Our next selection is the 1995 adaptation of Sense & Sensibility , elegantly directed by Ang Lee with a screenplay written by one of the movie’s co-stars Emma Thompson (who won an Oscar for this bit of double duty).
What makes this film suitably seasonal here? Well, for one thing, the setting off point for the plot is the death of the Dashwood patriarch, which leaves his estate to his son from his first marriage and very little to the wife and daughters from his second one.
Unfortunately, the current Mr. Dashwood (James Fleet) has little inclination to honor his deathbed promise to his father yet doesn’t want to look stingy either. Lucky for him, his wife Fanny(wickedly played by Harriet Walter) is swift to slowly yet surely talk him out of it there:
That leaves the newly widowed Mrs. Dashwood (Gemma Jones) and her trio of daughters, Elinor(Thompson), Marianne (Kate Winslet) and young Margaret (Miriam Francois) in search of a new home as well as new futures to plan.
Elinor is well aware that any such love match would be troublesome given the financial gulf between them, even before Lucy Steele(Imogen Stubbs) is on the scene.
Plus, it’s easier to hide her despair when Marianne’s love life is so dramatic, especially when the seemingly made for her Willoughby(Greg Wise) surprisingly breaks up with Marianne. Look at this whole scene where Marianne’s distress causes the entire household to go into an uproar.
While Elinor strives to keep her composure and try to figure out what went down, her mother launches into her own set of hysterics and even Margaret had a crying session Elinor is alone in the hallway by the end of it, with a cup of tea in hand, not at the center of the storm but rather the calm eye of the emotional chaos that is suffering just as much as the others are:
Even when Elinor’s true heartbreak is known, she does her best to see some good in the situation, hard as that is. When Marianne accuse her of being without a heart, it’s then that Elinor displays her inner anger and anguish in a speech that is all the more impactful for having been allowed to slowly build over the course of the story:
Of course, you might say “Emma Thompson did write the script, of course she made HER character interesting!” Thompson happens to be a Jane Austen reader which aided greatly when adapting the book to film and like many a good actor, didn’t upstage or undercut the other performers for her benefit.
In fact, she enhances several minor characters such as Margaret with her treehouses and comments about “we never talk about things!”and piracy being a viable option. Even the eternally grumpy Mr. Palmer(Hugh Laurie) gets a few moments of showing a nicer side to his character!
By giving the actor opportunities to use body language and writing their character into an arch that lets them showcase their inner strength in visible ways, it is possible to make such quiet leads like Elinor Dashwood,as well as Anne Eliot and yes, even Fanny Price from MP, be as compelling as their more lively counterparts can be.
It also helps a great deal to not only have read the source material but to also like it as well. Many of these productions seem determined to remake the leads to their own tastes rather than showcase the values of that character already beloved by readers.
Emma Thompson was a key factor in making this film work for both Austen fans and new viewers alike and others really should run where she walked artistically:
Speaking of Emma Thompson, she is also a co-star in our next Autumn in August film that has her being the sensible sister to a much more impulsive sibling.
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