Dakota Johnson, who had a jolly good crack at making the Fifty Shades movies watchable, has her work cut out once again as Anne Elliot, the middle daughter of ...
Our Anne is catty about her family, she is overly fond of the sauce (often to be seen necking bottles of red wine alone), and she even has a rabbit she chats to, perhaps in an attempt to one-up Fleabag’s guinea pig. Eight years later Anne is single and pining, and in her “second bloom” (as in a bit older than many of Austen’s heroines). Wentworth, of course, returns, now a rich and celebrated naval captain, and Anne is still hopeful they might reconcile. Perhaps only Henry Golding as the charmer-smarmer Mr. Elliot, Anne’s alternative suitor, manages to traverse the tonal weirdness by being both charismatic and sinister without turning into a boo-hiss baddie. Or not so inner, in this case since we the viewers are her secret confidants all along. As a young woman Anne was in love with a sailor named Frederick Wentworth (Cosmo Jarvis) but was persuaded not to marry him by her godmother and confidant, Lady Russell (Nikki Amuka-Bird) since he was not a man of means or standing in society. Bridgerton has been a roaring success for Netflix with its period setting, literary heritage, and “color conscious” casting.
Carrie Cracknell's skillful Netflix adaptation masterfully captures the subversive wit and charm of Austen's strident heroine.
Screenwriters Ron Bass and Alice Winslow retain much of the subversive, fundamental elements that made the original text so beloved, cheeky and subversive far beyond the boundaries of the time in which it was written. That said, even though this is very much “Not Your Mother’s” Jane Austen adaptation, the filmmakers wisely don’t alter the source material’s portrayals of class and character. Whether it be her Fleabag-esque, Enola Holmes-like or her Ferris Bueller-lite expository dialogue and reactions, Johnson adeptly holds the audience’s attention, letting them in on the joke—or at least hinting at her despair. Anne is holding out hope that he’s open to rekindling their romance, but quickly discovers that Wentworth is more awkward and aloof than ever. Her marriage prospects have vanished since she was persuaded eight years prior to dump her one true love, low-ranking Naval officer Frederick Wentworth (Cosmo Jarvis). Because their union would’ve been solely for love, it was frowned upon by Anne’s family and closest confidant, Lady Russell (Nikki Amuka-Bird), whose transactional view of marriage has left Anne despondent and remorseful. Suffice it to say that Cracknell wants audiences to know that their impending journey isn’t going to be like any of the film’s stuffy, slavish predecessors.
Elizabeth Olsen makes her escape from a sinister cult, while Dakota Johnson frocks up for a trip to Austenland.
But she can’t knock an odd sense of dislocation, exacerbated by visions of a ghostly man stalking her, episodes where she seems invisible to those around her, and a strange attraction to a disused out-of-town pavilion. He’s witness to the brutal persecution of overweight recruit Pyle (Vincent D’Onofrio) by Gunnery Sergeant Hartman (a terrifying R Lee Ermey). Later, in Vietnam as a forces reporter, he joins a patrol in an urban wasteland of bombed-out, blazing buildings (no jungle combat here) in a brilliantly sustained exercise in tension. Pete Docter’s animated comedy is up there with the finest in the Pixar canon, and features some of the most infectious laughter in cinema (courtesy of two-and-a-half-year-old Mary Gibbs). Billy Crystal and John Goodman voice Mike and Sully, residents of Monstropolis employed to hide in bedrooms at night and jump out at human children, whose screams then power the city (“We scare because we care”). But then a young girl, Boo (Gibbs), upends everything they know. Bette Davis shows her great range as Charlotte, the timorous daughter of a high-society Boston family dominated by her monstrous mother (Gladys Cooper). After Claude Rains’s psychiatrist frees her from her parent’s grip, Charlotte blossoms into a confident, outgoing woman – one who is happy to fall in love on a cruise with the married Jerry (Paul Henreid), a romance that develops in surprising ways. It’s a tale of late-blooming romance, lacking the youthful vim of Pride and Prejudice and so opting for quiet tenderness, as Anne’s regrets about a past relationship with Cosmo Jarvis’s sailor Wentworth – which had been blocked by her family – resurface when he reappears, still a bachelor but now much more eligible. A sense of unease suffuses the film, from the whistling drone of the soundtrack to Martha’s intimations of danger, which may or may not be real.
The Jane Austen adaptation aims to be subversive when it could have just been sincere. By David Sims. Lydia Rose Bewley, Richard E. Grant ...
