The Muddy Hems and Misty Moors: Why Joe Wright’s Pride & Prejudice (2005) Still Bewitches Us
However, the film’s stylistic choices come at a cost that purists have rightly noted. Austen’s sharp, surgical irony is often softened. The satirical edges of characters like Mr. Collins and Lady Catherine de Bourgh are blunted; they become less absurd and more simply annoying. Moreover, the film’s breakneck pace in the final act—compressing Elizabeth’s visit to Pemberley and the Lydia crisis into a montage—sacrifices some of the novel’s narrative logic. Most controversially, the film ends not with the wedding, but with a candlelit, moonlit scene of Darcy whispering “Mrs. Darcy” to Elizabeth on a balcony, a Hollywood-style romantic closure that Austen would never have written. Yet, this very anachronism reveals the film’s thesis: it is less concerned with the social contract of marriage than with the private ecstasy of mutual recognition. pride and prejudice 2005
👇 Drop a 🖐️ if you’ve rewatched this more times than you can count. The Muddy Hems and Misty Moors: Why Joe