on October 23, 2014, 8:15 am
(Excerpted)
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
"Emma" (1996)
This movie was not my first Austenian experience -- that distinction belongs to Sense and Sensibility (1995). However, this is the first Austen-related thing that I loved. I can't remember the first time I saw it -- I think I probably watched it with my two teen-years best friends. I do distinctly remember driving to town with my younger brother to rent it so we could watch it with my mom. I loved it so much, I bought my own copy to take to college with me, where my new friends and I just about wore out that VHS tape. I've seen this at least a dozen times -- maybe closer to twenty. However, I think my last viewing was seven or eight years ago, and I'd never seen the widescreen version before. I bought the DVD a year or so ago, when I found it for an enticingly low price, but never got around to watching it until now. So when Heidi announced her Discovering Emma Week, I eagerly signed up to review this. Finally! A really good reason to sit down and rewatch it!
Oh my goodness. I loooooooooove the widescreen version! I kept thinking things like, "I never saw Mr. Knightley's reaction there!" "I never saw that part of the dance!" "I never saw Emma have that little moment of realization!" Splendid, I tell you.
So anyway... you probably know this, but Emma is about a rich, headstrong girl named Emma Woodhouse (Gwyneth Paltrow) who loves matchmaking. Her rich, handsome neighbor, Mr. Knightley (Jeremy Northam) tries to help her grow and mature into a nicer and better person. And then she realizes he loves her and she loves him and we all throw flower petals in the air at their wedding.
Right, so anyway, why do I love this movie? Why is it, in fact, my favorite Austen adaptation? Why do I like it better than the book? So many questions, so little time.
I love this movie because it is beautiful. I want to live inside it. Hartfield entrances me. I want to hang out in this room in the evening and read books:
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I'm telling you, I would love to live inside this movie! And I can't say that about very many movies, certainly not about any of the other Austen adaptations I've seen. I usually only feel that way about westerns. So this makes Emma something of a rarity.
And the cast could not be more perfect. I have to admit that in my teens and early twenties, I would have loved to look like Gwyneth Paltrow in this movie. She's still kind of my epitome of graceful, elegant womanhood. I wish I could get my hair to do the pretty things her hair does. Really, I'm almost a bit obsessed with her hair.
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Then there's Jeremy Northam as Mr. Knightley. He's not nearly as combative as he is in the book. Still bossy, still always chiding Emma for her faults, but he doesn't constantly pick on her. And I feel like he knows himself so well in this, that already fairly early on in the movie he knows he loves Emma, and he's just waiting to be sure of himself and more sure of her before he takes any action.
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I love how the filmmakers kind of gloried in the absurd in a gentle way instead of taking the story oh-so-seriously. I can never decide if I should shelve this with the comedies or dramas. But I generally shelve it with the dramas because when I think of this movie, the first scene that comes to mind is the scene where Mr. Knightley scolds Emma for being rude to Miss Bates at the strawberry-picking picnic. The first time I saw this, that is the scene where I went from liking to loving it. It adds such weight to the story, and shows that Emma is not merely a spoiled, heedless girl. She can feel for other people, she can acknowledge she's been wrong. She can change.
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All you need is love. But a little chocolate now and then doesn't hurt. (Charles M. Schulz)
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