Ranking Relationships in SENSE AND SENSIBILITY

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  • čas přidán 8. 04. 2024
  • If you’re struggling, consider therapy with our sponsor BetterHelp. Go to betterhelp.com/cinematherapy for a 10% discount on your first month of therapy with a licensed professional specific to your needs.
    How do you tell the difference between infatuation and love?
    Licensed therapist Jonathan Decker and filmmaker Alan Seawright are taking a look at the movie adaptation of Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility. Jonathan is ranking the couples from least healthy to most sumptuous. Yes, most sumptuous. The contenders are Elinor and Edward, Marianne and Willoughby, and Marianne and Brandon. They talk about the qualities to look for in love and a partner, and they get a little flustered about how hot everyone is.
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    Written by: Megan Seawright, Jonathan Decker, and Alan Seawright
    Produced by: Jonathan Decker, Megan Seawright, Alan Seawright, and Corinne Demyanovich
    Edited by: Emily Colton
    Director of Photography: Bradley Olsen
    English Transcription by: Anna Preis
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  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @CinemaTherapyShow
    @CinemaTherapyShow  Před měsícem +65

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    • @researcherchameleon4602
      @researcherchameleon4602 Před 29 dny +2

      What about “City Lights”, the Charlie Chaplin film that was used as a template for a Futurama episode, “Stench and Stenchability”

    • @21700r
      @21700r Před 29 dny +86

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      @mykodibear17 Před 29 dny +60

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    • @giovananerib
      @giovananerib Před 29 dny

      Thank u!!!

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  • @trinaq
    @trinaq Před 29 dny +3227

    Move over, Mr D'Arcy, Colonel Brandon is THE dishest, kindest Austen male lead. Darcy may walk through a hazy field for you, but Brandon would carry you through a rainstorm.

    • @CinemaTherapyShow
      @CinemaTherapyShow  Před 29 dny +352

      Heck yes!

    • @juliadriscoll9210
      @juliadriscoll9210 Před 29 dny +174

      Agree when comparing movies. He's less delicious in the book. Good still, but not peak. Darcy wins in Austen's novels.

    • @WahleeUT
      @WahleeUT Před 29 dny +132

      Nah, Henry Tilney is the best Austen hero, bar none. He's also incredibly kind, likes to read novels, is willing to defy his father to do what is right, and I do love a man who can turn a perfectly snarky phrase. . .

    • @wellhellothere6347
      @wellhellothere6347 Před 29 dny +39

      @@WahleeUT Agree 100%. But this was about Sense and Sensibility. IN the novels though, Henry Tilney is hands down the best.

    • @wellhellothere6347
      @wellhellothere6347 Před 29 dny +22

      @@juliadriscoll9210 I disagree. Even when comparing the movies, Henry Tilney is the winner by far.

  • @1tagardina612
    @1tagardina612 Před 29 dny +1903

    Not to forget, in the book Willoughby gets another lady pregnant, Jane Austen made sure we hate him 😂

    • @crystalward1444
      @crystalward1444 Před 29 dny +233

      It happens in the film too. In he book Brandon challenges him to a dual and kicks his a$$ even while sparing it.

    • @laurathompson1652
      @laurathompson1652 Před 29 dny +200

      I believe it was Brandon's ward who Willoughby got pregnant - then surprise surprise, Willoughby becomes an absent father. He's also a gold digger. The reason he ghosted Marianne was that she was considered poor and the other woman was rich.

    • @margaretschaufele6502
      @margaretschaufele6502 Před 29 dny +106

      Another sign of Brandon's kindness, he blames the Willoughby, not his poor ward.

    • @gracehowell.
      @gracehowell. Před 29 dny +102

      Not a lady; a 15 year old, who might've been as young as 14 when he got her pregnant. An illegitimate girl, not a lady of means, either.

    • @souledout08
      @souledout08 Před 29 dny +20

      @@gracehowell. I don't think OP was considering formal titles - a lot of people use 'lady' interchangeably with 'gal' 'woman' 'girl' 'dudette'... all sorts of options!