Clueless may indulge crackling quips that wouldn’t make sense anytime but in the summer of 1995, but it’s also a candid tale of a girl growing up and embarking on the first mature relationship of her life. The result is harried and forgettable—the complete opposite of Austen’s quietest, noblest heroine. Little of that is present in this cinematic Persuasion, which portrays all of Anne’s self-doubt in knowing monologues delivered straight down the lens. That year, the BBC aired Andrew Davies’s Pride and Prejudice starring Colin Firth and Jennifer Ehle, a pitch-perfect, six-episode version of Austen’s novel that remains one of the best miniseries in the broadcaster’s history. The novel is one of careful choices and genuine introspection, tinged with more melancholy than Austen’s earlier works. As if Persuasion doesn’t have enough faith in its own plotting, it sasses the script for the viewer’s sake, lest we grow bored by the familiar beats of the period rom-com.
Jane Austen wrote William Elliot as one of literature's most memorable cads. In a buzzy new Netflix adaptation of Persuasion, Hollywood's nicest guy proves it's ...
“This is definitely a relaxed, enjoyable, funny take on Persuasion, but it’s going to open the door to interest in literature. We were having a challenging time casting his role, and I’m sure I was probably to blame, because I was looking for Nick Young, and then Nick Young came into the room. In the four years since Crazy Rich Asians, he has starred opposite Blake Lively in the thriller A Simple Favor, romanced Emilia Clarke in Last Christmas, played a gangster in Guy Ritchie’s The Gentlemen, and headlined the G.I. Joe spinoff Snake Eyes. “I’m really drawn to characters that itch something not only in my mind, but in my heart,” Golding says. Within the story, he has his goal and he’ll do anything to get it—or to get into the pants of his perspective target. “I always joke to Henry, ‘Did I ruin your life?’ says Kevin Kwan, who wrote the book Crazy Rich Asians and served as an executive producer on the film. I’ve lived a really beautiful existence in a way that I’m so grateful for, being able to have experience in different levels of life. Confidence and a sharp wit—not to mention that million-dollar smile—have served Golding well. “When we were casting Wentworth and Elliot, we were thinking about a whole range of actors,” Cracknell says. “He’s one of those people who knows what he wants and is going to mold the universe to his will. For me, that made it easier to really enjoy playing such a colorful character on the screen.” “I think it’s sacrilege to say,” the actor says carefully, “but I really like modern takes on period dramas. Finding his way into the part was a charming challenge for Golding. “I try to concentrate on the material in front of me.
Netflix's modern adaptation of Jane Austen's classic novel Persuasion has been panned by the critics – but Stylist's entertainment editor firmly believes ...
But this is a stylish, relatable and thoroughly entertaining adaptation, and I think there is definitely a place for it in the Austen canon. Now that the world’s largest streaming service has put Jane Austen on its home screen, a whole new generation is about to discover the beloved author. I also loved Nikki Amuka-Bird’s turn as Anne’s trusted confidante, Lady Russell, who, I’m fairly sure will put a lump in your throat when she tells Anne that she deserves a man who “loves you enough to fight for you”. Netflix, of course, reigns supreme when it comes to aesthetic delights, and it’s no exaggeration to say that the cinematography in Persuasion is absolutely stunning. Despite the silly humour and liberal use of millennial vernacular (at one point, Anne’s sister Mary refers to herself as “an empath”, while a pile of sheet music is a “playlist”), you’d be mistaken if you assumed that Netflix’s Persuasion doesn’t have emotional heft. She is, in her own words, “single and thriving” – if glugging wine, crying in the bath, cuddling a pet rabbit and lying face down on your bed can indeed be considered living your best life. After the trailer was released last month, Jane Austen fans emerged in droves to lament the Fleabag treatment of Austen’s classic tale, which sees Dakota Johnson’s heroine Anne Elliot winking at the camera and wisecracking about her ex-boyfriend.
Dakota Johnson leads the cast as Anne Elliot while Cosmo Jarvis and Henry Golding also star in Netflix's Persuasion.
What else has Edward Bluemel been in? What else has Yolanda Kettle been in? What else has Izuka Hoyle been in? What else has Mia McKenna-Bruce been in? What else has Nikki Amuka-Bird been in? What else has Henry Golding been in?
Dakota Johnson stars in Persuasion on Netflix but the adaptation of Jane Austen's novel fails - read our review of the new movie also starring Henry Golding ...
