I also love biographical films. A person's years or even decades of wasted time are always effortlessly condensed into a few shots: joy one second, tears the next; youthful one second, whitehead the next. Real life has never been able to switch as lightly as movie scenes, and those loneliness and sadness will not stop for just ten seconds.
Last year, ITV and BBC each contributed a TV series related to Jane Austen, namely "Lost in Austen" and "Austen's Regrets" mentioned above.
In front of the powerful BBC, ITV can only play the line of famous novels, so "Lost in Austin" made its debut ironically. This is just a work that Bo Jun smiled. The real title should be "Lost Pride and Prejudice", about a young woman living in contemporary London who swaps time and space with Elizabeth, and Mr. Darcy in Netherfield Gardens. Talk about love. There were a lot of jokes and some horrible things to watch - after all, the characters who were familiar and lively were "ravaged" in imaginary ways. Of course, the show is not completely lackluster. Its greatest contribution is to help all Jane fans recognize the fact that if a girl reads "Pride and Prejudice" at the age of eleven or twelve, then her view of love is actually There is not much leeway. Therefore, after Amanda and Mr. Darcy had been feuding enemies for a while, they suddenly realized that the Prince Charming whom he had been looking for and waiting for for many years was the character in this book, and it was the way of communication between the hero and heroine that attracted me, the courtship Rhythm……
And "Austen's Regrets" completely shattered all imaginations about Darcy and love. This less than 90-minute TV series depicts the last days of Miss Austen. She often left the Hampshire cottage rather restlessly, happily serving as a love adviser to her niece Fanny. She told her fledgling niece that the best way to get Mr Darcy was to make one up. Although her own heroines are all married to rich people and for love, Jane is well aware that in reality, a happy marriage depends on luck, and ironically, people are constantly making choices.
Nearly forty, she also has some admirers, but she ends up flirting and dancing. Young Dr. Hayden burst in like a ray of afternoon sun, and seemed very pleased. But as sensitive as Jane, seeing a young man courting his blond and red-lipped niece one night, he quickly escaped from a possibly absurd affair. She didn't want to risk her heart at all, which is why Charlotte Bronte laughed at the woman who wrote all the stories of marriage and love, and never really fell in love at all.
In order to comfort Fanny, she recalled the old events 20 years ago. Tom Lefoy, the first love that Anne Hathaway remembered in "Becoming Jane Austen", in the BBC version, only Made this Miss Jane "sad for five minutes". Such a light response reminded me of Elizabeth's emotion when she discovered that Mr. Wickham, who had a good impression on him, turned his attention to chasing others: beautiful teenagers, like ordinary people, need to dress and eat.
Money is another core focus of Jane. As the daughter of a pastor, Jane is saddled with the hope of a happy life for her mother and sister. The mother still complains that her daughter missed a great opportunity fifteen years ago and chose to be single; the daughter is bent on selling the text at a good price, so that the mother and sister will no longer worry about money. At that time, Jane, a writer whose genius and identity had just been recognized by the world, "Sense and Sensibility" made her 140 pounds, and a publisher introduced by her brother was willing to spend 450 pounds to buy all her novels... but it was far from enough. Mrs Woolf said that women should have a house of their own and earn five hundred pounds a year; unfortunately, Jane O had none. It really was born at the wrong age. If it were left today, Miss Jane might be richer than JK Rowling.
Olivia Williams' Jane is far more convincing in every way than Anne Hathaway's Jane two years ago, despite the fact that they each show twenty years apart. Austin. As a veteran Jane fan, I have to admit that Olivia's performance appropriately conveyed my psychological expectations for Miss Austin: smart and interesting, articulate, wise and transparent but not worldly and tacky, low-key but not to be ignored , I am persistent in love and do not embarrass myself, but I am often embarrassed by life.
Without meeting Mr. Darcy, Jane O's had to be a leftover girl. It's just that being an old lady in that era was more difficult than in the present world, and she was poor and sick. When the suitor asked her if she regretted it in the dead of night, her sister apologized for her selfish persuasion back then; she smiled and said that she had chosen freedom, and of course the loneliness and sadness that followed, the only thing she felt was herself knowledge. Or as Emma (the heroine Jane Austen considers herself most similar to herself) put it: Half the people in the world cannot understand the other half of the fun.
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