  • @aprilkendell6601
    @aprilkendell6601 Před 27 dny +483

    In Alan Rickman's diaries, he wrote how they filmed several character development scenes to show Col. Brandon slowly falling in love with Marianne due to their age gap. Those scenes got cut so it looks like Col. Brandon just fell for her quickly. Alan Rickman wrote how disappointed he was in how his character turned out on film.

    • @owl4260
      @owl4260 Před 25 dny +51

      Interesting! I didn't know that. Makes total sense that he would have wanted it another way...

    • @AgnesPelletier
      @AgnesPelletier Před 25 dny +16

      makes so much sense! I always preferred 2008 Brandon, and I wish this one would have shown more of him.

    • @LoveCrumb
      @LoveCrumb Před 24 dny +48

      You know, I LOVE this movie, but that has always been my one criticism of it. Gosh, I would have loved to have seen those extra scenes.

    • @Girl-rj3qe
      @Girl-rj3qe Před 23 dny +33

      I think the movie is already 2 hours long, so they had to cut some scenes. Wish they added just one more Marianne and Brandon scene so I could be more strongly attached to them as a couple. I think they could cut the scene where Brandon tells Elinor about the place he has available for Edward (to have space for another Marianne and Brandon scene) since this is already implied in the scene of Elinor telling Edward about the same place.

    • @naturallyamused
      @naturallyamused Před 19 dny +12

      I would've really liked this movie more if they were included! My take away was that he was an old man taken by a young pretty girl, and it did not sit with me well. She also was always snubbing him, so what in the world did he even see in her, except her looks?

  • @MortMe0430
    @MortMe0430 Před 29 dny +545

    A long time ago, I saw someone comment a little detail about Willoughby vs Brandon that show something about their characters: Willoughby just takes the flowers he brings Marianne from a neighbor field on his way, while Brandon offers carefully cultivated and tended flowers from his own greenhouse. Marianne initially preferred wildflowers for their romanticism, but Brandon's offering shows care and effort. Just an insightful little grace note.

    • @360shadowmoon
      @360shadowmoon Před 28 dny +48

      I noticed this, too! It reminds me of how when I was younger and first started dating, I used to be easily impressed by any sort of romantic attention/flirtation a guy directed at me - even if it was just a text message or an Instagram like. It was after a pattern of neglectful and inconsistent behavior that I would then look back at the initial texts, last-minute dates, etc. and realize that all those "romantic gestures" were actually very unimpressive and lacked effort. Let's just say I relate a lot to Marianne :p

    • @jaimicottrill2831
      @jaimicottrill2831 Před 25 dny +2

      Great point!

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 Před 17 dny +22

      It's the difference between a guy buying a birthday card for you 10 minutes before he stops by to pick you up for a date, and a guy making a hand-made birthday card over a weekend and mailing it to you the day before the date.

    • @jaimicottrill2831
      @jaimicottrill2831 Před 16 dny +6

      @@rikk319 Great analogy!

  • @lacys340
    @lacys340 Před 29 dny +1249

    You forgot to highlight how relaxed Maryanne is in that last scene when Brandon said he was leaving. He has been so consistent she has no fear he's going to run off like Whilouby did.

    • @Molly_1123
      @Molly_1123 Před 29 dny +133

      Just the slightest touch of anticipating missing him. His warm smile when he takes that in = gold

    • @Persewna4
      @Persewna4 Před 29 dny +119

      Yes! Like, he knows he can tease her a little by saying it's a "secret" and she understands that he's not actually keeping things from her, because there is trust between them.

    • @deliriumzer0
      @deliriumzer0 Před 29 dny +52

      omg SO much this. She has this tiiiiny bit of nervousness but it eases immediately when she remembers who this is, and who he isn't, lol. It's such a lovely moment of contrast showing that she'll be so much happier with him.

