Part
One: Austenland The Film
My
wife and I went to see Austenland on
Saturday, and, given that my expectations were not high, based on what I had
read about it beforehand, I was not disappointed, in fact it exceeded my
expectations. In a nutshell, the movie was
unpretentious fun, and I did not find myself squirming and checking my IPhone
for the time, despite its being a light confection. It maintained a charming
silliness much of the time, with a handful of short, serious scenes, so it did
not bother me that, to paraphrase Lloyd Bentsen, it was no Bridget Jones Diary, nor was it a Clueless.
So, even
though it is not inspired the way those two earlier modernizing Austen spinoffs
both were, I would still recommend Austenland
to anyone, especially a Janeite, looking for a light comedy that will not
offend one’s sensibilities with mean-spirited attempts at humor, and that
instead will actually generate occasional unforced laughter and still rarer
speculations about what it means.
One thing
which apparently eluded all mainstream film reviewers, but which would be
obvious to any Janeite watching the film, is that the story line manages to pick
up on important elements from each of the Austen novels. So Janeites who are
paying attention to those resonances are going to see a different movie than
other viewers for that very reason. While the modernized
Darcy-Elizabeth-Wickham love triangle will be obvious from the getgo, there’s
much more than that, showing that Shannon Hale really did read Austen’s novels,
and thought about them a lot, and did not just watch P&P2 a hundred times.
One
favorite sly allusion, which only occurred to me today as I was writing this
review, is when the heroine Jane Hayes’s petticoats wind up ripped down to a
shockingly small size while she’s riding a horse. This must remind the true
Janeite of Lydia Bennet boasting about a great slit in her gown. That’s pretty clever,
and nicely done, not heavy handed at all.
That
sort of genuine literary resonance is what interests me most about a spinoff
from Austen’s fiction--it can function as a kind of veiled commentary on the
novels, and sometimes shed surprising light. For example, much is made in Austenland about the difficulty in
assessing when a person is “acting” (performing, playing a role) vs. when one
is being “real”—I thought that theme was fairly well handled, and of course
this theme is most resonant to the Lovers
Vows episode in Mansfield Park. If
this film drives a Janeite back to Mansfield
Park to revisit the infinitely masterful and complex way that Jane Austen
addresses that same theme, then that would be a very good thing.
And a
final word (as to the film) about Jennifer Coolidge, who has perhaps gotten the
most attention, both negative and positive, from reviewers, for her broad but
still PG-13 portrayal of the sexually charged-up “Miss Charming”. To me, Coolidge’s
character, like the character of the supersexy military man who shows up at
Pembrook Park looking like he wandered in from a Chippendale’s club, was a net
negative for the film. Not because I am prudish, because I’m the opposite—but because
she raised the sexual farce-meter too high for too little benefit, comedy-wise.
But now
to turn to Shannon Hale’s 2007 novel which the film adapted.
Austenland: The Novel:
I quickly
picked up a copy of the novel at my local library after watching the movie,
because I was curious to see how it was altered from page to screen, and if so,
was it a dumbing down—turns out that in some ways that is exactly what
happened, despite Shannon Hale remaining on as a co-screenwriter.
Most
significantly, in the novel, the heroine is a 32-year old woman who is
successful professionally working in a man’s world, i.e., she is not living
hand to mouth. In the movie, she is impecunious, such that when she pays for
the Austenland experience, she is going to be broke. Plus, the novel heroine
does not even pay for the trip, it’s a bequest to her from her recently
deceased great aunt.
So,
in a way, that makes Jane Hayes’s choice much less interesting, because in the
film she really isn’t making it on her own, while in the novel she mostly is. Plus,
there is no stratification of levels of pampering at Pembrook Park I could detect
in my quick skim of the novel, which is heavily emphasized in the film, in
order to further emphasize the heroine’s lack of financial resources.
