Four
months ago….
… I
posted about the upcoming Whit Stillman film adaptation of Jane Austen’s last
completed work prior to her six published novels—the novella Lady Susan. My parting observation was: “I
hope the full-bore sociopathy of Lady
Susan is faithfully preserved by the cleverly subversive Whit Stillman. And I am
looking forward to seeing it, with cautious optimism.”
Consider
this post today a cautionary update. In my Google alert today, I read a short
article in which Stillman was recently
quoted as making the following weighty pronouncement on Jane Austen's novels:
"I
came late to Jane Austen. I read the wrong novel when I was in college, which
was Northanger Abbey. I thought it was terrible. In Northanger
Abbey, there are really two things happening: One, there's a typical
Jane Austen story about characters involved in romantic situations, and maybe
they're funny and maybe they're being mocked. And then you get into this
tiresome parody of Gothic novels, which I don't particularly like because I
don't particularly like Gothic novels. But I read the right Jane Austens after
college and liked them all."
I am
afraid this verdict on Northanger Abbey does
not bode well for his directing of the new version of Lady Susan (bizarrely entitled Love
& Friendship, which of course is the title of a different
late-juvenilia story by JA).
While
anybody could initially misread a Jane Austen novel so badly and uninsightfully
while in college—after all, Northanger
Abbey in particular leads its unwary readers down a garden path of
underestimation —its narrator spends so much time saying what Catherine is not, that most Janeites also
(misguidedly) believe that NA is somehow a poor cousin of the other five Austen
novels.
For examples of the hidden subtleties of Northanger Abbey, check out this sampling of posts of mine from the past several years, about the deadly serious anti-parody about the domestic everyday Gothic "horror" of everyday English marriage:
http://sharpelvessociety.blogspot.com/2011/04/opening-pandoras-royal-box-at-abbey-in.html
http://sharpelvessociety.blogspot.com/2012/01/byrne-portrait-two-abbeys-their-awful.html
http://sharpelvessociety.blogspot.com/2013/09/samuel-morland-general-tilney-from.html
For examples of the hidden subtleties of Northanger Abbey, check out this sampling of posts of mine from the past several years, about the deadly serious anti-parody about the domestic everyday Gothic "horror" of everyday English marriage:
http://sharpelvessociety.blogspot.com/2011/04/opening-pandoras-royal-box-at-abbey-in.html
http://sharpelvessociety.blogspot.com/2012/01/byrne-portrait-two-abbeys-their-awful.html
http://sharpelvessociety.blogspot.com/2013/09/samuel-morland-general-tilney-from.html
But…for
a fully grownup Stillman, a creative writer himself who has chosen to adapt a
work of fiction by JA, to still have this same idea about NA decades later---and
not even to have bothered, in the interim, to read up a little on NA's
sophisticated, multilayered satire, both parody and anti-parody all in one----does
not speak well of the sharpness of Stillman's ear for JA's infinitely subtle
irony.
I
guess we'll all see the result when Stillman's new film comes out, and perhaps we
can still hope against hope that he ends up taking a more imaginative approach
to Lady Susan (renamed Love and Friendship).
Cheers,
Arnie
@JaneAustenCode
on Twitter
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