    • @miriamrobarts
      @miriamrobarts Před 29 dny +29

      She's smart enough to ask & make sure he's coming back this time, too. She doesn't want to be left waiting around for a guy again.

  • @KatinkaMaika
    @KatinkaMaika Před 29 dny +950

    I always felt Elinor was not "panic crying from joy" but feeling incredible relief. All her life she held back her emotions and now for the first time she feels safe to show then, to just let them out. When I watch the film, my stomach is in knots because of her, I feel her tension so much, and I always cry so hard with her...

    • @evafischer6849
      @evafischer6849 Před 29 dny +69

      Yes!! She had been stuffing everything she was feeling deep down inside and the dam finally broke. That shallow sobbing is something else, she nailed it!

    • @amandalarissavieira7428
      @amandalarissavieira7428 Před 29 dny +18

      OMG, you hit the nail with this take. Absolutely true to character

    • @choyna
      @choyna Před 29 dny +40

      This is it, the correct take. I don’t find the scene haha funny at all, it’s emotional and cathartic and sweet (and even the clip made me cry like a baby).

    • @Crouteceleste
      @Crouteceleste Před 29 dny +27

      Yeah, I've cried like this before, it comes from locking down your feelings so long you can't contain them anymore

    • @lucybarrington4634
      @lucybarrington4634 Před 29 dny +13

      @@choyna I think some people laugh because we recognize that reaction of relief crying.
      I didn’t laugh the first time, I cried with her, but on other viewing I laughed because of the relief.

  • @fallingstar9643
    @fallingstar9643 Před 29 dny +143

    "Give me an occupation, Miss Dashwood, or I shall run mad."
    Definitely using that line next time I don't know how to help someone.

    • @CornedBee
      @CornedBee Před 16 dny +9

      But not to the person you want to help. It just puts more pressure on them when they're already in a bad place anyway.

  • @PetWessman
    @PetWessman Před 29 dny +127

    Elinor’s loud almost-scream-crying outburst is one of the most excellent unexpected acting/directing choices I’ve ever seen. The audience is caught just as off-guard as Hugh Grant was, and it makes so much sense for Elinor’s character. And then it’s followed with Emma Thompson’s blissfully smiling face- chef’s kiss

  • @caiti-christi
    @caiti-christi Před 29 dny +1065

    Let's also give Emma Thompson her flowers for being the writer who ADAPTED THIS SCREENPLAY 😍 highly recommend looking for a secondhand copy of the book with her original screenplay and diaries while making the film. Also yes -- Emma's first husband cheated on her, she met Greg Wise making this film I believe, they married several years later, and are still married today❤

    • @PillowHairBlog
      @PillowHairBlog Před 29 dny +115

      They did better than flowers, they gave her an Oscar for Best ScreenPlay and Best Actress. Her speech is hilarious!

    • @beverlykandraceffinger3764
      @beverlykandraceffinger3764 Před 29 dny +33

      Yes...Emma Thompson, you're an amazing woman. Such a fine screenplay adaptation, and so well acted in your role.

    • @ThaliaVitalis
      @ThaliaVitalis Před 29 dny +10

      Wait what there is a book?? 😮❤😱🤩

    • @laurenmendoza4371
      @laurenmendoza4371 Před 29 dny +36

      If memory serves correctly, they, Emma and Greg, started dating while still on set. In the scene where he is making fun of their relatives on the picnic, he is definitely flirting with Emma and she’s enjoying it. At least I picked up on that lol😅

    • @CM-pf1xc
      @CM-pf1xc Před 29 dny +15

      @@laurenmendoza4371omg 100% 😂😂😂 it’s hilarious because it’s like shoot I’m supposed to be into Marianne 😂

  • @hannahpatwell5435
    @hannahpatwell5435 Před 29 dny +1554

    While Brandon is the better choice, one of the reasons that Marianne says no at first is completely valid. She wants someone her own age and I can't fault her for that. He's got a 20 year gap on her, I would be too.

