On paper, a romantic comedy about Jane Austen’s novels and
finding true love, produced by the author of Twilight and directed by a first
timer Jerusha Hess, sounds like a recipe for absolute disaster. It has to be
said that “Austenland” is muddled, over the top, simplistic and occasionally quite
dull, but it somehow manages to wind up oddly sweet.
The plot follows unlucky-in-love Keri Russell, a woman so
fixated on Austen’s winsome Mr. Darcy that no “real” man could ever compare. At
one point in the film, her character bemoans that “all the good men are
fictional!” yet the viewer has to wonder what sane man would tolerate Jane’s
levels of obsession. Her bedroom is plastered with photos of him; a life-size
cardboard cut-out stands in her hall. Jane’s Austen obsession eventually leads
her to Austenland, a regency-era style holiday resort that promises immersion
in Austen’s world.
In Austenland, Jane finds passion, danger, and herself –
amongst so many other things I couldn’t help wondering if Sharon Hale’s script
was edited at all. The film suffers from
an overlong, over-complicated story – Jane’s various suitors become less and
less interesting until the viewer doesn’t give a damn who she ends up with. On
top of the love story, we have a vague look at class divisions with Jane’s
“copper package” leaving her clad in dull brown next to the richer guests’
jewels, a seemingly randomplot to shut the place down, all while immersed in
ritzy Regency era England. The period element of the film is by far the most
enjoyable - the guests sew, hunt, dance and enter Austen’s nineteenth century world almost entirely. In this
respect, the audience is swallowed up by the over the top carnival atmosphere,
all pink and diamond. Over the top is clearly what Austenland is going for – it’s just unfortunate that it’s more
sugar and less, well, sensibility. Her various men, played by JJ Fields (The
cool, reserved Mr. Darcy type), Bret McKenzie (Flight of The Concords musician
meets stable boy) and Henry Whittle (Pirate soap star) are amusing in their
one-dimensionality for the first hour, but after that the love square gets
duller and duller. The supporting cast are much better - Jennifer Coolige’s
performance may revolve around mocking British customs, but it’s still funny,
and Georgia King is great as a totally OTT repeat guest at Austenland.
Austenland is
ultimately quite a watchable, fun film, with a few laughs thrown in for good
measure. It looks ridiculous, but in a good way – in the same vein as Baz
Luhrmann, Hess has gone for intentional gaudiness and worked it. Jennifer
Coolige and JJ Fiels provide some of the best performances, and the always
decent Keri Russell centres the piece. What’s unfortunate, however, is that the
plot just doesn’t match the pretty – a film about a literary hero should
perhaps have worked out its story a little more clearly.
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