"200 years ahead of her time"? Hardly. It was all very much according to the confining upper class social norms and demands of those days. 'Chicklets' warning girls to stay virtuous until the right man would call on her.
@@brendabri Well, I'd think we'd had progressed somewhat meanwhile. In Austin's days a woman wasn't a legal entity. She could do very little without a man acting on her behalf. Thus 'marrying a rich widow' was the ultimate man-dream. She couldn't touch her own money without you, and you could spend her money without her being able to prevent that.
It always amazes me two roles Simon Woods played Mr Bingley and Augustus in Rome. They can’t be more different one cold cruel calculating and another sweet and charming
The director of this film, Joe Wright, has spoken about how he sought artistic composition with his shots. In particular, he mentioned being proud of the shot at 5:27. Every time I see it, I have to agree. It could be a painting, it's so gorgeous.
It is so lovely that you pointed this out, about the artistic composition seen as Jane stands in front of the clock at the edge of the shot, and the window in front of her. I went back to look at it, and indeed, it is an amazing composition. If I were in art school, I would want to paint a copy of it, just to engage with it for many hours. I thought the time stamp would lead to the scene by the water with all that green and mist (as I recall) and the top male characters working on the proposal. Care certainly went into getting that one so beautifully accomplished as well. But the one you painted out, it surely stands alone as a still painting... I'm surprised it's not out there for sale as large prints for hanging on the wall.
I remember watching this on its opening weekend and the auditorium was filled to capacity. When Bingley strode forward, momentarily paused, THEN kneeled there was a collective "AAAAAW!" from the mostly female audience! Then they burst into embarrassed giggles!
In the movie named “Becoming Jane”, her older sister asks her if she writes something new and she says “I write the story of two sisters getting married with two handsome, wealthy and loving men” at the time her sister lost her fiancé while she broke up with the man she loved. That’s why “Pride and Prejudice” was written for, solace for two sisters’ failed love life 🙁
I saw P&P in the movie theater; Mr. Bingley's wedding proposal was the only scene that I cried. Lizzy's heavy breathing upon seeing Mr. Darcy reminds me of my youth of when seeing my woman crush would put me out of breath.
I remember seeing this in theaters with my Mom and grandmother. I was 15 years old, and I loved it. I went home that evening, and started reading the book. I then read all of Jane Austen. This is my favorite adaptation of Pride and Prejudice.
@@SagarikaMajumdar-p7dMr. Bennet was every bit as caring and concerned about his daughters as his wife was. He was more restrained in his behavior than Mrs. Bennet was. Consider how anguished he became when Mr. Collins expressed a desire to marry Elizabeth.
That one glimpse of her twirling her hair tells you everything you need to know about the childlike character so close to the surface in a supposedly grown woman.
The old emergency cleanup when unexpected company shows up. One of my favorite parts of the movie. The poor Bingley has a neural shutdown when faced with the wall of Bennett women.
It's been so long since I ready the book that I forget a lot of the context around this scene. It is quite sweet. Looks like an interesting adaptation.
That little knowing smile Bingley gives to Jane as her mother comes rushing into the room after the proposal is icing on the cake. Don't blink or you'll miss it!
I suppose most people don’t mind the modern interpretation of Bingley’s proposal, but the book has it keeping with 1813 modesty of Bingley waiting for a quiet and alone moment rather than asking everyone to leave his presence to propose.
I think the scene utterly fails to capture the anticipation, awkwardness and anticipation the scenes in the book and the BBC adaption conveyed. Even the humour - Mrs Bennet winking at Kitty and Kitty announcing it. The modern interpretation is such a pale imitation - I'm sure it is good enough if one doesn't compare it. Watching this scene reminded me of that.
It's enjoyable, but I do prefer the less goofy version of Bingley in the book and BBC adaptation as well. Still, a very sweet moment if you can forgive the changes.
Yep. I have to tidy up so my house cleaners can clean. First world problems and too much stuff and uncomfortable clothing, and now bad manners of young people putting their shoe feet on airplane seats, even in business class.
There is one thing that is not clear to me: Mr Collins was initially interested in Jane, but his mother told him that she was practically promised. Why when Mr Bingley left Netherfields, Mr Collins did not ask for Jane's hand? (After all, Jane was "free" again).
Adoro quel periodo storico... La moda era così bella e femminile, inoltre lasciava le donne libere di muoversi senza corsetti e costrizioni. Successivamente, ahimè, è cambiato tutto e si è tornati ad abiti scomodi e pericolosi per la salute della donna.
