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Jane Eyre |
作者Author /  Charlotte Bronte 夏綠蒂•伯朗特 |
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Introduction
Availability
Clive/Bruce version and the Code
A bad film
Orson Welles and Joan Fontaine
The miniseries
Gainsbourg and Hurt
Morton and Hinds
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Introduction |
Charlotte Bronte's most famous novel,
the beloved Jane Eyre is well-loved by film makers as well. There have
been a whopping 17 versions of it filmed, the earliest in 1910 and the
latest as recently as 1997. According to the Internet Movie Database,
another mini-series is currently being filmed starring Toby Stephens as
Rochester and Ruth Wilson as Jane, though when this will arrive is not
announced as of yet.
As would be expected, the television adaptations keep the most
subplots, as they have more time. But a number of the cinematic
releases keep the spirit of the novel, if inevitably cutting out much
of the interesting bits not centered on Jane and Mr. Rochester.
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Availability |
Not all versions are available on
DVD, but a number are. I've listed them by their Janes. |
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1934 Bruce
1944 Fontaine I've only found it available as an import from
Asia.
My copy is Chinese and other copies are from Thailand.
1971 Susannah Yorke and George C. Scott but very difficult to
find
1983 Clarke this is a 2-disc, five hour mini series.
1996 Gainsbourg
1997
Morton
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Clive/Bruce version and the Code |
In 1934 Christy Cabanne
directed the first talky version of Jane Eyre for
Monogram Pictures Corporation, an American film studio which mostly
produced B films (secondary films to be the first in a double feature
with an A film). I think the year in which it was produced has much to
do with the radical changes in the book's text.
The year 1934 was the first year that the Movie Production Codes--the
Hayes Codes—went into effect.
In 1930, responding to
public pressure, the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA)
drafted a set of codes in order to regulate the movie industry. It was
drafted by William Harrison Hays and was known as either "the
Production Codes" or the "Hays Code."
Between 1930-34, the MPAA had no effective way of enforcing the Code,
but then started enforcing it in 1934. An amendment to the code
established the Production Code Administration, and required all films
to obtain a certificate of approval before being released.
This might be the reason why in this version, Adele is now a Rochester,
Rochester's much pampered and petted niece. There is no word of her
being an illegitimate child of a paid mistress. And during the
proceedings, Rochester is working with his London lawyer to get his
first marriage to Bertha annulled by the courts. He says no word to
anyone, but it is never his intention to join into a bigamous marriage.
Jane leaves him anyway, and runs to work in a soup kitchen run by Rev.
Rivers, a much older man whom she plans to marry and follow to India.
Through a meeting with a now down-and-out Thornfield servant, she
learns of the fire and Bertha's death, so she returns to the blind, but
two-handed Rochester.
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A bad film |
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Clive-Bruce version
Bruce: Virgina Bruce around the time
she starred in Jane Eyre. This is no plain Jane! Source:
http://www.cineyestrellas.com/Elenco/
Actrices/B/Bruce_Virgina_1.jpg
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On the whole, this is a bad
film. It has been released on DVD as a cheap version, so the print is
dark and sound quality is relatively poor. The acting is very stagey.
Colin Clive, perhaps most famous as Henry Frankenstein of the Whale
Frankenstein films, tries, but he obviously is enamoured of Jane from
almost the first.
Virginia Bruce is no Jane. She is tall, beautiful, blonde and in some
ways, too “tough". She is not a bad actor, but she is too 1930s “new
woman" for the role. This is a Jane with too much spunk. She yells at
her Aunt Reed, she yells at Brocklehurst and gets herself fired from
Lowood, and she's already inherited her money before she becomes a
governess, so she's not really a dependant. She also sings a song for
Rochester. Lovely voice, but again, doesn't fit.
On the whole, I would say give this film a miss, but on the other hand,
it might be a very interesting look at how societal strictures changed
how books were filmed. And at 63 minutes, it's certainly short enough
to watch in one class.
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Orson Welles and Joan Fontaine |
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Orson Welles
as Rochester
and Joan Fontaine as
Jane Eyre.
Source: http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/
cbmc/images/jane-eyre.jpg |
Ten years later, Robert
Stevenson directed Orson Welles and Joan Fontaine in a classic version
of the novel. With a screen play by John Houseman and Aldous Huxley and
a stellar cast, including the child actors Margaret O'Brien (Adele) and
Elizabeth Taylor (Helen Burns), many viewers call this the “best" Jane
Eyre ever filmed.
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The blind Rochester and
Jane in the final scene. Source: http://www.geocities.com/
joanfan20/costars3.JPG |
Again, much is cut out, and
there are a number of changes to the text, but the core of the story
remains. It's done in a true 1940s style—melodramatic, swelling music,
dramatic lighting, costuming done by a Hollywood ideal not based in
reality—but at the heart, this is Jane Eyre and
it's well worth watching.
