followed the counsels and the dictates of their evil hearts, and went backwards, and not forwards.” —Jeremiah 7:23-24 ESVUK
“Guard your steps when you go to the house of God. Go near to listen rather than to offer the sacrifice of fools, who do not know that they do wrong. Do not be quick with your mouth, do not be hasty in your heart to utter anything before God. God is in heaven and you are on earth, so let your words be few.” —Eccl 5:1-2 NIV
See list of Relevant Issues—questions-and-answers.
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My opinion is that this new movie was better than the TV movie. I always got the impression while watching the TV movie that it was supposed to be humorous, but that it just wasn’t. It seemed like they were trying to make little jokes and have funny things happen, but those things just didn’t feel funny, but just serious. It was distracting at times. This new movie does not have that problem. The movie has multiple moments that made me chuckle, but at the same time stayed subtle so that the humor didn’t distract from the rest of the film. I don’t know if the book is more or less subtle when it comes to the humor, but, judging the film on its own, it worked.See all »
My Ratings: Moral rating: Better than Average / Moviemaking quality: 5