Jane Austen made a book for daydreamers like you. I would suggest reading (or watching) Northanger Abbey. Come back to this comment section once you're done, I'd like your thoughts
@@sriana5136Honestly? 'Northanger Abbey'? My word! But doth not despair! For Austen wrote many other, finer books. As did her contemporaries like Mary Brunton.
@@_PJW_ That comment was for OP, but it wasn't a compliment. I suggested it for its plot. The naive protagonist let books rot her brain so now she constantly lives in her imagination. It took over how she saw reality. By doing that, she almost ruined a relationship with a great dude (ex: her accusation of her FIL). You'll see it still holds up today, like Booktok. OP wanted her bf to be like Darcy, a person of FICTION. Imagine having a partner who wishes you could be a fictional dude? That current you isn't enough, and never will be. You'd feel exactly the same shitty way if it was reversed. Can you imagine your bf saying he wished you were Naomi from Wolf of Wall Street because she's the hottest fictional woman ever? Course not. Now I like Jane Austen as much as the next person, but it's a story at the end of the day. Austen wrote romance books, yes, but before anything else, it was her method of communicating important life lessons to the youth. Girls were naive, especially around love/marriage because that is how society planned it to be. To skip the lesson altogether would be doing her a disservice. In this case, both Elizabeth AND Darcy were assholes, but changed for the better for the sake of being a good person.
I agree. This scene is an unmitigated mess, however it made me laugh so hard. Darcy is such a good friend that he play acts the scene out before going back a second time.😂😂😂😂
"Everyone behave naturally and whatever you do, do not appear overbearing" says the most overbearing person in the room 😂
3:57 this is the funniest part of this sequence. The "Mr. Bingley" said by Darcy is just hilarious! Such precious friends.
Jane Austen was the MASTER of romantic comedy. 200 years ahead of her time, just imagine what else she could have written had she not died so young.
"200 years ahead of her time"? Hardly. It was all very much according to the confining upper class social norms and demands of those days. 'Chicklets' warning girls to stay virtuous until the right man would call on her.
@@_PJW_and that's true until now
@@brendabri Well, I'd think we'd had progressed somewhat meanwhile. In Austin's days a woman wasn't a legal entity. She could do very little without a man acting on her behalf.
Thus 'marrying a rich widow' was the ultimate man-dream. She couldn't touch her own money without you, and you could spend her money without her being able to prevent that.
THE MASTER!!!
Jane Austen is a great writer writing timeless classics
"Mary put that away at once! Find some useful employment." That line always cracks me up lol
Mary is getting yelled at constantly in this movie
Mary sit down!
And Kitty steals the chair.
I absolutely love when they get caught at the window the second time. The look on mom’s face😆😆😆
At least Bingley got his shit together at the end when it came to Jane.
And Ilove that it was dear Mr. Darcy who helped him pluck up the courage to propose to her.
She was seriously scary in "Gone Girl"
It always amazes me two roles Simon Woods played Mr Bingley and Augustus in Rome. They can’t be more different one cold cruel calculating and another sweet and charming
I honestly never realized that....,in my minds eye, they are two utterly different personages. Great acting I guess.
Mesma coisa com a Rosamund Pike. Ela é tão doce e inocente em "Orgulho e Preconceito" e tão diferente em "Gone Girl"
Or his antagonist role in Penelope! He was so funny and charming in the complete opposite way in that movie.
The director of this film, Joe Wright, has spoken about how he sought artistic composition with his shots. In particular, he mentioned being proud of the shot at 5:27. Every time I see it, I have to agree. It could be a painting, it's so gorgeous.
It is so lovely that you pointed this out, about the artistic composition seen as Jane stands in front of the clock at the edge of the shot, and the window in front of her. I went back to look at it, and indeed, it is an amazing composition. If I were in art school, I would want to paint a copy of it, just to engage with it for many hours. I thought the time stamp would lead to the scene by the water with all that green and mist (as I recall) and the top male characters working on the proposal. Care certainly went into getting that one so beautifully accomplished as well. But the one you painted out, it surely stands alone as a still painting... I'm surprised it's not out there for sale as large prints for hanging on the wall.
So many many shots could be grand large paintings. So very beautiful!
“Yes, a thousand times yes”
Double happiness!
I remember watching this on its opening weekend and the auditorium was filled to capacity. When Bingley strode forward, momentarily paused, THEN kneeled there was a collective "AAAAAW!" from the mostly female audience! Then they burst into embarrassed giggles!
Ah yes. Emancipation has come a long way. 😇
"Unmitigated and comprehensive ass". Love it! 😂
Such a refine sentence
if darcy had proposed like that in the first place, the movie would be half as long lol
@@juliasaraiva9146yeah. But the movie wouldnt be half as strong too! 😅
Why does he say that? About his own? Or hers?