Wikipedia
tells me that both Shannon Hale, the author of the novel and the
co-screenwriter, and Jerusha Hess, the film director and screen writer, are
Mormons living in Utah, both married women with young children. From looking
over some of Hale’s recent Tweets, I get the sense that she is catching flak
from conservative viewers who think the film is too racy. How sad, this film is
an innocent as grass.
And I
wonder how much of that sort of conservative pressure has made the fimmakers
feel they needed to underscore the patriarchal message that is conveyed pretty
emphatically in the film, which is that young women ought to get married to the
good men who are often right under their noses, and get over impossible
fantasies of waiting for the perfect man or of living a life without a man in
the house.
To
encapsulate what happened from page to screen---Jane Hayes in the novel has a hundred
books about Jane Austen, and has read The
Mysteries of Udolpho. Whereas Jane Hayes in the movie has a Mr. Darcy
lifesize cardboard figure in her bedroom—that tells you all you need to know
right there.
As to
the patriarchal message of the film (and to a lesser extent the novel), those
who read my opinions about Jane Austen will anticipate my reaction to that “get
married already!” theme in Austenland,
which is that the desperate rush to get married is the furthest thing from what
Jane Austen herself believed was good for young women, even in the much more
sexist society she lived in, when gentlewomen like Jane Austen herself had few
chances to support themselves financially.
And
so what happens in the novel, more so than in the film, is that a young woman
is essentially tricked out of her independence and led to fall in love with a
man who is a performer (although at the end he tells her he was not acting). Jane’s acceptance of her suitor at the end
doesn’t work for me.
I
wish I could find in Hale’s novel some sign that she was troubled by this turn
of events, but I can’t. And the movie is ten times more troubling in that
regard than the novel, because it ducks that point entirely and goes straight
to the “happy ending” of true love.
Oh, one
other interesting resonance to Jane Austen’s novels that is also worth noting
by a Janeite reading the novel. The heroine’s great aunt Carolyn in the novel sounds
a lot to me like the Lady Catherine of Aldous Huxley’s 1940 P&P, in that
she might seem to be a kind of secret matchmaker for her great-niece, while
being secretive about it. With my love
of shadows, I can’t help but wonder whether Hale intended that sly allusion,
and whether we are supposed to wonder whether the great aunt told Mrs. Wattlebrook
all about Jane Hayes, and also probably paid extra for Jane to have a unique
experience at Pembrook Park, without telling Jane about it, of course. But that’s
all gone in the movie.
And I
also can’t help but wonder whether Hale intended Mrs. Wattlebrook (played by
Jane Seymour in the film) to be seen as being in the same relationship to Jane
Hayes as Jane Austen is to her readers—i.e., providing an immersive experience
in which she repeatedly leads her reader/client down a garden path of making something
seem "real" (the overt story) while actually it is all stage managed,
to conceal the actual "reality" (the shadow story). And that line of inquiry leads, in ways I will
write about in my book, deep into the shadows of Jane Austen’s writing.
But
what is most fascinating to me in this regard is that Shannon Hale does not
appear in any way to have intended this double structure. I searched for the “bread
crumbs” in the novel text, the kind that Jane Austen left everywhere in her novels, and I mostly didn’t see
them. Nor did any of Hale’s interviews give any hint of such sly subversiveness
on her part. So, if it is there at all,
and I really am uncertain even about it, then it appears to be totally unconscious
on her part.
And I
conclude by observing that if anyone was looking for insight into Austen
obsession, they won’t find it in Austenland,
either the novel or the film. For that I recommend you read books like Deborah
Yaffe’s Among the Janeites, which, as
many of you know, includes a chapter about my own Austen obsession:
Cheers,
ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode
on Twitter
P.S.:
It only occurred to me the morning after seeing the film that there was one
very sly bit of wordplay in the novel that deserves a small round of applause.
The hero (played in the film by J.J. Feild, who, in my opinion, gave far and
away the best performance in the film, with Keri Russell a distant second), was
in the novel named Henry Jenkins, playing the role of the faux-Darcyish “William
Nobley” at Pembrook Park. So because of
this duality, we might fairly refer to Fields’s character m as” Jenkins/Nobley”.
