The same Jane Aussie-style fate of characters, only to end up with the feeling of "it's really not good without tossing"

Astrid 2022-11-29 21:35:00

I haven't read Jane Austen's novel "Emma", and I haven't seen other versions of this movie. Just talking about this new film in 2020, I feel that the story does not have many conflicts and the heroine does not have much ambition. And the pursuit, the whole movie is full of affection between rich and poor nobles, all the characters including the heroine are arrogant, arrogant, hypocritical, and even stupid. There are problems in the life of the nobles themselves. They have nothing to do but still communicate with each other. If their interests are not good, it is inevitable that this kind of low-level and boring. It's long overdue to break up the group, it's better to find something more reliable to do. The hero and heroine stayed in a small place, guarding an old circle. Their innocent and arrogant nature made them go around a big circle, only to find that what was originally correct was entangled every day, but it was originally simple and obvious. This is the fate of the characters often found in Jane Austen's works, but what I have seen and read in the past is under the tragic plot. The hero and heroine have a strong pursuit of independence and freedom, with a strong sense of loneliness, lingering and grief. And this "Emma" is placed in the so-called light comedy environment, with the same Jane Austen-style character fate, but it only makes people feel that it is really impossible to do it without tossing it. The heroine Emma is naive and willful, making mistakes frequently in her life, and it is this setback that makes her understand life and who she is. This is a girl's growth path. However, many of the film's handling of nosebleeds at a critical juncture makes people feel funny, and the supporting characters around her seem to be specially arranged to accompany her, which is not very natural.

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Emma. quotes

  • Miss Bates: Oh, oh Mother, do you hear? MISS WOODHOUSE HAS INVITED US TO HARTFIELD!

  • Emma Woodhouse: We are both prejudiced. You against, I for him and we shall have no chance of agreeing until he is really here.

    Mr. Knightley: Prejudiced? I'm not prejudiced!

    Emma Woodhouse: Yes, but I am. Very much, and without at all being ashamed of it. My love for Mr. and Mrs. Weston gives me a decided prejudice in his favor.