Women (trans women included) still have foisted upon them a weight of expectation that is impossible to carry. From getting chemotherapy to interstate travel, the world is shrinking at a drastic rate for women. Yet, Netflix's need to stick to the aesthetically pleasing Regency get-up means it can't quite escape the dated confines of themes that could be easily transposed to modern times. It's hard to imagine for the majority of us our parents convincing us not to marry a man because he isn't 'distinguished' enough. Johnson's persistent winking at the camera does not invite you into her psychology because there is no psychology to these characters. Unfortunately, Persuasion is full of paper dolls.
There's another, better film buried in the performances of the Netflix Austen adaptation.
At one point earlier in the film, Anne asks Mary, “Why must everyone always assume that all women want is to be chosen by an eligible bachelor?” But Cracknell’s Persuasion offers no evidence to the contrary. But Cracknell’s film is more about the feel of Austen than the brilliance of Austen, of which it nails neither. Instead of its intended effect—camaraderie with the audience—the gesture feels better suited to checking if viewers are indeed still awake. Anne repeatedly shoots glimpses at the camera, a la The Office, as if to say, Are you seeing this? Johnson is delicious in this scene, a perfect mix of bumbling and lit-from-within, but her performance crumbles like clay in the grasp of such a plodding script. “It’s clear to me that I want you in my life,” he says, despite all evidence to the contrary, as the seagulls circle and screech in the background. After a lot of pointless brooding that could have been solved in one straightforward conversation, everyone is eventually righted and placed into the proper relationships. I genuinely hope you find love,” he adds, and Johnson’s crushing groan of a laugh is one of the film’s more emotionally intelligent moments. A blushing, flabbergasted Anne throws the audience a look that’s as much a cry for help as it is a gathering storm cloud. The film tries, in a detached, listless sort of way, to adhere to the original novel’s story. Here, we see what a different film Persuasion might have been, had it followed the electricity of its actors and not a false sense of winking relatability. “Now I am single and thriving,” a luminous Dakota Johnson relays as protagonist Anne Elliot, sobbing into the bathtub and suckling from a wine bottle.
To prepare for her role in Persuasion, Dakota Johnson turned to personal trainer, Luke Worthington, and embarked on a schedule of weight training, ...
During the last portion of the workout, Johnson and Worthington focused specifically on the areas she wanted to work on, which were usually glutes and abs. “Firstly, she wanted to be in shape for the movie,” Worthington tells Vogue. “And secondly, she also wanted to enjoy the mental benefits of maintaining her exercise regimen during busy filming schedules.” She turned to personal trainer, Luke Worthington, of course, who helped her achieve two key goals in the lead up to – and during – filming.
Dakota Johnson takes on the lead role of Anne Elliot in this version – following in the footsteps of other stars such as Amanda Root and Sally Hawkins – and she ...
Elsewhere, the exteriors of the Musgrove family home Uppercross House in fact belong to Brympton House in Yeovil, and Trafalgar Park in Salisbury moonlights as the Elliot ancestral home Kellynch Hall. Meanwhile, other locations outside of Bath were also used to moonlight as the Somerset city, including Osterley Park in Isleworth, West London, and Ammerdown House in Kilmersdon, the former dressed up as Bath's Assembly Rooms. As mentioned above, large portions of the movie were filmed in Bath – which is appropriate enough, given that is where much of the film is set.
Dakota Johnson's Anne Elliot is a weirdly modern hot mess — much like the entirety of Netflix's new adaptation of Jane Austen's Persuasion.
She gets wine-drunk and yells Frederick’s name out of a window, because she knows he’s at a party across the lawn that she can’t attend because she’s tending to her sick nephew. In an effort to make Anne’s struggles with class expectations and societal norms more relatable, Cracknell and the writers apparently decided to make her a quirky free spirit. Perhaps the first felt like too much of a risk in an adaptation of a classic. Perhaps the second was too boring to the filmmakers. She’s an utterly delightful example of the character viewers love to hate. Characters frequently blurt out things like “I’m an empath!” or “If you’re a five in London, you’re a 10 in Bath,” in moments that are utterly discordant amid the otherwise period-typical dialogue. And not just narrate it, but talk directly to the camera, throwing it pithy glances and rolling her eyes in response to her obnoxious relatives. Contrary to popular belief, not every Austen heroine is a Lizzie Bennet or Emma Woodhouse. So much of the original Anne’s journey is about realizing she doesn’t have to conform to expectations. She’s a Regency-era Fleabag, even though that characterization is at total odds with the original character. Out of all of Jane Austen’s novels, Persuasion may be the most difficult to adapt for modern audiences. But instead of grappling with making these themes resonate in 2022, or taking time to let the book’s more thoughtful moments breathe, Carrie Cracknell, director of Netflix’s new movie version of Persuasion, decided to turn its lead character into a #relatable mess. She lives with her self-absorbed father and eldest sister, but when her family’s extravagant spending forces them to rent out their grand estate, a naval officer and his wife move in.