So what, you ask? Well, if you abbreviate that linked pair of names down to “J.
Nobley”, then, when you speak it out loud, and if you, like the heroine of Austenland, are a fan of professional
basketball, as I am, then you will hear “J NOBLEY”, which sounds exactly like
“Ginobili”.
And
the last name of one of the three stars of the NBA’s San Antonio Spurs, who
just happened to win the NBA Championship in 2007, the year Hale’s novel was
published, is Manu GINOBILI, pronounced Gee-noble-ee!
Think
I’m reaching for that one? Well, consider that in both the novel and the film,
we have a scene in which the heroine and the “gardener” (straight out of Lady Chatterley’s Lover) briefly listen
to….an NBA basketball game while she is visiting him illicitly in his room! That’s proof enough for me! ;)
1 comment:
I found your last comment about the "shadow structure" most interesting, because while the novel doesn't lent itself to that reading, the film does. Mrs Wattlesbrook in the film clearly sees something is happening between Jane and Henry. In the book, Henry gets on the flight Jane gets onto, in the film he goes to her apartment. How does he know where it is? The most likely source for that address is Mrs W. I imagine her leaving it in his path rather than it being handed over directly.
I also think elements of both the film and the book undermine the idea Jane is tricked out of her independence. In the book, Jane is much more cautious. She falls for Henry's "fine eyes" only on the plane.
In the film, while Jane is falling in love earlier, Henry is authentic throughout. Even his name IS his actual real name (unlike the book). Even the book he reads: to my eye that gold embossed image on the front looks contemporary. If you spot the title, "Ethical Dilemmas in Elizabethan Crop Production", it looks very like Henry (the historian) is reading for work in the drawing room. (About dispossession and famine, which is a nice touch.) I would see Henry acting generally as he would (note all the little meaningful glances Mrs W throws at him), just couched in more "Regency appropriate" language. Henry in the book plainly IS acting quite often.
On the other hand, there are points at which the book Henry certainly isn't, one being the reading of Sterne's "Sentimental Journey". It is deeply appropriate that that book is referenced. Sterne publicised "sensibility" where the importance of ones own fine emotions is paramount. "Sentimental Journey" both displays "sentiment" as a kind of social pathology as well as delivering it. (Eagleton describes Sterne as a "self-conscious consumer of finer feelings".)
Austenland is a Sternean enterprise. It's false, and those involved know its false, but they go there to indulge their emotions and feel all the excitement of falling in love, without the love. As such, ironically enough, it runs counter to Austen's own thinking. It's the kind of thing Lydia (in one way) and Marianne (in another) might have enjoyed. (In fact, Jane Seymour's Mrs W is very much an older Lydia Wickham imo.)
In the film, Jane is a slave to the "feelings" evoked by constant watching of Colin Firth. When Henry asks if he has any hope at the end, she realises how empty Austenland is (as Molly, the married pregnant friend already knew she would) and goes for what she thinks is real. At the airport she rejects the Sternean "emotional consumption" and at home cleans away the sentiment she had been clinging to along with her china dolls.
Before reading the book version, the film reminded me a little of "Northanger Abbey". It's the same Sternean dilemma - it's not that novels or P&P adaptations are a problem, but indulging your emotions and your fantasies recklessly is. I've since learned that Feild was cast based on his role in the 2007 adaptation and parallels between that film and this are even more marked. "Perhaps there is much a thing as too much novel reading" could be a criticism of Austenland. But Jane is in even a worse state than Felicity Jones' Catherine - Catherine senses the truth even if in melodramatic terms, Jane misses it.
"Emma" provides another parallel: lost in romancing Emma doesn't understand the relationship between her and Knightly, just as Jane doesn't understand the relationship between her and Nobley (we see what you did there, Shannon Hale!)
This comment is overly long. If you have read this far, thank you for your indulgence.
A long-term Austen fan, who is interested in 18th century philosophy!
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