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the Christmas movie on Hallmark? I thought it was nice enough but not Austen.


Well, yes, the actors tend to be ex-soap opera stars, has been child stars and sometimes has been adult actors I recognize. The Hallmark movies are more in Austen's line than the sexy teen drama. I refused to watch Reign even though Megan Follows Anne of Green Gables is Catherine de' Medici.


I know what you mean! I have not watched this Emma and I don't think I ever will, also for the reasons you mentioned. Quite frankly, I find stuff like that or like MMF's dishevelled Darcy striding into Elizabeth's bedroom in the middle of the night more offensive, because those are supposed to be period pieces.

I know!! The new Emma movie was awful. if you watch it, which I hope you don't, you will hate Emma. The whole movie was not want Jane would have wanted! The only Jane Austen movies I watch is the BBC version. They are the only ones who gets it right!!


I've always though the director of the Keira Knightley Pride and Prejudice just didn't understand that although Mr Bennet was by no means 'rich', he was, as Elizabeth so roundly rebuffs Lady Catherine's fuming outrage, 'a gentleman' (like Darcy), and as such would not have lived in a house with pigs running around loose.
On the other hand, maybe even Austen herself could get carried away - she does record that Pemberley was inspired by Chatsworth (both are in Derbyshire!), which, as a ducal residence (one of the three largest private houses in England, along with Castle Howard and Blenheim)(the latter is the only non-royal palace), is really too large and grand even for the wealthy Mr D.
As for Mr Knightley's wealth, doesn't he state at some point that his carriage horses are being used to help bring in the harvest? That's hardly the thing a very very rich man would need to do!

It’s not clear to me whether Mr. Knightley used his farm horses for his carriage because he couldn’t afford more horses or did so because he so rarely used his carriage that he thought it would be wasteful to have another team. Mr. Bennet also uses his farm horses for his carriage, but in his case it seems to be a necessary economy. Mr. Knightley’s economies seem more voluntary because he holds more extensive property, well managed.
I think he’s intended to be seen as the epitome of an ethical and responsible landlord, a private country gentleman who respects his tenants and neighbors and works for the good of the entire community. His type should be regarded as a contrast to the wealthy landowners who see their land only as a source of income while they pursue lazy lives or political careers in the metropolis, men who suck the resources out of the land without supporting their tenants.
In this sense, Emma is Austen’s most conservative novel, celebrating old-school values in a changing society.



That is one of the reasons why I was so careful, in writing my book Darcy's Story in 1996, not to distort anything that Jane Austen wrote in P&P.
I have visited Lyme Park in the county of Cheshire, which is the National Trust property used in the 1995 BBC TV series for Darcy's home.
Darcy's Story was my (first) novel (using the pen name Janet Aylmer for the author), and is still selling in 2020, 24 years after being published (!).
Over 160,000 copies have been sold in paperback since 1996.
Most copies are now sold in ebook format.
See www.janetaylmer.com for my other books.

Hmm, totally doubting my (ageing!) memory now!

"It is believed that Jane Austen may have based her idea of Pemberley on Chatsworth House and written the novel while in Bakewell."
Bakewell's definitely in Derbyshire. :) :)
However, whether any of the above is verified in Austen records I've no idea!

My husband's family comes from the village of Ashford in the Water, which is about 15 minutes drive from Chatsworth.
No, the hotel in the town of Bakewell, to the east of the village, likes to claim that she stayed there! But Jane Austen never visited Derbyshire, and she got her knowledge of the county from a cousin who had visited Derbyshire.
It is wonderful countryside, now in the Peak District National Park. Try "googling" images of the former railway viaduct at Monsal Head, and you will see what I mean.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timelin...

As for me finding an Austen lit crit book at Chatsworth, presumably that is because of the Keira Knightley film locating Pemberley at Chatsworth, rather than any authentic link to Austen herself.
It's a nice link to our current fascination with life in 'olden days' that Austen did visit 'Downton Abbey' (or its precursor at least.) I hope the earlier edifice was more elegant than the one in Downton Abbey, ie, the 'modern' Highclere, as personally I think it's hideous!! (Not a fan of Victorian gothic or whatever style it is.)
I also rather liked from the wiki map you linked to that Austen seems to have visited Addlestrop! Nothing, alas, seems to remain of the original station in the poem, except the station sign, which is beside the little road, and one can pause and take photos of it (as I did when I passed by some years ago.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adlestr...
Overall, from the Wiki map in the link you provided, Austen does seem to have travelled pretty extensively in the south of England - she covered quite a lot of ground evidently!

All the earlier TV versions do look very stagey overall, not just in the acting, but the settings too - they probably film less outdoors or in interior locations, and more in the studio I suspect?
I would say the Amanda Root/Ciaran Hinds Persuasion remains the benchmark though - and it wasn't episodic I think, ie, you watch it as a film, all the way through?
The Emma Thompson Sense and Sensibility is also definitive, thanks to her, and Hugh Grant playing an almost impossible role. Kate Winslett brings out Marianne's irritatingly teenage qualities v well!!


Ugh no thank you. Teens will be sooo disappointed and hate Austen if they go in expecting a sexed up teen drama of the modern day and not a 19th-century comedy of manners.