    • @msk-qp6fn
      @msk-qp6fn Před 29 dny +258

      This! I did like the colonel a lot as a teen and saw him as the smart choice but the age gap did rub me off the bit wrong. Still does to a degree.

    • @trinaq
      @trinaq Před 29 dny +230

      Agreed, Marianne was only about 17 in the original book, and it was understandable why she would want someone younger. It was only after Brandon took care of her, and proved his loyalty, that she fell for him, age be darned.

    • @lyneemcadams8120
      @lyneemcadams8120 Před 29 dny +147

      I agree! I love how Marianne loves with reckless abandon. What a wonderful contrast to her sister’s ultra guarded personality. I’ve always believed that Willoughby really did love Marianne, just not more than his need for status and his way of life. I think he was experiencing more than just embarrassment at the party, but also shame and a bit of his own heart breaking.
      I agree that Colonel Brandon was by far the best catch here, and I also agree with you that it is completely understandable that Marianne didn’t see him in this way for a long time.

    • @moon83star30
      @moon83star30 Před 29 dny +33

      Absolutely. That really was it. The other guy was younger, but not mature.

    • @hannahpatwell5435
      @hannahpatwell5435 Před 29 dny

      @@msk-qp6fn Same!

  • @spique32
    @spique32 Před 28 dny +77

    You have to hand it to Austen for writing men who do what they can for the woman they love, without expectation of anything in return, for both Brandon and Darcy. Darcy in P&P didn't grow to impress Lizzy, but because he respected her and listened to her criticism, and agreed that he could indeed improve, regardless of Lizzy in his life.

    • @jenni5104
      @jenni5104 Před 5 dny +1

      Mr Knightley is cut from the same cloth.

  • @user-kz6in8qk2h
    @user-kz6in8qk2h Před 29 dny +207

    “He is the polar opposite of a nice guy. He is a good man.” ::SCREAMING::
    Casting Alan Rickman as Colonel Brandon in “Sense and Sensibility” (1995) = Casting Gabriel Byrne as Professor Bhaer in “Little Women” (1994). The 1990s *knew* how to show us that the “also-ran” is the real prize 😊.

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 Před 17 dny +8

      It's funny how terms change over time. The original meaning of "nice guys finish last" was supposed to mean a nice guy was the stable, kind, marriage-material guy but wasn't what women really wanted. Now the term "nice guy" means the manosphere neckbeard contrarian who is neither marriage material nor the alpha/sigma/whatever dumbass term those kinda clueless guys are making up these days about themselves.

    • @Era515
      @Era515 Před 15 dny +4

      Makes me think also of the character Gabriel Oak in Far from the Madding Crowd.

    • @Ganychan
      @Ganychan Před 12 dny

      Yes, both Baer and Brandon opened up the possibility in my young brain that older men are the way to go 😂

    • @Silvermouse27
      @Silvermouse27 Před 7 dny +3

      Ooh yes, professor Bhaer! I had SUCH a crush on him! Gabriel Byrne has a type though - he was great in Man in the Iron Mask as well

  • @a35362
    @a35362 Před 29 dny +411

    In the commentary track for this movie, Emma Thompson mentions how we see how both Edward and Colonel Brandon pay attention to the youngest daughter Margaret, who is interested in a beautiful old atlas and who plays at being an adventurer. Both men are kind enough to pay attention to her and to take her questions seriously. She said this was a quick way to establish that they are good men of good character. She said the trouble with Jane Austen is that male characters are introduced, and then they go away for a while, and we don't know what's going on with them except indirectly, so it's important to give us a sense of who they are quickly before they disappear.

    • @wrathika
      @wrathika Před 29 dny +41

      I miss the age of commentary tracks and extras

    • @dpstitches
      @dpstitches Před 26 dny +9

      Thanks for reminding me of this. It's been too long since I watched the commentary.

  • @reinrose82
    @reinrose82 Před 29 dny +688

    17:19 Another great thing about her choice in that scene was that Emma didn’t share it. Hugh Grant said in an interview about this film that Emma gave nothing away in rehearsal, so didn’t burst out weeping tilling cameras were actually rolling, so his surprise there is genuine.

