The various film versions of Jane Austen’s Emma offer fascinating insights into the
broader nature of film adaptation. Audiences tend to categorize films based on
genre, first and foremost. And by incorporating the expected conventions,
filmmakers can make their product more marketable. Austen adaptations tend to
be period pieces—films that strive to capture the look and feel of certain time
period. And although this can make for tempting Oscar-bait, it is not always
accessible to the masses. Thus, film iterations of Emma typically emphasize the romantic and comedic aspects of
Austen’s novel—comfortably placing their films within the extremely marketable
(and inexplicably popular) romantic comedy.
This seems like a pretty solid game plan for an adaptation
attempt. Austen’s novel has humor and satire, drama and romance, and the
dialogue (though perhaps insufferable by today’s standards) is certainly
distinctive of her time. What is curious, then, is why so many attempts have
been made—seemly upon the assumption that all the previous attempts were
somehow lacking.
Interestingly, the novel has been adapted for film in a
feature-length format, as well for television, with a more episodic treatment.
Personally I find that the episodic format more accurately captures the
“everyday life” aspect of Austen’s novel, allowing us to spend a little more
time to “live with” the people of Highbury, as Emma does. I cannot say for
certain whether it succeeds or not, since we did not screen them in class;
however, I would expect that having more time to live with Emma would form a
better equivalence of meaning with both the complex social interactions and the
sprawling character arc that Austen writes for Emma.
With that being said, more streamlined feature-length
adaptations emphasize the “big picture” plotline, which one could argue is
equally important. To be honest, it is not that complicated of a story, and
audiences are much more likely to invest two hours of their time rather than
several evenings.
The two feature length version of Emma that we watched in
class, Emma (1996) and Clueless (1995), offer different insights into Austen’s
novel. Both are good films in their own right; it is difficult to compare them
in any meaningful way, except by their relation to the novel. The filmmakers
strove to emphasize different aspect of the source text, and in this regard, I think
each was successful.
Emma, staring Gywneth
Paltrow, emphasizes the look and feel of Austen’s era, most especially through
the characters’ speech. Some of the dialogue is borrowed directly from the
text. It streamlines the story and emphasizes the romantic and comedic aspects
(the tagline is “Cupid is armed and dangerous!”) to make it more accessible to
modern audiences, while still firmly rooted in the visual and linguistic setting.
While the film does a good job of showing us what the period “looked” like, it
does help us much with understanding it. Austen’s subtle social criticisms of
Highbury’s elite are largely glazed over. It focuses the attention of Emma’s
character and her various flaws and virtues, and the lower class is almost never
shown.
![]() |
"Cupid is armed and dangerous!" |
![]() |
Note the distinctive period costumes. |
![]() |
Again, quite distinctive. It's definitely the 90's. |
Film theorist William Galperin claims that this attention to
the world around Emma/Cher is in fact more faithful to Austen than the numerous
other adaptions. This may be true, but I still prefer to say that the film simply
emphasizes that aspect of the text better than some others. Each adaptation gives
us new ways of thinking about the text. It is an excellent example of the
choices filmmakers face when producing an adaptation, and how not all of their approaches
are necessarily as bad as they sound.
I hadn't considered the social dynamic that is shown on either film although now that I think about it, I agree with you. This hits on a point of equivalence of meaning, which is relatively close when you look at the critique of the upper class, social dynamic, and satire of the novel and Clueless.
ReplyDeleteGreat way to compare the world of Austen to the world of *Clueless* -- and vice versa! You show such helpful parallel images of the "period costumes." It makes me think that *Clueless* could be released today and have a similar effect in the way it satirizes the 1990s.
ReplyDelete