Pride and Prejudice

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AMG AllMovie Guide:

Pride and Prejudice

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Plot

Long before 19th-century novelist Jane Austen became a hot property in Hollywood, MGM produced this opulent and entertaining adaptation of one of Austen's best-known novels. The elegant and slyly satirical comedy of manners gets under way when socially conscious Mrs. Bennet (Mary Boland), with the begrudging assistance of her husband (Edmund Gwenn), begins seeking out suitable (and suitably wealthy) husbands for her five daughters: Elizabeth (Greer Garson), Jane (Maureen O'Sullivan), Lydia (Ann Rutherford), Kitty (Heather Angel), and Mary (Marsha Hunt). One of the least likely matrimonial prospects is Mr. Darcy (Laurence Olivier), a rich, handsome, but cynical and boorish young man. Naturally, Elizabeth Bennet, the strongest-willed of the Bennet girls, is immediately fascinated by him, and she sets out to land him -- but only on her own terms, and only after she has exacted a bit of genteel revenge for his calculated indifference to her. Though Austen's novel was set in 1813, the year of its publication, the film version takes place in 1835, reportedly so as to take advantage of the more attractive costume designs of that period. Not surprisingly, a few changes had to be made to mollify the Hollywood censors (eager to find offense in the most innocent of material): the most notable is the character of Mr. Collins (Melville Cooper), transformed from the book's hypocritical clergyman to the film's standard-issue opportunist. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Review

Pride and Prejudice is a moderately faithful re-telling of Jane Austen's best-known novel. The protagonists are appropriately composed in the pre-Victorian England setting, championing Austen's rebellion against what she saw as the excessive emotionalism and romantic world view of the literature of her time. Austen's aim of puncturing holes in the snootiness of upper-middle class figures is retained in Aldous Huxley's screenplay and Robert Leonard's occasionally stiff direction. The unlikely romance of the leads, played conventionally but effectively by the attractive pair of Laurence Olivier and Greer Garson, evolves from contempt to understanding to affection, retaining a modern appeal in its focus on illusory first impressions and the follies of personal pride and class prejudice. Sometimes Leonard gets the details wrong -- the costumes and sets seem more at home in a late Victorian setting than in Austen's early 19th century -- but the overall effect is truthful, transporting us to a world different from but related to our own. The gentle satire of Austen's novel sits quietly, just beneath the surface, only to rise up and take the occasional bite out of offending characters at opportune moments. ~ Dan Jardine, Rovi

Cast

Ann Rutherford - Lydia Bennet; Frieda Inescort - Miss Caroline Bingley; Karen Morley - Mrs. Collins; Heather Angel - Kitty Bennet; Marsha Hunt - Mary Bennet; Edward Ashley - Mr. Wickham; Melville Cooper - Mr. Collins; Marten Lamont - Mr. Denny; E.E. Clive - Sir William Lucas; May Beatty - Mrs. Phillips; Marjorie Wood - Lady Lucas; Claud Allister - Yardgoods Clerk; Vernon P. Downing - Capt. Carter; Bruce Lister - Mr. Bingley; Clara Reid - Maid in Parsonage; Gerald Oliver Smith - Fitz William; Wyndham Standing; Lowden Adams - Committeeman; Buster Slaven - Beck's Assistant

Credit

Cedric Gibbons - Art Director, Paul Groesse - Art Director, Ernst Matray - Choreography, Adrian - Costume Designer, Gile Steele - Costume Designer, Robert Z. Leonard - Director, Robert J. Kern - Editor, Herbert Stothart - Composer (Music Score), Jack Dawn - Makeup, Karl W. Freund - Cinematographer, Hunt Stromberg - Producer, Edwin B. Willis - Set Designer, Jane Murfin - Screenwriter, Aldous Huxley - Screenwriter, Jane Austen - Book Author, Helen Jerome - Play Author

Previous:Pride and Peril (2000 Film), Pride and Loyalty (2002 Film)
Next:Pride and Prejudice (1995 Film), Pride and Prejudice (1980 Film)
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Pride and Prejudice (1940 film)

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Pride and Prejudice

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Robert Z. Leonard
Produced by Hunt Stromberg
Screenplay by Aldous Huxley
Helen Jerome
Jane Murfin
Based on Pride and Prejudice by
Jane Austen
Starring Laurence Olivier
Greer Garson
Maureen O'Sullivan
Edna May Oliver
Mary Boland
Edmund Gwenn
Music by Herbert Stothart
Cinematography Karl Freund
Editing by Robert Kern
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s) July 26, 1940 (1940-07-26)
Running time 117 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $1,437,000[1]
Box office $1,001,000 (Domestic earnings)[1]
$848,000 (Foreign earnings)[1]

Pride and Prejudice is a 1940 film adaptation of Jane Austen's novel of the same name. Robert Z. Leonard directed, and Aldous Huxley served as one of the screenwriters of the film. It is adapted specifically from the stage adaptation by Helen Jerome in addition to Jane Austen's novel. The period of the film is later than that of Austen's novel, a move motivated by a desire to use more elaborate and flamboyant costumes than those from Austen's time period. The film is substantially different from the novel in a number of ways; most notably, the confrontation near the end of the film between Lady Catherine and Elizabeth Bennet was radically altered, changing DeBourgh's haughty demand that Elizabeth never marry Darcy into a hoax to test the mettle and sincerity of Elizabeth's love. In the novel, this confrontation is an authentic demand motivated by Lady Catherine's snobbery and her ardent desire that Darcy marry her own daughter.