The new adaptation of the Jane Austen classic, starring Dakota Johnson, swings wildly from dour to dull.
We’re exes.” Then the camera pulls back to let you survey the result, as if this film has done you the service of making Persuasion make sense in the 21st century, in the same way that Clueless made Emma make sense in the 20th century. In Netflix’s Persuasion, Anne takes on the mannerisms of the heroine of a mid-tier ’90s rom-com, weeping in the bathtub, weeping into copious amounts of red wine, weeping as she pratfalls into accidentally pouring gravy over her head. As played by Cosmo Jarvis, Wentworth is shy, brooding, and vague; a Darcy cyborg without the specificity. Austen’s Anne reacts to these circumstances the way she reacts to most things: outwardly remaining as calm and composed as possible, while inwardly tortured. The film picks up briefly when Henry Golding arrives to play Mr. Elliot, Anne’s cousin and Wentworth’s rival for her heart. Anne has never gotten over Wentworth, but she’s now a spinster, resigned to devoting her life to caring for her sisters and her sister’s children. He’s now wealthy and respectable, in search of a wife of his own, and still furious with Anne for ending their relationship the way she did. Instead, she winks at the camera with her best Jim-from-The Office smirk, as if to say, “Aren’t we all in agreement that this is charming?” We aren’t. Unforgivably, it makes a mess of one of Austen’s most romantic moments, undercutting the iconic letter-writing scene until it’s lost all internal logic and, with it, all emotional power. While it aims for the candy-coated Regency pastiche that Bridgerton made fashionable, it’s too stolidly convinced of its own virtues to revel in the sudsiness that renders Bridgerton so satisfying. Anne Elliot — rich, pretty, and charming — was once madly in love with the penniless young sailor Frederick Wentworth. They were engaged to be married. As an imitation of Netflix’s hit Bridgerton, Persuasion is a pale copy.
Netflix's attempt to modernize the classic novel has led to a disaster of anachronistic dialogue and annoyingly wry glances at the camera.
As soon as Fleabag reached full cultural capacity, every single new show that happened to have a woman in it was branded ‘The new Fleabag’. Back to Life, Run, Mood, I May Destroy You, This Way Up, The Duchess, Everything I Know About Love, Out of Her Mind – all these shows (and plenty of others, including the French remake Mouche) have been tagged with the same lazy label. A bold new voice enters the arena, and then everyone in the world rips it off for years and years afterwards. The closest equivalent I can think of is J Robert Oppenheimer, whose impressive work in the field of fast neutron calculation led directly to the creation of the atomic bomb. It’s the sort of inelegant modernisation that allows one character to describe herself as an empath, and its comedic ambition peaks during a scene where Johnson says with a sigh, “There’s nothing worse than thinking your life is ruined, and then realising you’ve got much further to fall,” before immediately literally falling on her face. Of all the adaptations that Jane Austen’s novel has suffered, this is by far the most ostentatiously Fleabaggy. It isn’t just that Dakota Johnson’s Anne Elliott talks to camera, or even that she seems pathologically inclined to glance at us whenever anything happens whatsoever. Hopefully it isn’t too late to stop her, because the sweeping wave of full-body horror that will overcome her within seconds of pressing play is bound to hurt.
Reviews for Persuasion have said the film is "embarrassing", "torturous" and "one of the worst movies in recent memory". Ouch.
There is updating classic literature to bring it in tune with modern sensibilities, and then there is insulting the viewer’s intelligence. At the very least, there is the constant welcome presence of Johnson, who gamely soldiers through the inspired and sometimes misguided aspects of this production and keeps it more or less on track. But its problems are failures of filmmaking, not necessarily of adaptation: Cracknell, who has until now worked largely in theatre, may make some choices that undermine her aims, but she gives no indication of being careless with the material—her affection for it comes through. It’s such a tone-deaf device, demonstrating so little sensitivity to the delicate precision of Austen’s writing, that you wonder why she didn’t just go the whole hog and bung in some comedy trombone quacks and an audience laugh track. Not for life, but until we could be confident they’d learned the error of their ways and there was minimal risk of reoffending. At no point during Carrie Cracknell’s directorial debut do you ever get the sense that anyone’s actually read Persuasion. For those with even the slightest affinity for Austen’s work, it’s vaguely mortifying to watch – seeing one of her most beautifully moulded protagonists…
The director and writers of Netflix's 'Persuasion' explain the updated language, inclusive casting choices and why Dakota Johnson talks to the camera.
