Daily Archives: April 30, 2023

Mansfield Park (1999)

Mansfield Park
Directed by Patricia Rozema
Written by Patricia Rozema from a novel by Jane Austin
1999/UK

IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon Prime rental

Edmund Bertram: There are as many forms of love as there are moments in time.

The late 1990s was prime time for Jane Austen adaptations. Here is an interesting one.

The Ward family had three beautiful daughters. The most beautiful of all, a complete airhead, married into the nobility becoming Lady Charles Bertram, another married a clergyman who received the parsonage on the Bertram estate and became a confirmed meddler known as Mrs. Norris. The final daughter married a sailor of low character named Price for love and produced nine children. Our heroine Fanny Price (Frances O’Connor) is the eldest of these.

Childless busybody Mrs. Norris suggests that Fanny be taken off the Prices’ hands and raised to be a gentlewoman. She grows up with the four Bertram children but is always treated as an inferior. The only one of her cousins with any sense or brains is Edmund. Fanny develops feelings for him but knows this is hopeless.

Into this milieu come dastardly scoundrels Mary and Henry Crawford, who attempt to seduce and corrupt Edmund and Fanny respectively. With Harold Pinter as Sir Thomas Bertram.

This adaptation strays fairly far afield from the novel. Here, Fanny is an aspiring writer, an obvious stand in for Jane Austen, and has quite the witty tongue unlike the humble and priggish character in the novel. The lighter tone here actually improved Austin’s most moralistic novel at least for me. I found this version much better than the 2007 TV movie.

Manhattan (1979)

Manhattan
Directed by Woody Allen
Written by Woody Allen and Marshall Brickman
1979/US

IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime rental
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Isaac Davis: Chapter One. He was as tough and romantic as the city he loved. Behind his black-rimmed glasses was the coiled sexual power of a jungle cat. Oh, I love this. New York was his town, and it always would be.

When I saw this on original release, long before the scandal, I thought this was Woody Allen’s best ever. Decades later it’s still near the top. As a valentine to New York City, it will probably never be surpassed.

Isaac (Allen) is a twice-divorced TV comedy writer. His last wife (Meryl Streep) left him for another woman and is now writing a scathing memoir about the horrors of their marriage. He is dating a 17-year-old high school student named Tracy (Mariel Hemingway). Tracy is the only character in the movie who is not pretentious and neurotic.

Tracy and Isaac double date with Isaac’s best friend Yale (Michael Murphy) and his wife Emily. Early on, Yale discloses that he is having an affair with journalist Mary (Diane Keaton), whom Isaac hates at first meeting. Then she changes his mind and complications ensue.

I remember this movie mostly for the scenes with Mariel Hemingway who was perfect for her character. But the images of Manhattan and all that glorious Gershwin music are the star attractions. Allen also gets in some hilarious digs at pseudo-intellectuals. Recommended.

This gives me chills