    • @rubygracemoseley8144
      @rubygracemoseley8144 Před 29 dny +43

      That’s awesome and makes this scene even better! 😭💖

    • @partipatil
      @partipatil Před 28 dny +24

      Also said he hated that she cried like that. He wanted her to stop, she said she wasn't going to, and he just went with it.

    • @isabelguzmanmiranda5025
      @isabelguzmanmiranda5025 Před 27 dny +26

      @@partipatil Oh, sorry for him because it must have been terribly awkward and some men can't stand seeing women cry (in the good sense, as they suffer when they see women crying)... but that was in the book. Elinor spends the whole book controlling her actions while heartbroken because she's in love with an engaged man. The moment she's allowed to, she collapses.
      Austen's point throughout the novel is that we all have feelings, but that we need to control our actions, because letting our feeligs govern our actions without any sort of exertion will end up badly.

  • @jenniferwatson2107
    @jenniferwatson2107 Před 29 dny +132

    I just heard Ellie Dashwood in a CZcams short talking about how TIME is such an important theme in Austen’s works. It’s so important to give people time to show their true character before dedicating your life to them in marriage.

  • @natcommon
    @natcommon Před 29 dny +150

    Col. Brandon is the most underrated Austen male love interest. He is my favorite and I'm so glad you showcased that. Also, the way Alan Rickman delivers his lines are just beautiful and heartbreaking.

    • @Girl-rj3qe
      @Girl-rj3qe Před 29 dny +2

      I don't think so, I think it's Henry Tilney from Northanger Abbey or Frederick Wentworth from Persuasion. Especially after this adaptation was shown.

    • @jenniedarling3710
      @jenniedarling3710 Před 15 dny +1

      ​@@Girl-rj3qeagreed Mr Tilney is very unrated.

  • @VengefulPurity
    @VengefulPurity Před 29 dny +756

    “The air is full of spices.” Just that one line alone made me swoon when I was a kid 😍 Alan Rickman’s voice was something else.

    • @gregariagirl
      @gregariagirl Před 29 dny +11

      YES! The one line my family quotes consistently from this movie!

    • @lauranoble9578
      @lauranoble9578 Před 29 dny +4

      YES!

    • @celestjujube8
      @celestjujube8 Před 29 dny +22

      The voice is awesome but the man that goes with it was incomparable! We will "Always" miss him, his talent, his personality and yes, his handsomness!

    • @cc1k435
      @cc1k435 Před 26 dny +9

      A great line! My favorite was always, "Give me an occupation...or I shall run mad," which I just realized how often I have quoted in my life to people who don't know this movie. 😂

    • @kalonicamcquesten692
      @kalonicamcquesten692 Před 5 dny

      Tempest

  • @trinaq
    @trinaq Před 29 dny +961

    Brandon may not have been as charming or dashing as Willoughby, but his persistent kindness and patience eventually won Marianne over. Also, Alan Rickman filmed the wedding scene first, joking that he got married before even saying a line.

    • @Liz66.
      @Liz66. Před 29 dny +24

      As someone who got won over by a similar person, that's completely true.

    • @msk-qp6fn
      @msk-qp6fn Před 29 dny +17

      The one eek factor is the age gap

    • @melanierenz1517
      @melanierenz1517 Před 29 dny +8

      Not in that time

    • @Persewna4
      @Persewna4 Před 29 dny +39

      ​@@msk-qp6fn In the film, they are both adults, and Brandon is shown to be respectful of Marianne's choices. If anything, the age gap serves the story, as it demonstrates Marianne's change in values: when before, she sought out someone with her same youthful energy, that petson was proven to be immature and uncertain. She then falls for and ultimately weds Brandon, who, because he is older, has more experience, and is mature and solid in who he is. He shows to Marianne that, while he may not share that same youthful exuberance, he is stable and consistent, because he has had more time to establish himself.