“Those are described as looking similar to like a Facebook news feed,” says Winslow. “There are little hints of that elsewhere in the script as well.” “I wanted the widest possible audience to see themselves in this film,” Cracknell says. “We wanted to capture that spirit of play in our engagement with the material,” Winslow explains. While England in 1817 wasn’t the most diverse place, this onscreen version of “Persuasion” was cast more inclusively. The most glaring alteration to “Persuasion” is the inclusion of modern-day language, including meme-ready Gen Z speak. For Kellynch Hall, majestic home of the Elliot family, the script noted that a particular wall, as Winslow describes it, “looks like Justin Bieber’s Instagram account if it were 1812 and the Regency oil painting filter were on.” “We’re all big fans of the book and pretty reverent to it in the ways we could be,” Winslow adds. While the novel is written in third person, with Austen playing the part of narrator, Cracknell’s “Persuasion” sees Anne (Dakota Johnson) speaking directly to the viewer. “We tried to make sure we were capturing the sensibility in all moments, even when some of the language changed.… “The film is set pretty faithfully in the sumptuous Regency period, but the physical behaviors, attitudes and elements of the aesthetic also lean towards now,” Cracknell notes. In “Persuasion,” a new adaptation of Jane Austen’s final novel made for Netflix, protagonist Anne Elliot speaks directly to the camera, addressing the audience like an old friend. The goal of these noticeable changes is to welcome a fresh batch of viewers into Austen’s world.
Whatever is wrong with this new version of Jane Austen's Persuasion has little to do with its modern makeover.
However, Louisa supposedly makes a romantic connection of her own with Wentworth that feels hurried and unearned in the script from veteran Ron Bass and newcomer Alice Victoria Winslow. Naturally, various obstacles stand in the way of Anne and Wentworth reconciling, beyond her pride and his mistrust. Austen influenced “ Bridget Jones’s Diary,” and now Bridget herself seems to have influenced Dakota Johnson’s thoroughly charming portrayal of Anne Elliot. There’s lots of drinking red wine straight from the bottle, crying in the tub and lying around in bed, narrating her romantic woes with a familiar, self-effacing wit. On the brink of financial ruin because of the impulsive spending habits of the vain Sir Walter Elliot ( Richard E. Grant, in a perfect bit of casting as the preening patriarch), the family must downsize to more suitable digs for the time being. Anne jokes that she’s “thriving,” and clearly she is anything but, but she’s so winning in her state of loss that we can’t help but root for her. Just this year, Andrew Ahn’s “ Fire Island” had the vision to take “ Pride and Prejudice” and turn it into a frothy rom-com in queer paradise.
There have been plenty of Persuasion book adaptations over the years and Jane Austen fans will all have their favorite...
Available to buy on DVD on Amazon (opens in new tab), it stars Ann Firkbank and Bryan Marshall as Anne Elliot and Captain Wentworth. Telling the story across five parts, you can binge-watch your way through to your heart’s content and savor every minute of this romantic tale. So if you’ve already raced through the likes of fellow historical adaptations The Essex Serpent and Life After Life, then you might just be *persuaded* to give one of these a try… Anne’s father and William’s uncle Sir Walter Elliot is played by Richard E. Grant, who is understood to have a friendship with the royals, as revealed by Duchess Camilla’s kind words following the loss of his wife last year. But if you prefer a more faithful depiction of the Jane Austen story, then it might not quite make it to your all-time favorites list. Though the new Netflix Persuasion 2022 movie has an all-star cast and a pretty stand-out storyline to start with, critically it hasn’t been garnering the best reception. From the moment it was announced that Jane Austen’s Persuasion would be getting a brand new adaptation many book fans might have been eager to see how this 19th century tale would be brought to life.
In Persuasion, Dakota Johnson tries to navigate playing an Austen heroine written like she's a cringey mashup of Fleabag and Bridget Jones.
