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Plot |
Jane Hayes (Keri Russell) is a Jane Austen nut who is in love with Mr. Darcy, the romantic male lead in Jane Austen’s “Pride & Prejudice”. She is intimately familiar with this story, for she has read it countless times and has continuously viewed the mini-series with Colin Firth and even has a life sized cardboard cutout of him as Mr. Darcy in her apartment. She believes the next logical step for her is to go to Austenland in England. Once there she becomes familiar with the males actors that she is supposed to form a relationship with, including the actor who is acting a lot like the fictitious Mr. Darcy, but she finds herself sneaking around with the guy who works in the stables. Now she is torn between sticking to the script and being engrossed by her fantasies or should she venture out and break away with this real relationship. |
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Character Development |
The growth that the protagonist goes through is fairly predictable because she is such a Jane Austen fanatic you knew something was about to change, yet the change was more or less symbolic and did anything but dazzle me. |
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Acting |
Keri Russell does a fine job for the most part. This role didn’t really showcase her talents, because I have seen a better performance out of her in the feature length cartoon ‘Wonder Woman’ (2009). As Jane Hayes she didn’t have much to say or a great deal to react to. Most of who she encountered were these broad stroke characters that are less lifelike than the ones out of you would find in the average comic book. They were loud and literally get in her face. Jennifer Coolidge played one of these vacuous characters. I don’t know if she is supposed to be funny because she is so hopelessly annoying, but for me she was just plain annoying and oh so boring. |
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Overview |
Not as enjoyable as I thought it would be with Keri Russell at the helm. I fault the writing more than anything else. The pace was just too slow and the other actors didn’t really do an acceptable job supporting Russell who went along admirably. I thought that there would be more of a connection to Jane Austen’s books which makes me question if the creators spent much time reading them in the first place. There was just so much material that could have been used and it is a shame it didn’t make its way to the screen. The exchange between the characters played more for cheap laughs than anything else. I was hoping for the types of conversations right out of “Pride & Prejudice” and instead of that there is one guy taking off his shirt and an incredible awful play production that one of the characters wrote. It really felt like amateur hour. Yet there was one nice turn in the end that surprised me and made me think that the writing didn’t fall asleep completely at the wheel. But by this time I was so underwhelmed that it almost didn’t matter. |
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