Contents

Plot

Greer Garson in Pride and Prejudice.

Mrs. Bennet (Mary Boland, in one of her most celebrated performances) and her two eldest daughters, Jane (Maureen O'Sullivan) and Elizabeth (Greer Garson), are shopping for new dresses when they see two gentlemen and a lady alight from a very expensive carriage outside. They learn that the men are Mr. Bingley (Bruce Lester), who has just rented the local estate of Netherfield, and Mr. Darcy (Laurence Olivier), both wealthy, eligible bachelors, which excites Mrs. Bennet. After leaving to collect her other daughters, the Bennets return home, where Mrs. Bennet tries to make Mr. Bennet see Mr. Bingley, but he refuses, having already made his acquaintance.

At the next ball, Elizabeth sees how proud Mr. Darcy is when she overhears him refusing to dance with her, and also meets Mr. Wickham, who tells Elizabeth how Mr. Darcy did him a terrible wrong. When Mr. Darcy does ask her to dance with him, she refuses, but when Mr. Wickham asks her right in front of Darcy, she accepts.

The Bennets' cousin, Mr. Collins (Melville Cooper), who will inherit the Bennet estate upon the death or Mr. Bennet, arrives, looking for a wife, and decides that Elizabeth will be suitable. At ball held at Netherfield, he keeps following her around and won't leave her alone. Mr. Darcy surprisingly helps her out, and later asks her to dance. After seeing the reckless behaviour of her mother and younger sisters however, he leaves her again, making Elizabeth very angry with him once more. The next day, Mr. Collins asks her to marry him, but she refuses point blank. He then goes and becomes engaged to her best friend, Charlotte Lucas (Karen Morley).

Elizabeth visits Charlotte in her new home. There, she is introduced to Lady Catherine de Bourgh (Edna May Oliver), and also encounters Mr. Darcy again. Later, he asks her to marry him, but she refuses, partly due to the story Wickham had told her about Darcy depriving him of his rightful fortune, and also because she has just learned that he broke up the romance between Mr. Bingley and Jane. They get into a heated argument and he leaves.

When Elizabeth returns to Longborn, she learns that Lydia has eloped with Wickham. Mr. Darcy visits her and tells her that Wickham will never marry Lydia. He reveals that Wickham had tried to elope with his then 15-year-old sister, Georgiana. After he leaves, Elizabeth realizes that she loves him, but believes he will never see her again because of Lydia's disgraceful act. Lydia and Wickham return married to the house. Later, Lady Catherine visits and reveals that Mr. Darcy found Lydia and forced Wickham to marry her. Darcy reappears, and he and Elizabeth proclaim their love for each other. The movie ends with a long kiss between Elizabeth and Darcy, with Mrs. Bennet spying on them and seeing how her other daughters have found good suitors.

Cast and crew

Reactions

The film was critically well received. Bosley Crowther in a 9 August 1940 review for the New York Times described the film as "the most deliciously pert comedy of old manners, the most crisp and crackling satire in costume that we in this corner can remember ever having seen on the screen." Crowther also praised casting decisions and noted of the two central protagonists, "Greer Garson is Elizabeth—'dear, beautiful Lizzie'—stepped right out of the book, or rather out of one's fondest imagination: poised, graceful, self-contained, witty, spasmodically stubborn and as lovely as a woman can be. Laurence Olivier is Darcy, that's all there is to it—the arrogant, sardonic Darcy whose pride went before a most felicitous fall." [2]. TV Guide, commenting upon the changes made to the original novel by this adaptation, calls the film "an unusually successful adaptation of Jane Austen's most famous novel. Although the satire is slightly reduced and coarsened and the period advanced in order to use more flamboyant costumes, the spirit is entirely in keeping with Austen's sharp, witty portrait of rural 19th century social mores." The reviewer also comments upon the cast, stating "Garson never did anything better than her Elizabeth Bennet. Genteel but not precious, witty yet not forced, spirited but never vulgar, Garson's Elizabeth is an Austen heroine incarnate. Olivier, too, has rarely been better in a part requiring the passion of his Heathcliff from Wuthering Heights but strapping it into the straitjacket of snobbery." Mary Boland gives one of her most brilliant comedic performances (certainly on par with her performance in The Women). [3]

The film received an 88% rating from Rotten Tomatoes (7 fresh and 1 rotten reviews). [4]

Differences Between the Film & Novel

Among aficionados of Jane Austen's original novel, this movie adaptation is notorious for drastically diverging from the novel and being excessively "Hollywoodized" — and for putting the women in clothes based on the styles of the late 1820s and the styles of the 1830s which were quite different from the Regency styles appropriate to the novel's setting.

