Plot
Eight years earlier, Anne Elliot, the daughter of a financially troubled aristocratic family, was persuaded to break off her engagement to Frederick Wentworth...
Release Year: 1995
Rating: 7.5/10 (5,067 voted)
Director:
Roger Michell
Stars: Amanda Root, Ciarán Hinds, Susan Fleetwood
Storyline Eight years earlier, Anne Elliot, the daughter of a financially troubled aristocratic family, was persuaded to break off her engagement to Frederick Wentworth, a young seaman, who, though promising, had poor family connections. When her father rents out the family estate to Admiral Croft, Anne is thrown into company with Frederick, because his sister is Mrs. Croft. Frederick is now a rich and successful Captain, and a highly eligible bachelor. Whom will he marry? One of Anne's sister's husband's sisters? Or will he and Anne rekindle the old flame?
Writers: Jane Austen, Nick Dear
Cast: Amanda Root
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Anne Elliot
Ciarán Hinds
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Captain Frederick Wentworth
Susan Fleetwood
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Lady Russell
Corin Redgrave
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Sir Walter Elliot
Fiona Shaw
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Mrs. Croft
John Woodvine
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Admiral Croft
Phoebe Nicholls
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Elizabeth Elliot
Samuel West
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Mr. Elliot
Sophie Thompson
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Mary Musgrove
Judy Cornwell
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Mrs. Musgrove
Simon Russell Beale
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Charles Musgrove
Felicity Dean
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Mrs. Clay
Roger Hammond
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Mr. Musgrove
Emma Roberts
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Louisa Musgrove
Victoria Hamilton
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Henrietta Musgrove
Filming Locations: Abbey Green, Bath, Somerset, England, UK
Gross: $5,462,325
(USA)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
The red print gown worn by Susan Fleetwood (Lady Russell) at the party at Camden Place is the same costume worn by Catherine Bigg in
The Real Jane Austen, Sheila Gish (Mrs.Norris) while Fanny reads the newspaper aloud in
Mansfield Park, a guest at a London ball in
Byron, Elizabeth Devonport to dinner in
The Regency House Party, Hayley Atwell (Mary Crawford) in
Mansfield Park, Daisy Haggard (Anne Steele) to the London ball in
Sense & Sensibility, and Alex Kingston (Mrs.Bennet) in
Lost in Austen.
Goofs:
Continuity:
When Anne visits Mrs. Smith the second time she goes in wearing her pink coat and comes out without wearing the coat.
Quotes: Anne Elliot:
Are you here for the concert? Captain Wentworth:
No, I am here for a lecture on navigation. Am I in the wrong place?
User Review
Beautifully observed portrayal of Jane Austen's mature tale of devotion
Rating: 10/10
Following in the BBC's fine tradition of producing outstanding costume
dramas through the 1970's and 1980's, including versions of Jane Austen's
novels, this Bafta award-winning co-production, with WGBH and Sony amongst
others, of `Persuasion' (her final complete work published mid rewrite in
1818, the year after her death), was made in 1995 with a stellar cast of
British stage actors, many from the Royal Shakespeare Company with numerous
TV credits.
The film's events converge on the time Napoleon has been banished to Elba
and the Battle of Waterloo of 1815 is still a year away. Among the
servicemen returning home is Captain Frederick Wentworth (Ciaran Hinds) who
has been at sea for eight years since Anne Elliot's (Amanda Root) rejection
of his marriage proposal. The Captain is now a man of prosperity and social
rank while his former nineteen-year-old love interest has matured into a
faded and thin' old maid of twenty-seven in service to her family. Anne
has lived to regret her mistake in being persuaded by her friend and
patroness, Lady Russell (Susan Fleetwood, `Heat and Dust', who sadly died
the year `Persuasion' was released), to refuse Wentworth as a man of
unsuitable temperament. Whilst his affection would now seem to be directed
towards her brother-in-law's sister, Louisa Musgrove (Emma Roberts), Anne's
only romantic hope lies in the dubious and underhand attentions of her
cousin William Elliot (an obsequious Samuel West, who was memorably the
ill-fated Leonard Bast in `Howards End'). However, the accident on the Cobb
at Lyme Regis requires Anne's sensible advice on how to handle the crisis
and eventually leads to a second chance for her. Incidentally the Cobb was
to play another starring role in John Fowles' `The French Lieutenant's
Woman', with Karel Reisz' 1981 dramatic movie version embellishing it with a
strikingly cloaked Meryl Streep braving the elements, ensuring that it will
remain a tourist attraction in perpetuity.
