Becoming Jane (about Jane Austen)?
If you have, what did you think?
Becoming Jane (about Jane Austen)?
If you have, what did you think?
I've always found it rather exciting to remember that there is a difference between what we experience and what we think it means.
nah... where do they show that? is it a TV movie?
Wish hard enough, I could turn it to what I like.
Fall Out Boy, "Tiffany Blews."
No TV. It's a major release.
IMDB
A youtube trailer
I've always found it rather exciting to remember that there is a difference between what we experience and what we think it means.
I've been dying to go, but here in Holland it's released at august 16th, I'll have to wait a little longer!
Each man's death diminishes me, for I am involved in mankind. - John Donne
I saw "Becoming Jane" last night. I enjoyed it. Enjoy, though, is really not the word. I was entranced by it. Although the movie is loosely based on her life, the movie had me in an emotional grip. I left teary the whole 30 minute ride home with a lump in my throat. I feel ridiculous every time I cry during/after a movie, but I did and I was moved considering her life and writing. I will be interested in what others have to say about the movie.
It got torn apart by critics here, and taken out of theaters 4 days after release. I would have seen it, but now I can't see how I can (unless I travel for an hour each way).
Too bad JBI! Where is "here?" I live in Vancouver. It didn't get great reviews here but since I've often disagreed with movie reviewers I never let that stop me from thinking about it differently. It just seems that often reviewers hold all movies to one standard and that just doesn't work because movies have many different targeted audiences and purposes. I think Jane's movie was targeted to the people who love to read stories with wit and perception but that also want a happy ending as a reward for a life well lived. I think that is completely acceptable but often reviewers do not.
Well, you can see it when it comes out on DVD...unless you are a torrent fan?
I've always found it rather exciting to remember that there is a difference between what we experience and what we think it means.
I just got back from seeing it! I was also entranced, just as I was with "Pride and Prejudice." I was also teary-eyed and weepy! My daughter asked more than once, "Are you CRYING?" I cried the whole way home.
I think it's just so sad how much she wanted the kind of love that she wrote about in her novels and never realized it.
I fear that the romanticizing (or Hollywood-ization, if you will) of Jane Austen's life will create the impression that she was a much more interesting person than she actually was. Witty, of course, and a goddess with the pen, but Austen's life was largely uneventful and hardly warrants a major motion picture. Unfortunately I must play the cynic and say, "Down with the movie!" Do please read a biography instead; the one by Carol Shields is an excellent one to begin with.
I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear has gone, there will be nothing. Only I will remain.
~Bene Gesserit Litany against Fear. Dune.
I saw it on a plane, and I loved it! It made me cry so much...
But now it'll make her books seem sad, because you know that behind the happy endings was unrequited love, and that's the only reason the happy endings were put in.
But I love her books and the dramatisations of them, and am really glad I saw the film. More than any other books I can think of, it's really good to know about the author as a person because it adds so much to them.
That last bit was rambly but I hope it makes sense.
"The magic gave me insight, and you gave me a heart, but for all the heart and insight in the world, I am still a cat."
I admit it was like seeing Jane cast as one of the heroines in her own books, but still as long as I can keep the real Jane separate from the character Jane I feel like it adds to my conception of her as a person who still has relevance today. I do wonder what she would have thought of her being cast as her own character.
I've always found it rather exciting to remember that there is a difference between what we experience and what we think it means.
Although it is loosely based upon her life, it was a very emotional film, and yes I admit to crying. It was brilliantly woven from situations in her novels, and shows why she may have had reason to write what she did. A really good, but really sad movie.
I havent actually seen the movie but by the way my mother wouldn't stop raving about it, it must have some high points my mother was so inspired by the movie that she actually asked me for all my Jane Austen books, I want to go but I fear that the movie will leave me feeling the same way I did after the first few chapeters of Pride and Prejudice, wanting to kill myself. I have no idea why I can't get into Jane Austen books like my friends do, I once was browsing through the comic's section (Yes, yes I read comics, you can't blame me my father once owned a comic book store its in my blood) and I happened to pick up a comic book version of Emma not being a fan of Jane Austen I did not realize it was her story of course you expect me to say that I loved it well no, Like all Jane Austen books it left me dazed and confused. I could not even grasp the personality type of the main character. I'm sorry I've tried hard but her writing alludes me, my father was disappointed to find out that I didnt finish any of the Jane Austen books that he gave to me for christmas he strongly believes that every girl should read them. I'll rent it the next time I see it, and cross my fingers and hope I'm not left out in the dark