Click here to enter my other blog: Jane Austen's World.
Showing posts with label Getting Inside Northanger Abbey 2007. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Getting Inside Northanger Abbey 2007. Show all posts

Monday, November 7

Catherine Morland (Felicity Jones) Goes Modern

Gemtle Readers, We fell in love with Felicity Jones as Catherine Morland in 2007s Northanger Abbey. Only 23 when she made the film, we believed her performance as the very young, innocent Catherine. Now 27, look how beautiful and sophisticated she looks in modern garb:

Felicity in Proenza Schouler, Spring 2012 Collection
at the Motion Picture and Television Fund, Fall 2011
Felicity and Jessica Brown Findlay from Downton Abbey
in a fashion shoot
Modern Felicity vs. old-fashioned Felicity deserve a comparison: One is fetchingly innocent maid, while the other is a modern woman about town.

Felicity in Northanger Abbey, 2007
Felicity plays Anna in Like Crazy. Here is an NPR review of her latest film.

Sunday, February 28

Jane Austen Movie Throwdown

Next time I visit England, I am definitely visiting some of the Jane Austen movie locations. Of the locations you have seen, which will take you off the beaten path?

Which Jane Austen Movie Location/s Would You Like to See?

Lacock has been the setting for Meryton in Pride and Prejudice 1995, Emma with Kate Beckinsale in 1996, and the recent Cranford series.



Remember the rain scene at the Temple of Apollo in Pride and Prejudice 2005? While the setting is inaccurate in terms of Jane Austen's description, the backdrop was wildly romantic for Mr. Darcy's (Matthew Macfadyen's) first proposal to Lizzie (Keira Knightley).





The setting for all Box Hill scenes in Emma is, well, Box Hill. Emma's ridicule of Miss Bates, Mr. Knightley's justifiable anger and disappointment with Emma, Frank Churchill's dubious nature, and Jane Fairfax's pain upon seeing Frank flirt with another woman. The views from this hill are said to be spectacular, and it remains today much as it was during Jane Austen's time.


Stanage Edge, Hathersage Moor, Hathersage, Derbyshire, England, UK

Who can forget Elizabeth Bennet standing at the edge of Stanage Edge in the Peak District as she and the Gardiners traveled north? One might quibble with the end result of this film, but some of the visuals are stunning. This scene alone gave me a desire to see this part of England.

City of Bath

Jane Austen lived in Bath, which is also featured in Persuasion and Northanger Abbey. The Georgian center of town is a jewel and transports one back to the Georgian Era. The Jane Austen Centre is located in Bath, as are the Pump Room, Assembly Rooms, Molland's, and a host of other sites we associate with Jane Austen.

Multiple answers are allowed this week!

Jane Austen Film Location I Would Like to Visit
Lacock Village, Wiltshire
Stourhead Landscape Garden, Wiltshire
Box Hill, Surrey
Stanage Edge, Hathersage Moor, Derbyshire
City of Bath, Somerset
pollcode.com free polls


Saturday, January 19

Northanger Abbey's General Tilney: A Real or Imagined Tyrant?

The PBS presentation of Northanger Abbey airs this Sunday, and I am looking forward to Liam Cunningham’s performance as that dastardly despot, General Tilney, who can be included as one of Jane Austen’s Bad Daddy’s.


Opinions of this potentate vary so greatly that accounts of him “puzzle me exceedingly”. When the novel was first published with Persuasion, an anonymous review of both novels appeared in the magazine the British Critic in March of 1818. I understand that during the early 1800’s it was common for reviews to be published anonymously. Really? That seems so impersonal and sheepish. What’s the point of a review if you can’t point a finger at the critic?

“Northanger Abbey is one of the best of Miss Austen’s productions, and will every way repay the time and trouble of perusing it. Some of the incidents in it are rather improbable, and the character of General Tilney seems to have been drawn from imagination, for it is not a very probable character, and is not portrayed with our authoress’s usual taste and judgment.”