Orson Welles makes an excellent Rochester. Unlike most Rochesters
before and after, Welles is not a handsome man. He's not ugly, but Jane
can say that she doesn't think him handsome and the audience won't
snort in derision. And of course his acting is excellent. Welles was
often undervalued by his contemporary audiences, but he's sometimes
riveting to watch. And that voice—his famous deep voice rolls over us,
hypnotizing us along with Jane.
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Rochester and
Jane before their aborted wedding.
Source: http://www.standaard.be/Assets/
Images_Upload/FL_EYRE.MM.jpg |
Fontaine doesn't get to do
much other than gaze, tremble and sigh, but her face is expressive, and
we feel moved by Jane's story.
This is definitely an excellent version to watch with a class, and can
be the basis of much discussion.
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The miniseries |
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Timothy Dalton as the
too-handsome Edward Rochester. Source: www.timothydalton.com/
rjane.html |
Perhaps the most faithful
version of Jane Eyre is the 1983 miniseries starring the far too
good-looking Timothy Dalton and Zelah Clarke. She is certainly tiny
enough to be the little Jane, and while not plain, she almost looks
plain next to Dalton.
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A happy and in love Jane
and Rochester. Source: www.timothydalton.com/
rjane.html |
This is an excellent version
of Jane Eyre, in parts word-for-word from the
text. But the problem for teaching purposes is that it is five hours
long, so too time consuming to show in a class.
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Timothy Dalton and Zelah
Clarke as Rochester and Jane. Source: www.timothydalton.com/
rjane.html |
I do suggest perhaps showing
part of the film in order to allow students to get a taste of it. The
costuming and set design is quite authentic, up to usual BBC standards,
and the acting is quite fine.
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Sian Pattenden as the
young Jane Eyre in the miniseries version. Source:
www.timothydalton.com/
rjane.html |
The young Jane is played
quite ably by Sian Pattenden. She does an admirable job of portraying
young Jane's struggles to be proud but to find love.
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The aborted wedding
ceremony. Source: www.timothydalton.com/
rjane.html |
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Gainsbourg and Hurt |
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Anna Paquin as the young
Jane.
Source:
http://members.tripod.com/
~AthenaIris/MOVIEJANE2.JPG |
The 1996 version was
directed by the great Franco Zeffirelli, who also wrote the screenplay
with Hugh Whitemore. Like all Zeffirelli films, this is a visually
beautiful work, but one perhaps expects more romantic feeling from the
man who gave us the amazing 1969 film Romeo and Juliet.
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The wedding scene. Source:
http://www.moviesnapshot.com/1996Reviews/
Jane_Eyre.html |
Zeffirelli has collected a stellar
cast, even in smaller roles. The young Jane is played, for perhaps too
brief a time, by Anna Paquin, three years after her Academy
award-winning performance in The Piano.
Charlotte Gainsbourg, daughter of French singer Serge Gainsbourg and
English actor Jane Birkin, makes herself positively plain for the role
of the adult Jane. She is a physically slight woman, and at times
almost fades into the background. Because of cuts to the novel in the
screenplay version, this Jane doesn't seem as spunky or as independent
as the book Jane.
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Charlotte Gainsbourg and
William Hurt as Jane and Rochester. Source: http://www.boxoffice.com/
jpg/may/rvw01.jpg |
Rochester in this version is
played by the American actor William Hurt. A blond, quiet actor, he
doesn't quite seem to “fit" the Rochester role. He plays a very
subdued, almost Austenean Rochester.
On a whole, this is a good version of the book, and has its legion of
fans. It can easily be adapted to a course, but if there is to be only
one film version, perhaps the 1997 version is the one to choose.
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Morton and Hinds |
In 1997, Robert Young directed a fine TV version for A&E
entertainment in America starring Ciaran Hinds and Samantha Morton as
Rochester and Jane. The screenwriters, Richard Hawley, Kay Mellor and
Peter Wright, have ruthlessly cut away all the subplots and have even
severely condensed the St. John interactions. In this version he has
but one sister, his attentions to Jane are less complex, and we never
learn that he and Jane are cousins.
But Samantha Morton does a wonderful job of showing Jane's strength of
spirit and sense of self worth. A physically slight actor, Morton
nevertheless gives her Jane stature. Hinds, a handsome (again, perhaps
too handsome) Irish actor, plays a Rochester full of fire and passion.
He seems to try to physically intimidate the much smaller Morton, but
he is never able to do so.
While this version is missing all of the subplots, on many levels, it's
an excellent and passionate version of the book. |
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