I love Brideshead Revisited, both the novel and the luscious 1981 Granada Television miniseries that was a word-for-word adaptation of the book. I have no idea why anyone felt compelled to make a feature film of Brideshead when there was no way a 2-hour movie could improve upon the miniseries and I'd heard that the film version was bad but no one said it was BLOODY AWFUL and wow, I wish someone had because they would have just saved me $1.99 at Blockbuster. I rented this out of curiosity and I'm sitting here kind of stunned because it's virtually unwatchable no matter how you look at it -- it's a dull and incoherent movie all on its own, but as an adaptation of a novel it's absolute crap.
Maybe I'm unclear on the concept but I thought the film adaptation of a book was supposed to have something in common with the book besides the title and the names of the characters. I don't know how anyone got this script out of that book. Everyone is saying and doing things they never said or did in the book in a way they never would have said or done them -- not in a million years. They're completely different people and so this is a completely different story. It's nothing more than a plodding romance in which the book's central themes of religion, privilege, temptation and loss have been completely abandoned.
The casting is also dreadful. Charles is not bad but he's playing Charles as a straightforward nice guy, not as the pompous, self-absorbed prick that Charles Ryder really was and that Jeremy Irons captured so well. Sebastian was supposed to be strikingly, sinfully beautiful and this skinny kid playing him is merely kind of cute and has none of the decadent, charming languor that Anthony Andrews brought to the role. Neither he nor any of the actors portraying the Flytes (including Emma Thompson) convey the aristocratic confidence (and shallow, ornamental uselessness) of the ancient-money rich the way their counterparts in the miniseries did. And for pity's sake, it's not even prettily filmed, not once managing to display Castle Howard and its grounds to their full grandeur.
Oh my God, Rex Mottram just told Charles he'd have to buy Julia off of him. He did everything short of twirling his moustache and going bwhahaha. GOOD GOD. What a hot, hot mess of a production. Who greenlit this piece of shit? The very walls of Castle Howard must be groaning.
Maybe I'm unclear on the concept but I thought the film adaptation of a book was supposed to have something in common with the book besides the title and the names of the characters. I don't know how anyone got this script out of that book. Everyone is saying and doing things they never said or did in the book in a way they never would have said or done them -- not in a million years. They're completely different people and so this is a completely different story. It's nothing more than a plodding romance in which the book's central themes of religion, privilege, temptation and loss have been completely abandoned.
The casting is also dreadful. Charles is not bad but he's playing Charles as a straightforward nice guy, not as the pompous, self-absorbed prick that Charles Ryder really was and that Jeremy Irons captured so well. Sebastian was supposed to be strikingly, sinfully beautiful and this skinny kid playing him is merely kind of cute and has none of the decadent, charming languor that Anthony Andrews brought to the role. Neither he nor any of the actors portraying the Flytes (including Emma Thompson) convey the aristocratic confidence (and shallow, ornamental uselessness) of the ancient-money rich the way their counterparts in the miniseries did. And for pity's sake, it's not even prettily filmed, not once managing to display Castle Howard and its grounds to their full grandeur.
Oh my God, Rex Mottram just told Charles he'd have to buy Julia off of him. He did everything short of twirling his moustache and going bwhahaha. GOOD GOD. What a hot, hot mess of a production. Who greenlit this piece of shit? The very walls of Castle Howard must be groaning.
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Date: 2009-06-06 09:53 pm (UTC)So I'm really, REALLY glad I took a pass on seeing the movie. The preview I saw didn't seem right -- I don't know, it just didn't SOUND like BR. Thank god I didn't see it. That would make me CRY.
(I have to laugh, though. I was so in love with the story that I seriously toyed with the idea of carrying a bear around with me; I don't think I went that far, but it gave me a passionate interest in teddy bears I never had as a child.)