And oddly, this adaptation of Wentworth is arguably the most reduced version of the character in any translation, as Jarvis is directed to play him pining softly, never showing any of the qualities that an almost Admiral might have in regards to having loved and lost Anne. For Austen purists, this version of Persuasion only gives up the goods when it comes to the English locations and the lovely costume design. And in the case of Golding, who is supposed to be the cousin who almost wins her heart, he’s given an original story beat where he admits to Anne that his sole goal is trying to keep his inheritance from her father. And Anne talking to the camera means the movie excessively leans on telling, rather than showing, so we lose a lot of scenes where characters could be speaking to one another. And then there’s a lot of anachronistic dialogue littered throughout the screenplay, such as Anne saying, “He’s a 10. Both are heartbroken, so he goes to sea to nurse his ego while she is stuck in the role of family caretaker, reduced to playing agony aunt to her terrible father and sisters.
As Daktota Johnson appears in the new Jane Austen adaptation, Lorelei Marfil speaks to the film's costume designer about the input the star had on the ...
It is the way to create and enhance nuances in the story which the audience can then relate to visually. The Western duel feel between Wentworth and Mr Elliot when they first meet on the stunning clifftop was the main inspiration for Henry. This includes a well loved but dented top hat we ended up having to give him to wear for the first days of filming. Generally I start the day on set by establishing costumes to make sure that we have got everything in place. That often meant going back to our costume base in London unless we had managed to set up a costume space near the location. The fittings were exciting and full on with lots of garments to develop. It was a wonderful opportunity to take artistic license - my favourite garment for Lady Russel is the golden pelisse she wears in the opening scenes. I do very simple sketches and work with the cutter to achieve the final cuts of garments during fittings. In particular there was a riding hat which seemed too much at the fitting stage but Dakota felt it was right once we were at the location. The evolving mood boards are used for communication with the director, the production designer and the cinematographer. Dakota was generous with her time and her input was vital. And although reviews have been, um, varied, there’s no denying the film is sumptuous to look at. We had precious little time on Persuasion and had just nine weeks of prep before we started filming.
Dakota Johnson's enigmatic quality is her greatest strength as an actress; "Persuasion" and the recent "Cha Cha Real Smooth" fail to lean into it.
There isn’t much humor to “The Lost Daughter” — perhaps only the sort eliciting a bitter chuckle — but the film stands as proof of Johnson’s versatility. The age difference between Domino and Andrew is far from egregious, but it contributes to a gap in maturity. The film’s also-vacationing protagonist, a divorced professor named Leda (Olivia Colman), is reminded of her own struggles as a young mother while observing Nina. The women form an unusual bond over this connection. This enigmatic quality helped Johnson avoid being pigeonholed after her breakout role in “ Fifty Shades of Grey.” Filmmakers from Luca Guadagnino to Maggie Gyllenhaal have cast Johnson in projects that, in theory, ask her to suggest hidden depths that reveal themselves over the course of the films. Johnson leads “Persuasion,” the new Jane Austen adaptation widely seen as veering into “ Fleabag” territory. Does she mean what she says, or is she masking the truth?
As fans dig into Netflix's latest period film, Persuasion, starring Dakota Johnson as Jane Austen's Anne Elliot, The Independent has taken the opportunity ...
The imposing manor is an English Heritage site and open to the public free of charge. The house is currently the home of Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 7th Marquess of Salisbury but is open to visitors from 19 May – 29 August while the park and gardens are open until 25 September. In Pride and Prejudice (2005), Chatsworth was used as Pemberley, the residence of Mr Darcy. It is believed that Jane Austen may have based her idea of Pemberley on Chatsworth House and written the novel while in nearby Bakewell. In reality, the Derbyshire Dales residence is home to the Devonshire family, and has been passed down through 16 generations. Wollaton was chosen because it resembles Mentmore Towers in Buckinghamshire, which was used in the first Chistopher Nolan film, Batman Begins, during which Wayne Manor is burnt to the ground. Highclere Castle in Hampshire might be the most iconic stately home in British popular culture thanks to its longtime usage in the Downton Abbey series and its subsequent films. In reality, the building houses The Wernher Collection, an art collection amassed by the 19th-century businessman, Sir Julius Wernher, boasting 700 works of art from the Renaissance, Dutch Old Masters and French tapestries.
Persuasion is an adaptation of Jane Austen's classic novel of the same name and it seems that Austen fans all had the same complaint about the film's take ...
As the official synopsis from Netflix reads: "Living with her snobby family on the brink of bankruptcy, Anne Elliot is an unconforming woman with modern sensibilities. Go in less purist & judgmental maybe," one fan of the new version said. Another echoed this, writing; "I'm not an Austen purist, am game for re-interpretations, but the sassy version of Anne Elliot completely misses the mark and sinks the story.