@@lavatr8322 "I have been ....". You'll see it clearly in the clip. 🙂
In the movie named “Becoming Jane”, her older sister asks her if she writes something new and she says “I write the story of two sisters getting married with two handsome, wealthy and loving men” at the time her sister lost her fiancé while she broke up with the man she loved. That’s why “Pride and Prejudice” was written for, solace for two sisters’ failed love life 🙁
Aww, I love “Becoming Jane” so much! 😍
I saw P&P in the movie theater; Mr. Bingley's wedding proposal was the only scene that I cried. Lizzy's heavy breathing upon seeing Mr. Darcy reminds me of my youth of when seeing my woman crush would put me out of breath.
One of our best, female stories,❤
I remember seeing this in theaters with my Mom and grandmother. I was 15 years old, and I loved it. I went home that evening, and started reading the book. I then read all of Jane Austen. This is my favorite adaptation of Pride and Prejudice.
Haha women haven’t changed much 0:24 😂 we’re still the same and then scrambling to tidy when someone unexpectedly shows up
A large portion of young women now purposefully make themselves unattractive.
PIKE SHOULD BE IN EVERY TOP 10 BEAUTIFUL ACTRESSES
Mrs. Bennett's overbearing nature does more to unwittingly undermine these proceedings then she will ever know.
The actress playing the mother is the best of them all. Oscar performance 👌
Yup.. So natural😂😂😂.. N funny.. But i think she had far more concerns about her daughters life than their father
@@SagarikaMajumdar-p7dMr. Bennet was every bit as caring and concerned about his daughters as his wife was. He was more restrained in his behavior than Mrs. Bennet was. Consider how anguished he became when Mr. Collins expressed a desire to marry Elizabeth.
Simon and Rosamund (Bingley and Jane) were a couple for two years at Oxford.
@@FYTFDMAYeah because Joe Wright the director was engaged to Rosamund during the filming
@@AbbyLeFleurwhaaaat really?
@normalgirlcvco Yes but something happened and they also broke off their engagement.
....and then he discovered that he was gay and that was the end of that!
@@ladydamiana6841He married a very rich man.
Mrs. Bennett drowsily humming "Greensleeves", lol
That one glimpse of her twirling her hair tells you everything you need to know about the childlike character so close to the surface in a supposedly grown woman.
Glad that Octavian finally managed to chill out.
Bingley looks like he’s going to throw up lol
I think it’s so cute how he keeps looking at Jane in the beginning like he’s nervous but eager to talk to her alone😂
The old emergency cleanup when unexpected company shows up. One of my favorite parts of the movie.
The poor Bingley has a neural shutdown when faced with the wall of Bennett women.
they're both such soft warm souls 🥺💕
It's been so long since I ready the book that I forget a lot of the context around this scene. It is quite sweet. Looks like an interesting adaptation.
How is it in the book ?
That little knowing smile Bingley gives to Jane as her mother comes rushing into the room after the proposal is icing on the cake.
Don't blink or you'll miss it!
I suppose most people don’t mind the modern interpretation of Bingley’s proposal, but the book has it keeping with 1813 modesty of Bingley waiting for a quiet and alone moment rather than asking everyone to leave his presence to propose.
I think the scene utterly fails to capture the anticipation, awkwardness and anticipation the scenes in the book and the BBC adaption conveyed. Even the humour - Mrs Bennet winking at Kitty and Kitty announcing it. The modern interpretation is such a pale imitation - I'm sure it is good enough if one doesn't compare it. Watching this scene reminded me of that.
It's enjoyable, but I do prefer the less goofy version of Bingley in the book and BBC adaptation as well.
Still, a very sweet moment if you can forgive the changes.
Brenda Blethyn is a master craftsman in every scene.
Thank you love both the main actors so much sorry don’t know how to spell their names🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽
I really related to the part where mes bennets initiates the panics as the visitors were coming
Yep. I have to tidy up so my house cleaners can clean. First world problems and too much stuff and uncomfortable clothing, and now bad manners of young people putting their shoe feet on airplane seats, even in business class.
How dare they see ribbons.
La película más bella de todos los tiempos
2:10 got me kicking my feet and all
rosamund pyke 😍
One of my fave scenes of all time.
una de las peliculas mas bellas que he visto , me encanta
Crazy how Kiera Mulligan, Rosamund Pike, and Carey Mulligan are all in this film. Three lead actresses in multiple films. Jenna Malone is in this too.