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Date: 2009-06-06 09:57 pm (UTC)I have not seen it, but I tippy-toed by it due to the resounding silence that surrounded the opening. I gathered it was so badly done no one even wanted to think about it enough to trash it. I was around for the 1981 event and it was so profound, guests refused invitations to a White House dinner that dared to be held on the night of the finale.
Thanks for the warning - I shan't be further tempted to even take a peek.
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Date: 2009-06-06 10:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-06 10:32 pm (UTC)Am I misremembering this or didn't toting around teddy bears become briefly fashionable in England during the Bridesheadmania that surrounded the miniseries?
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Date: 2009-06-06 10:36 pm (UTC)I just watched a clip on Youtube. Holy crap, was Jeremy Irons YOUNG then. ::weeps:: Come to think of it, I'd just graduated from high school. *I* was young then, too! DAMN.
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Date: 2009-06-06 10:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-06 10:42 pm (UTC)I love the book, and adored the miniseries. The casting was amazing, even aside from gorgeous Jeremy Irons and Anthony Andrews--it had Laurence Olivier, didn't it? And the locations...
Okay--just thinking about it makes me want to see it again--wonder if it holds up?
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Date: 2009-06-06 10:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-06 10:53 pm (UTC)Anthony Andrews really didn't hold onto the pretty for very long, did he? That reminds me that years ago, I stumbled across some messageboard where fans were talking about how Andrews had lost his looks because of the stress of having to be married and have kids and deny his TRUE GAY IDENTITY. This was a good five years or so before I'd ever heard of slash or tinhats or RPS and I remember being stunned that there were people out there utterly convinced that Andrews really was gay (and still carrying a torch for Jeremy Irons, apparently). LOL, talk about naive. Oh, and J2 4-ever!
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Date: 2009-06-06 10:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-06 11:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-06 11:12 pm (UTC)I'm clicking on the theme on my ipod now!
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Date: 2009-06-06 11:26 pm (UTC)I was a weird kid, I guess; I wrote my first slash (such as it was) when I was about 11. I blame Kirk and Spock. (The actually slashy Kirk/Spock, she adds with a teeeeeny-tiny sneer, and promptly gets shot in the head.)
(Sorry, that was uncalled for. I blame the generalized clinical depression.
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Date: 2009-06-06 11:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-06 11:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-07 04:12 am (UTC)LOL, you have the theme on your iPod!
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Date: 2009-06-07 04:15 am (UTC)Man, Kirk/Spock. People have been shipping those two for what...40 years now? That's gotta be a fandom record.
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Date: 2009-06-07 07:22 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-07 01:18 pm (UTC)You’re right, it’s rubbish. *blush*
Although I adore Emma Thompson, the film’s take on Lady Marchmain as a one-dimensional Catholic fundamentalist cannot begin to compare with Waugh’s exquisitely nuanced writing. Waugh certainly portrays her as a control freak -- but she’s not a monster.
Like you, I adore the original novel and the sublime 1981 series. Anthony Andrews’ finest hour. Le sigh!!!!! And that wonderful, wonderful music …
The final episode was unbelievably, incredibly moving. Just … the most exalted television drama ever made …
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Date: 2009-06-07 01:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-07 09:50 pm (UTC)They didn't even manage to get her one dimension right! Do you remember the scene where she triumphantly announced Julia's engagement to Rex as if she had powerbrokered her off in an arranged marriage? I just about fell off the couch. They literally made Lady Marchmain into an entirely different character. Andrew Davies was one of the screenwriters and I think he's the guy who's done some terrific adaptations of classics like Bleak House, so I don't know if he was smoking crack when he wrote this or was just daunted by the abbreviated feature film format or what, but wow, what a sad, sloppy disaster.
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Date: 2009-06-07 09:51 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-08 03:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-08 09:03 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-06-10 02:32 pm (UTC)Sigh. Now I want to buy the original dvd and snuggle up with Aloysius.
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Date: 2009-06-16 01:40 am (UTC)