Monday, December 15, 2025

Sense and Sensibility

I love Ang Lee's adaptation of Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen so I was really happy to see it last night during its limited run in theaters to mark its 30th anniversary (what?).  The Dashwood sisters, Elinor (Emma Thompson) and Marianne (Kate Winslet), experience a sudden change in fortune after their father dies and leaves his estate to their older half-brother John (James Fleet).  This impacts their marriage prospects when the sensible Elinor silently pines for Edward Ferrars (Hugh Grant), who is expected to marry well by his mother, and the passionate Marianne is swept up (literally) in a romance with the dashing John Willoughby (Greg Wise), who needs a wealthy wife after he is cut off by his family for his indiscretions.  They ultimately find happiness when they balance reason with emotion.  Elinor finally reveals her feelings to Edward when he is free to propose and Marianne finds the value in real love, rather than impetuous infatuation, with Colonel Brandon (Alan Rickman).  To be sure, I love the biting critique of the often transactional nature of marriage but I think this movie is hilarious.  I regularly heard the rest of the audience laughing along with me during my favorite scenes, including when Fanny Dashwood (Harriet Walter) subtly convinces her husband not to give his sisters any portion of their father's estate, when Marianne tries to get Edward to read with more feeling, when Sir John Middleton (Robert Hardy) and Mrs. Jennings (Elizabeth Spriggs) learn that Elinor loves someone whose name begins with F, when Mrs. Dashwood (Gemma Jones), Marianne, and Margaret (Emilie Francois) all end up crying in their rooms so Elinor sits on the stairs with a cup of tea, whenever Mr. Palmer (Hugh Laurie) shows disdain for his wife Charlotte (Imelda Staunton), when Fanny attacks Lucy Steele (Imogen Stubbs) after she learns of her engagement to Edward, and when Elinor starts crying when she learns that Edward has not married Lucy. I love the witty dialogue (the screenplay was written by Thompson), the beautiful locations, the evocative score (including the "sad songs" Marianne sings), the Regency costumes (I am a big fan of empire waists but I especially love how buttoned up Edward always appears because it shows his repression), and the performances from the entire cast (although Thompson gives my favorite one).  I watch my copy of this all of the time (it is definitely one of my comfort watches) but I am so glad that I got to see it on the big screen again!  There are two more opportunities to see it (December 16 and 17) and I highly recommend getting a ticket!

Note:  Last weekend I saw movie adaptations of novels by Stephen King and Jane Austen and I loved both of them.  That's how I roll.

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