    • @elvinfp
      @elvinfp Před 29 dny +13

      @@msk-qp6fn It seems to work for them. I think as long as both people are adults, have shared values, are attracted to each other, and - maybe most importantly - hold respect for each other, an age gap doesn't mean much in the end. Imo, it entirely depends on how well a couple clicks and how balanced the relationship is. I've found that a lot of that "eek" is based on assumption and bias, and if you personally get to know an actually happy, functional couple with an age gap, it becomes harder to judge.

  • @ShelbySmith-ch4qr
    @ShelbySmith-ch4qr Před 29 dny +40

    In the book it was even more so. He does so much for Eleanor just because of their friendship. Starting from Marianne’s heart break. He offers Edward a home and a job just because Eleanor had a high opinion of him. It was the most surprising thing I found in the book. So rare and delightful.

  • @Jannah1
    @Jannah1 Před 25 dny +6

    In defense of Edward Ferrars, “my fiancée left me for my older brother, but I’ve not loved her for years anyway,” is an awkward thing to say in any time and place.

    • @MissLizaMay
      @MissLizaMay Před 4 dny

      * younger brother who got my inheritance

    • @Jannah1
      @Jannah1 Před 4 dny

      You’re right. It’s been years since I reread S&S, so I got mixed up. Sorry!

  • @ShelbySmith-ch4qr
    @ShelbySmith-ch4qr Před 29 dny +221

    The only thing I truly miss from the film is the fantastic pure friendship between Eleanor and Brandon. So rare.

    • @eski5084
      @eski5084 Před 29 dny +36

      when i got the notification i was like ‘omg please talk about best friends elinor and brandon’. sitting in a room and commiserating and listening to each other is true friendship

    • @lauraschoenborn3544
      @lauraschoenborn3544 Před 29 dny +52

      "Give me an occupation, or I shall go mad." And she immediately finds something for him to do. True friendship, the. way he was able to say that, and the way she does it.

  • @HannahCPageUK
    @HannahCPageUK Před 29 dny +220

    I really miss Alan Rickman too. Not only was he incredibly talented and full of presence, he was such a kind, decent, funny yet gentle, intelligent yet humble man. He suits portraying Col. Brandon so well because they shared such strikingly similar qualities.

    • @lindamarshall3485
      @lindamarshall3485 Před 27 dny +16

      I have a friend who knew him when they were all young and in the theatre world in London in the 70s. She said he really was a nice guy.

    • @meganrogers3571
      @meganrogers3571 Před 19 dny +5

      One of my college classmates briefly met him when we were studying in London-even in such a short interaction, he was a good guy.

  • @binnytheearthhero
    @binnytheearthhero Před 28 dny +42

    THE RICKMAN CARELESS WHISPER EDIT omg 10/10

    • @WhatsAModderU
      @WhatsAModderU Před 3 dny

      Rickman is who made Snape from unlikable antihero into served with a side of breakfast potatoes please. 😍

  • @wonhur885
    @wonhur885 Před 27 dny +236

    Fascinating video, Let's stop taking relationship and family for granted. I have battled depression since my wife left me. I have tried all I can to make her see that I love her with everything I am made of but she has insisted on leaving. This has made me so empty, and I do not know what to do. I can barely function properly at work. I am frustrated and miserable. I really miss her.

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      @josephregland Před 27 dny

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      @wonhur885 Před 27 dny

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  • @laurenfrey873
    @laurenfrey873 Před 29 dny +263

    I love Elinor and Marianne’s relationship too. When Elinor snaps and lays everything out for Marianne and how she’s has to deal with Lucy (who is a horrible person, I loathe her), like… Marianne needed to hear that. She was young and naive and had her heart broken, true, but she was also selfish, everything was about her and her own suffering. But then when Marianne is sick and close to death, Elinor breaks down and cries, ugh, it gets me every time.

