Genre: Romance/Drama
Director: Julian Jarrold
Cast: Anne Hathaway, James McAvoy, Julie Walters,
James Cromwell, Maggie Smith
RunTime: 2 hrs
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: PG
Official Website: http://www.becomingjane-themovie.com/
Opening Day: 27 March 2008
Synopsis:
"Becoming
Jane" is the story of the great, untold romance that
inspired a young Jane Austen, played by Anne Hathaway. Willful
and spirited, Jane is not ready to be tied down to anything
but her writing. That is until she meets Tom Lefroy (James
McAvoy), a charming rogue from London who spends more time
drinking and socializing than on his law studies.
Movie Review:
Becoming Jane as a biopic does little to instruct and educate
the audience on the finer details of Jane's emotional and
mental maturation in her days, it is in fact a film of rapidly
paced dialogue, action with apparently witting and slightly
comical overtones. Should one replace the name Jane with,
perhaps Kate, and brand it an adaptation, it will easily pass
off as another fictional text by the English literary heroine.
Perhaps Becoming Jane is the strongest, most representative
example of the modern trends and perception of Jane Austen
and her works. As modern adaptations of Pride and Prejudice
(think Colin Firth), Emma (not too recent), and Renee Zellweger's
almost campy Bridget Jones' Diaries, Hollywood has made Austen
geared towards a modern audience with a shorter attention
span. Becoming Jane the same, engaging in dramatising the
life and story of Jane Austen in a way the audience would
suspect - surely her life isn't that crazy after all?
Anne Hathaway plays Austen in a typically dependable performance,
performing the title character as a vivacious, strong-minded
woman who mother declares "needs a husband". Her
love interest, Thomas Lefroy, plays an equally free-spirited
character whose love for fun and the free life renders him
unbecoming to his uncle expectations - "dissipation wild
enough to glut the imaginings of a Hottentot braggadocio"
- he answers to the question of what kind of a lawyer is he
with his behaviour with a humourous "Typical." McAvoy
excelled as the heroic, admirable protagonist with almost
painful fatal character flaws however, in Becoming Jane, he
is shoehorned into a almost uninspiring character of a charming
rich boy, successful yet playful.
Austen engages in a disdain-love (chronogically) interaction
with Lefroy, not dissimilar in on a macro level to Darcy and
Elizabeth. But of course, it is improper to expect a biopic
to be subjugated to the whims of imitating plot devices of
some of her greatest works. As such, Becoming Jane becomes
a film lacking in character, one that engages the classic
tools, methods and feel of modern Hollywood perception of
Austen's works as such unable to tear itself away from reminding
the audience of adaptations of her work.
In the end, Becoming Jane doesn't disturb, provoke or inspire
the audience in a way a biopic, perhaps done with a less commercial
mindset, would have a achieved. However, Atonement has proved
how excellent British work partnered with a mainstream audience
direction can actually find sensible, admirable middle-ground
compromise.
Becoming Jane doesn't do justice to the great British author
- it almost relegates her to a bland, light and campy tale
that is lesser than her great works. This despite the modern
dramatisation and exaggerations of British life in the day.
However, who's to say Austen's life isn't a less dramatic
experience compared to her fictional works? In fact, it has
to be - fiction by Austen were portrayals and excellent discussions
of life of the female in her times, both empowering and moving.
The fault of Becoming Jane, unfortunately, was in how the
plot, script and screen play were crafted the exact modern
Hollywood dramatisation of her works, putting it on the same
artistic platform of comparision and cross-reference with
her adaptations, which in all probability shouldn't have been
the case. Where the opportunity for a incisive, intellectual
dissection on mind, heart and life of a woman who crafted
these works was there for the taking, for example the much
heralded "The Hours" with Virginia Woolf, Becoming
Jane unfortunately chooses to take the path of what was essentially
a dramatic adaption of Austen's romantic life and romantic
life only. How is that easy to separate from- and subsequently
fail to match- her great fictional works? Unless the writers
and director were modern Janes of their times.
Movie Rating:
(Becoming Jane doesn't so much trivialises but under-represents
the dramatisation of Austen)
Review by Daniel Lim
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