The timeframe of the movie's plot progression is quite noticeably compressed, with certain events being juxtaposed in the film that were separated by days, weeks or even months in the novel. Wickham did not attend the Meryton ball where Darcy first insults Elizabeth, and in fact never attended any ball at which Darcy was also present. There is an archery scene between Darcy and Elizabeth that is not present at all in the novel. Darcy's revelation of Wickham's attempted elopement with his own sister, Georgiana, is not done in person after Lydia and Wickham's elopement as is shown in the movie; in the novel, he describes these events to Elizabeth in the letter he delivers to her the day after she turns down his marriage proposal during her stay at Hunsford.

The film eliminates two journeys which are pivotal plot points in the novel:

1) In the novel, Jane travels to London with the Bennett girls' Aunt and Uncle Gardiner after the Christmas holiday. The Bingleys, the Hursts and Darcy had already left Hertfordshire for London at the time, shortly after the Netherfield ball on 26 November, and Jane specifically goes in the hopes of seeing Charles Bingley and continuing their fledgling courtship. Darcy and Bingley's sisters actively conceal her being in London from Charles in their efforts to put an end to Charles and Jane's budding romance, which Darcy confesses to during his ill-fated proposal to Elizabeth at Hunsford.

2) Later in the novel, Elizabeth plans an extensive tour of the 'lake country' with the same aunt and uncle, only to have her uncle's business responsibilities cut short the time available for the trip and rerouting the trio to Derbyshire. In Derbyshire, Elizabeth has an opportunity to see Pemberly, Darcy's home estate, and to see a different side of Darcy than she had encountered previously. She also meets Georgiana Darcy and develops a rapport with the shy teenager, to Darcy's great pleasure. This is the first time Darcy has seen her since the disastrous marriage proposal as well, and his first opportunity to show her how much he has changed in the wake of her scathing rejection and rebukes. It is during this trip that Elizabeth and Darcy both find out about Lydia's elopement, via Jane's letters to Elizabeth begging her to return with their aunt and uncle in the face of the family crisis.

Also changed is the timing of Lydia's elopement with Wickham. In the novel, Lydia follows Wickham's regiment to Brighton as the companion of the colonel's wife, and elopes with Wickham from there. As described above, this takes place while Elizabeth is in Derbyshire with her Aunt and Uncle Gardiner, not after Elizabeth's return from her visit to the Collins' at Hunsford as happens in the movie. When Lydia and Wickham visit Longbourne after their wedding in the novel, which is several weeks after the initial elopement and Elizabeth's return from Derbyshire, it is Lydia who reveals that Darcy was at their wedding, and it is Elizabeth's Aunt Gardiner who, by letter, reveals his role in getting the elopees to the altar. Mary and Kitty do not have suitors at the end of the novel.

The following characters were eliminated completely from this film adaptation:

  • Georgiana Darcy (Fitzwilliam Darcy's younger sister)
  • Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner (Elizabeth's maternal uncle and his wife)
  • Colonel and Mrs. Forster (the commanding officer of the Meryton regiment and his wife, whom Lydia goes to Brighton as a companion to in the novel)
  • Mariah Lucas (Charlotte Lucas' younger sister)
  • Mr. and Mrs. Hurst (Charles Bingley's married sister and her husband)

The removal of these plot points, as well as the characters associated with them, drastically alters the development of Elizabeth and Darcy's characters and the evolution of the romance between them. The movie implies that the entire relationship is one long flirtation with a few rough patches, while the novel illustrates the maturation of two people who fall deeply in love after both are irrevocably changed by the other. This, plus the above-described drastically altered motivations behind Lady Catherine's confrontation with Elizabeth in the movie, creates an entirely different tone than Austen's original work.

Awards

References

  1. ^ a b c Glancy, H. Mark "When Hollywood Loved Britain: The Hollywood 'British' Film 1939-1945" (Manchester University Press, 1999)
  2. ^ New York Times
  3. ^ TV Guide
  4. ^ Pride and Prejudice (1940) @ Rotten Tomatoes
  5. ^ "NY Times: Pride and Prejudice". NY Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/39130/Pride-and-Prejudice/details. Retrieved 2008-12-12. 

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Mentioned in

DVD Bookshelf: Pride and Prejudice (2007 Language & Literature Film)
Austen, Jane (British writer)
live together (Idiom)
Joe Wright (Director, Romance/Historical Film)
death-of-the-author (philosophy)