    • @baboo3507
      @baboo3507 Před 29 dny +13

      oh thank god someone else who can’t stand lucy 😭 i’m reading the book and haven’t gotten to when lucy is introduced, but in the movie she comes off as cocky and irritates me so much

    • @ginapiroli6136
      @ginapiroli6136 Před 29 dny +22

      On the DVD commentary, Emma Thompson has sympathy for Lucy. She's in even a worse situation than Elinor and Marianne, she's desperate so that's why she goes after Edward. In the epilog of the book, she wins over all the snobby relatives, including her mother in law and makes it to ton of society. Both of which Edward and Elinor never wanted. So she enabled everyone's happiness, including her own.

    • @Girl-rj3qe
      @Girl-rj3qe Před 29 dny +3

      @@ginapiroli6136 she's such a good person with a great heart. Trivia: the actress who played Lucy was for a time married to Trevor Nunn (director of the original staging of the 1985 Les Miserables musical as well as the lyricist for the Memory song from Cats).

    • @laurenfrey873
      @laurenfrey873 Před 28 dny +8

      @@ginapiroli6136 it’s been a while since I’ve listened to the audio commentary, I’ll have to do that again soon. My takeaway is that she wanted wealth and privilege, why would she almost immediately decide to marry Robert if she loved Edward just because Robert was the one who has his family’s wealth? And the cynical part of me saw her winning the family over as “see, I’m just as shallow and materialistic as the rest of you.” I get that money was a huge factor for everyone especially in that era, and in this movie, so many conversations circled around money. And I understand not wanting to be destitute and fearing it, especially as a single woman, I do agree Lucy was doing what she felt was necessary for her survival. But I still found her manipulative and conniving. She knew good and well that her words to Elinor about Edward were hurtful, and that Elinor was competition. Lucy (thought) she had the upper hand and flaunted it to Elinor at every single opportunity she saw.

    • @isabelguzmanmiranda5025
      @isabelguzmanmiranda5025 Před 27 dny +2

      @@baboo3507 Wait until you read all about her in the book :-)

  • @AlectoWildfire
    @AlectoWildfire Před 29 dny +98

    I love that you can see throughout the film the Brandon is as passionate and fierce as Marianne, only years of grief made him subdued and careful. But deep down, you can still see the young man who can love as madly as Marianne

  • @missMagbeth
    @missMagbeth Před 29 dny +18

    Two grown men enjoying and discussing this movie is something my far in the past 19y/o self have never dreamed of. I needed this😂

  • @Kitastrophic
    @Kitastrophic Před 23 dny +8

    Also, the piano is really special, because Brandon bought it specifically to fit Maryanne’s sitting room, meaning that even if she chooses not to marry him, he still wants her to be happy and have a piano. It’s really beautiful. It’s a love based in support of her dreams and interests.

  • @JS19-60
    @JS19-60 Před 29 dny +169

    „I like women. I think.“ The power of Alan Rickman compels thee. My favourite actor and greatest inspiration.

    • @obliviousred
      @obliviousred Před 27 dny +13

      Alan Rickman is a worthy bisexual awakening!

    • @MSN_63
      @MSN_63 Před 27 dny +8

      It definitely is the voice!

    • @JS19-60
      @JS19-60 Před 27 dny +4

      @@MSN_63 I love his voice. Have you listened to the audiobook of Thomas Hardys „return of the native“? That is so good…🥰

    • @JS19-60
      @JS19-60 Před 27 dny +5

      @@obliviousredyeah, if I was a guy he’d definitely still be my favourite. i found it funny how they said like „oh he played Snape, the sheriff of Nottingham, hans gruber…all those nasty slimy characters, but in S&S he’s finally sexy!“ uh… I don’t know, guys… I think his „slimy“ characters are just as sexy. Snape in that cloak, Hans Gruber…or even Judge Turpin from Sweeney Todd in those frickin gold pants…

    • @AbigailKimballmrscrazycatman
      @AbigailKimballmrscrazycatman Před 10 dny

      Best moment of commentary.

