Brideshead Might be Close to Revisitation
Filed under: Drama, Independent, Deals, Remakes and Sequels, Cinematical Indie
The works of snarky author Evelyn Waugh are no stranger to cinematic adaptation, although his writing rarely gets big-screen love like William Shakespeare or Jane Austen. Perhaps it is because his novels are rife with dark humor, rather than heart-wrenching drama or light romance. The last to hit the screen was Vile Bodies in 2003, which became Stephen Fry's Bright Young Things. However, beyond the satire, Waugh also had controversial words to spare on religion. In fact, his novel Brideshead Revisited was considered by George Orwell to be untenable.Even without the defense of his fellow English writer, Brideshead gets its share of attention. It was made into a television miniseries in 1981, and director Julian Jarrold is now trying to get a big-screen version off the ground. The project, which has been in development for years, is set to start shooting this spring, although the cast has not yet been confirmed. (Paul Bettany and Jennifer Connelly were previously attached.) Although Jarrold is best known for his recent film, Kinky Boots, he's no stranger to literary adaptations. For television, he's directed classics ranging from Charles Dickens' Great Expectations to Fyodor Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment.
The screenplay comes from Bridget Jones screenwriter Andrew Davies and Last King of Scotland scribe, Jeremy Brock, which bodes doubly well for the film. Brideshead tells the story of Charles Ryder. At Oxford, he strikes up a close friendship with Lord Sebastian Flyte and joins him on the family estate. There, he falls for Sebastian's sister while experiencing the collide of families, politics and religion. It'll be a particularly relevant film to today's society ... if things continue as planned.










Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
2-01-2007 @ 4:25PM
Martha Fischer said...
Allow me the first one to say "NOOOO! TERRIBLE IDEA!" Thank you.
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2-01-2007 @ 5:18PM
Cath said...
The TV miniseries was so well done and so thorough and faithful an adaptation, I don't see how any film could stand the comparison. With Jeremy Irons in the lead role, the wonderful Anthony Andrews as Lord Sebastian and Simon Jones as Bridey, it's hard to see the current crop of Britain's finest holding a candle to their predecessors.
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2-02-2007 @ 10:27AM
Liz Newcomb said...
I will second Martha's "NOOO!" with my own. NOOO! The miniseries (or maxi-series, really, because I think it must have been 12-hours long) was so fantastic and well-done that any shorter version will have to leave out too much to be interesting. There are plenty of other great books to bring to the big screen!
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