This reviewer may not have understood that Northanger Abbey is a parody on Gothic novels, and General Tilney was an archetype of a villain. The ironic twist is that it is believed that the character of General Tilney was fashioned after a real person in Jane Austen’s family, a General Edward Mathew (1728-1805), who was the father-in-law of her elder brother James Austen.

General Mathew had served bravely in the Army with the Coldstream Guards in Europe, through the American War of Independence, and as the Governor of Grenada his last ten years in service. He retired to the county and lived in the old Manor House of Laverstoke, near Steventon where the Austen family resided. ‘The General was in his own house and family a despot whose will no-one could venture to dispute, and although autocratic and hot tempered was kind hearted and very generous.’ General Mathew could certainly have inspired Jane Austen’s characterization of General Tilney, who resembles an autocratic despot quite neatly.

More current views of General Tilney appear in the book Jane Austen and the Fiction of her Time, by Mary Waldron.

“General Tilney is immediately recognizable to the modern reader as he must have been at the turn of the nineteenth century as the archetypical domestic tyrant…grasping, irascible, overbearing, insincere and despotic.”

Whatever early or modern critics think of this character, General Tilney is one of the highlights of the novel, and fuels our heroine Catherine Morland’s Gothic fantasies into fervor.

Be sure to catch the premiere of Northanger Abbey, starring Felicity Jones and J.J. Field, airing on PBS, January 20th, at 9:00 pm, to see if General Tilney is as horrid as we hope!

Posted by Laurel Ann

Friday, January 18

Seen on the Blogosphere

SF Gate probably had the funniest and most scathing review of ITV's 2007 adaptation of Persuasion. PBS aired the truncated 90 minute version last Sunday, and the votes on this blog are still rolling in. One presumes that mostly Jane fans come to visit my little corner of the blogosphere, yet over 40% of the votes show less than ardent fervor for the movie. David Wiegand of SF Gate minced no words, saying,

Hawkins is effective at times, but at too many others, she surrenders to a wide variety of vocal mannerisms and facial tics. At the end of the film, as she is about to kiss Wentworth (oh, come on, you always knew how it comes out), her mouth twitches like a bass zeroing in on a tasty side order of plankton as her face moves slowly toward its target. The shot is about the longest in the entire film, which admittedly may come as a bit of a relief after the breakneck pace of what's led up to it.

Director Adrian Shergold moves things along so quickly, it's probably hard for newcomers to Austen's story to figure out who's who and who's related to whom. But that's the least of the problems caused by this approach. More significant are the losses of nuance, character development and emotional complexity. Of course, "Persuasion" isn't a screwball comedy, but as adapted by Simon Burke and directed by Shergold, it plays like "Bringing Up Baby," without the intercostal clavicle or, you know, wit.

Whoa, David. Tell us what you really think!

Meanwhile, PBS's Remotely Connected has posted the reviews of The Complete Jane Austen: Northanger Abbey by bloggers Heather and Natalie. The previous posts by me (Ms. Place) and Moxie on Persuasion generated a host of comments and insightful discussion. Having watched a preview of Northanger Abbey, I can safely say that Felicity Jones is a delight to watch as Catherine Morland. To whet your appetite, watch a 'Behind the Scenes' clip of Northanger Abbey here.

Here's a wonderful banner for a live journal blog named emjy, which is devoted to Jane:

Posted by Ms.Place

Friday, December 28

Getting Inside Jane Austen Series Persuasion and Northanger Abbey

Last spring Classic FM presented "Getting inside ITV1's Jane Austen Series", two audio broadcasts for your listening pleasure.

Go behind the scenes with Lisa Duncombe to hear Getting Inside Northanger Abbey and Getting Inside Persuasion. She talks to the stars and crew behind the scenes about these two productions.

Our Canadian neighbors can watch Persuasion on OTV Canada this Sunday at 9 pm. Masterpiece Theatre is getting ready to unveil it series in mid-January.