Mr. Darcy is still the elegant and beautiful man, and the protagonist has his own skills (!);
the soy sauce man is still the modern version of Wickham who betrayed Darcy by lying and betraying Darcy;
even the heroine's sister They all traveled collectively to the modern age, and unfortunately they became gay (the youngest sister) who also loves music, a best friend who loves swearing (perhaps a combination of the third and fourth), and always calls the heroine when he is hesitant about her boyfriend. The treasurer (presumably alluding to Elizabeth's sister Jane, who shared Bentley's love affair);
and more importantly, Mrs. Bennett, who tried hard to bring the two together, also brought the vanity of hundreds of years ago and her daughter-in-law. Mr. Bennett, who is a friend;
but the cute and weak sister Darcy who loves music in the novel (sorry for being too weak, I don't remember her name in the film and novel) becomes a vicious Japanese woman here (23333, This is probably the British's complaints about the indifferent Japanese);
with Elizabeth's love triangle, of course, the body of Bentley's sister, who has always expected to marry Darcy, looked down on the countrymen - I knew that the poor one came out. A female lawyer who plays soy sauce;
even the screenwriter secretly embedded an "uncle" who likes to touch the heroine's butt but has no relatives. Think about it carefully, isn't this the "cousin" Collins who wants to eat swan meat!
There is a story that goes like this: The arrogant male protagonist left a very bad influence on the female protagonist at the banquet. The female protagonist met the second male and complained about Darcy with the second male. Then the second male cheated, the female protagonist happened to know the male Second, I deceived myself and betrayed Haoyou, which led to the misunderstanding of Darcy. After the apology, the lover finally got married-----Yes, I'm just talking about the plot of Pride and Prejudice! It has nothing to do with the movie.
This movie has never become a classic like a novel, not because of the gap between the movie and the novel, but because of the heroine's character: one is a minority female representative of the old world who loves to read and think, and has a sense of independence from the world. , one is unmarried in their thirties (although Elizabeth is considered to be married late at that age), most women in the new century who smoke, drink, and have a fat body. There are so many protagonists and supporting roles arranged in the front, and what we are waiting for is the group of single older unmarried young women who are all jumping into this beautiful dream!
It's impossible to go into the details of the film, in short, even if it is a tribute to Jane Austen from the writer or director. Because I know too much about the details of the novel, every time a familiar scene appears in the movie, I always have the tacit pleasure of being a fan of the novel with the screenwriter.
PS The song at the beginning of the movie is You're just to good to be true and the second song All by myself (Friends episode) is also poignant. A thirty-year-old unmarried woman always sings the second song in her mouth, but thinks of the sweet first song in her heart.
Tribute to Jane Austen we all love~
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