Amo esta pelicula es padrisima
The mother almost sabotaged it with all her chattering at the start that put him off his speech... Take note, over eager mothers!
My favorite movie
I loved that movie 🩵so romantic
Love at movie 🎬 🎞 I buy it ❤❤❤❤❤😊
Великолепный фильм !
Mr. Darcy was a steadfast friend to Mr. Bingley.
Im pretty sure jane austens mom had a favorite child and it wasnt her
❤loving the right person too be happy 😊
Love this movie ❤
Amo esse filme ❤️
Rosamund pike is sooo beautiful..
There is one thing that is not clear to me:
Mr Collins was initially interested in Jane, but his mother told him that she was practically promised.
Why when Mr Bingley left Netherfields, Mr Collins did not ask for Jane's hand?
(After all, Jane was "free" again).
Mr Collins proposed to Charlotte by the end of the week that he proposed to Lizzy.
Collins was on the bullet train for marriage.
@@lisabellamy8424 Ok thank you. So the first one available after Lizzy
Oh my lord! I shall have a seizure, I'm sure I shall.😂
I'm sorry. I don't think anyone can match Alison Steadman as Mrs. Bennett. This movie's version of her just feels so watered down by comparison.
Adoro quel periodo storico... La moda era così bella e femminile, inoltre lasciava le donne libere di muoversi senza corsetti e costrizioni. Successivamente, ahimè, è cambiato tutto e si è tornati ad abiti scomodi e pericolosi per la salute della donna.
Elizabeth’s hair really bothered me in this version. It’s like she couldn’t afford a comb,
Hey! Mr Wickham brought his A Game and scored 15 large and a bimbo!
What's with Bingley's hair?
Funny how my wife prefers this than those latest film with stronger female. Tbh I do too, hehehe.
I totally get this world; in fact, I still live in it. I don't like it. But, it's charming and familiar.
This was amazing I wish my boyfriend was like Mr Darcy then I might actually like him lol
🚩
Jane Austen made a book for daydreamers like you. I would suggest reading (or watching) Northanger Abbey. Come back to this comment section once you're done, I'd like your thoughts
@@sriana5136Honestly? 'Northanger Abbey'? My word!
But doth not despair! For Austen wrote many other, finer books. As did her contemporaries like Mary Brunton.
@@_PJW_ That comment was for OP, but it wasn't a compliment. I suggested it for its plot. The naive protagonist let books rot her brain so now she constantly lives in her imagination. It took over how she saw reality. By doing that, she almost ruined a relationship with a great dude (ex: her accusation of her FIL). You'll see it still holds up today, like Booktok.
OP wanted her bf to be like Darcy, a person of FICTION. Imagine having a partner who wishes you could be a fictional dude? That current you isn't enough, and never will be. You'd feel exactly the same shitty way if it was reversed. Can you imagine your bf saying he wished you were Naomi from Wolf of Wall Street because she's the hottest fictional woman ever? Course not.
Now I like Jane Austen as much as the next person, but it's a story at the end of the day. Austen wrote romance books, yes, but before anything else, it was her method of communicating important life lessons to the youth. Girls were naive, especially around love/marriage because that is how society planned it to be. To skip the lesson altogether would be doing her a disservice. In this case, both Elizabeth AND Darcy were assholes, but changed for the better for the sake of being a good person.
@@sriana5136Hey guys just going to butt into the Convo here, I am the boyfriend in question and I took wish that I was more like Mr Darcy
Why did Octavian get here?
💓
The mother was unbearable
The made a mistake in the movie of having Mr. Bingley stutter during his proposal. Ruined the scene.
The mother non stop talking ruined it completely...
Ukr lolll but it's kinda make his proposal better
Really? This Red Haired vacant expression distant cousin of Ron Weasley and Ed Sheeran lands one of the Baddest Blondes of all time? 😂
😮🎉❤
Don't like that adaptation.
I agree. This scene is an unmitigated mess, however it made me laugh so hard. Darcy is such a good friend that he play acts the scene out before going back a second time.😂😂😂😂
Her teeth are quite large
shes british
This isn't 'Little Red Riding Hood', you know.
And?
Owo
how can people enjoy such slow paced cringy drivel?
Because not everyone enjoys instant gratification. You marry not the body but the mind, heart, and soul. I guess you wouldn't know that.
@@DibIrken hahahaha, you are either a hopeless female or a weird gay guy
You don't have to watch it if you don't enjoy it. Go back to watching car crashes and explosions.
the world needs more slow paced drivel
@@sliceserve234 not a smart one, eh?
Now that's a good sign 😍🤍🤍🤍 love it🤍 thank you for the good omen 🎉😌🙏