Ostensibly with concern over the intellectual inequality of Captain
Benwick's sudden attachment to Louisa after the accident, Captain Wentworth
makes the impassioned declaration to Anne regarding his friend's broken
hearted loss of his fiancee: `A man does not recover from such a devotion to
such a woman, he ought not, he does not', but is patently reflecting on his
own lasting strong feelings for Anne. Surely it is wiser to recognise when
adoration for one person is no longer appropriate and a chance may lie with
someone else. The supposed difference between the sexes regarding fidelity
is discussed with Jane Austen adding the comment to her argument that the
authors who view women as more fickle, have all been men. This last remark
in the film is rather improbably but modernly given to Anne, who also makes
the bold claim for her sex that it is capable of `loving longest when all
hope is gone.' It is not a question of gender but of genetic makeup and
whether you are truly monogamous, as Western religions and society would
decree us to be, or true to yourself.
Although comfortable, life must have been dreadfully dull at times for the
women in this world who could not relieve their tedium as their menfolk
would by going off to war. This observation is endorsed by the couple of
scenes depicting a concert and an evening of card playing, tinged with amber
candle light infusing gentle nostalgic warmth to the proceedings which is at
odds with the atmosphere of bored ritualistic entertainment. The different
levels of lighting are used to subtle effect here and contrast with the cold
glare of Ang Lee's brilliantly lit interiors in his working of Austen's
first novel `Sense and Sensibility', also produced in the same
year.
Amanda Root (`Mortimer's Law', and as Fanny Price, another of Austen's
independent women, in `Mansfield Park' for BBC Radio 4) is brilliant as the
quiet understated heroine with luminosity to her face that beautifully
transcribes the full gamut of emotions she experiences from servitude to the
blossoming of love. Her co-star, Ciaran Hinds (`The Cook, The Thief, His
Wife & Her Lover') is equally gifted of expression, with a barely repressed
anger and resentment towards Anne, under the guise of curt civility that
eventually he is forced to recognise masks his continuing passion for her.
Interestingly over the next two years both leads went onto appear in
different versions of Jane Eyre, with Amanda Root well cast as the kindly
schoolteacher Miss Temple in Franco Zeffirelli's 1996 version and Ciaran
Hinds as a suitably anguished Mr Rochester in Robert Young's 1997 TV
adaptation.
Jane Austen's fable may be recognised as the classic fairy tale of
Cinderella, of a good hearted and dutiful daughter put upon by her foolish
and snobbish father and cruel sisters, but who is eventually saved by her
true prince. With great effect, the author adds to the romance her wit and
sense of humour to explore the characteristics of the genteel world she
lived in with all its human frailties. Nick Dear's screenplay, together
with Roger Michell's necessarily less frantic direction than in `Notting
Hill', adroitly captures the essence of Austen's narrative to provide one of
the finest visual interpretations of her work. Strong supporting
performances are also given by the ensemble of Corin Redgrave (`Enigma') as
the supercilious father; Sophie Thompson (`Emma') and Phoebe Nicholls (`The
Elephant Man') as the far from ugly sisters of hypochondriac Mary and
haughty Elizabeth; and Fiona Shaw (`Jane Eyre') and John Woodvine
(`Wuthering Heights') as the companionable Crofts.
Obviously complying with its `Beautiful People' culture the original cover
of the American video version replaced the demure leads with two glamorous
models, as a spokeswoman for Columbia Tristar in California has said, `I
guess to make it a little more seductive to us over here'. Nonetheless, it
is pleasing to read that this film was well received in the States
especially as it remained true to its British identity, and therefore set an
exemplary standard in not pandering to an anticipated overseas market by
using well-known international stars.
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