- Deleted Scenes
- Gag Reel
- A Playful Tease
- Crafting a Colorful World
- The Autumn Gaze
- Feature Commentary
Wednesday, May 20, 2020
Blu-ray Review - Emma (2020)
Focus Features had released a new adaptation of Jane Austen’s 1815 coming-of-age story Emma (PG; 2 hrs 3 mins)
in February, and because of the COVID-19 pandemic, it received a
streaming platform release on March 20th. The film is now available to
purchase on Blu-ray (Amazon), DVD (Amazon), and Digital from Universal Pictures Home
Entertainment.
Directed by Autumn de
Wilde, Anya Taylor-Joy (The Witch) stars as Emma, the strong-willed (and
stubborn) youngest daughter of widowed Henry Woodhouse (played by Bill
Nighy). After her former governess married, she searches for a new
companion and, eventually, settles on Harriet Smith (Mia Goth), a youthful woman with no parents, though an unnamed gentleman had paid for her schooling. Being the “queen bee” of the area, Emma takes Harriet
under her wing and shows her how to be a lady.
Emma plays matchmaker for her companion, which leads to many mismatches and romantic errors.
Bonus Features are:
Once upon a time, I read Jane Austen’s Emma, but for the life of
me, I cannot remember a single thing about it, besides from Emma
Woodhouse trying to find a suitable husband for her friend. Like
Austen’s other works, Emma has been adapted many times, with the
most-modern adaptation, Clueless, being the only one I had seen before
viewing 2020’s Emma, a film that fell on the radar thanks to the
COVID-19 pandemic.
I’m not for sure if it’s the
script or the directing, but Emma’s pacing is a bit off and the story
is difficult to follow for the first half. The acting from the entire
cast is decent; though Anya Taylor-Joy was my favorite. (FYI: I’m a big
fan of The Witch!) They spoke the dialogue too fast, and with their
British accents, I had to rewind several times to figure out what the
characters were saying. There’s no chemistry between Anya Taylor-Joy and
Johnny Flynn, whom they miscast as George Knightley.
The set and costumes designs are beautiful, but all the pastel colors were distracting.
Overall,
Emma is intriguing, but soulless adaptation of Jane Austen’s classic
tale, mostly because of the misguided directing by Autumn de Wilde. The movie
is pretty to look at and has a few entertaining moments, but it will bore the average viewer.
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About
B.J. Burgess
Bookworm extraordinaire with a caffeine addiction, I’ve spent years dodging reality in the pages of novels—from spine-tingling thrillers to Westerns that make me feel like a cowboy. Join my chaotic love affair with books and movies at Ramblings of a Coffee-Addicted Writer and Gunsmoke & Grit—where words flow faster than my coffee supply!
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