  • @kndacus
    @kndacus Před 29 dny +388

    Fun fact: when this movie was made, Emma Thompson was still married to or in the process of getting divorced from Kenneth Branagh. She and Greg Wise, who most likely started their relationship while making this film, didn't actually get married until nearly a decade later.

    • @PeacockFeatherBlue
      @PeacockFeatherBlue Před 29 dny +52

      Even more fun fact: A fortune teller told Greg Wise he'd meet his wife on his next movie. He first went out with Kate Winslet, thinking that would be her.

    • @aine.no23
      @aine.no23 Před 29 dny +48

      Wasn't she getting divorced from Branagh because he cheated on her with Helena Bonham Carter?

    • @kndacus
      @kndacus Před 29 dny +27

      @@aine.no23 If I remember correctly, yes, he and HBC started an affair while making Frankenstein.

    • @tearsofawaterfall2656
      @tearsofawaterfall2656 Před 29 dny +17

      @@aine.no23yeah so allegedly when they were both filming harry potter, they had to make sure they were never on set on the same days

    • @arabellamileham9978
      @arabellamileham9978 Před 29 dny +32

      ​@@PeacockFeatherBlue it was Kate Winslet who noticed the sparks between Emma Thompson, who was recovering from a broken heart after Kenneth Branagh's affair with Helena Bonham-Carter, and Greg Wise and suggested they date instead..

  • @maloreally
    @maloreally Před 29 dny +27

    One of my favorite things about the first conversation with Willoughby is that Emma Thompson included sonnet 116 as Marianne’s favorite in the script. The constancy described in the sonnet is what she desires, and it is such a magical touch that it is included in that moment-she thinks she sees it in Willoughby, but of course we know it comes from Brandon.

  • @Corellyn
    @Corellyn Před 28 dny +29

    Colonel Brandon is THE epitome of a romantic hero, and Rickman was the perfect choice for the role. I've had what I call a "weird little crush" on Alan Rickman since Die Hard first came out. He just had whatever that quality is that draws you in, no matter his role. It doesn't hurt that I could happily just sit there and listen to him read the dictionary. His voice was magnificent.

  • @GabiO-te4dc
    @GabiO-te4dc Před 29 dny +54

    "She's full on princess brideing it down." I'm Dying😂😂

  • @Liberteabelle
    @Liberteabelle Před 29 dny +97

    As a woman who will ALWAYS go for the good man, I can also see that, as a young woman, Marianne would appreciate a man closer to her own age who has a sense of humor and fun. Col Brandon, clearly the right guy, does NOT come across as breezy and fun. He is very serious natured and significantly older, so it’s understandable why Marianne needed some life experience to appreciate his finer qualities. She was naive because she was herself TOO YOUNG!

    • @gryphonvert
      @gryphonvert Před 25 dny +7

      It's very interesting, though, because early on we do still get a glimpse here and there of Brandon having a fun side to him -- I would point out the inclusion in this video of the bit where the youngest sister runs out the door, and he stops briefly to give her a jaunty salute and a big smile. That whole bit of physical acting seems like it takes years off the character, or the perception of his age. It's a very small bit, but of course, things like that don't end up on film (and in the final cut of a movie) by chance. It's showing us a side of him that exists, but that Marianne (and others) can't see yet; literally, she isn't able to see that interaction. Others are correct that there's more going on with Brandon; his grief gives him a caution and reticence, too. But there's also just the issue of the sense of propriety of the time. Brandon is willing to be very briefly silly with a child, but he knows what the societal expectation is of how he should present himself to adults. And the film does a good job of showing us that no matter how much "fun" Willoughby is, or how spontaneous and breezy he might be, his behavior is often right on the edge of, or over the edge of, scandalous -- which might seem attractive to us, and to Marianne, but at the time wasn't a desirable trait. That bit, also shown here, of him taking her driving in the equivalent of a hot rod, with the galloping horses -- I recall reading commentary that it was meant to show that he's reckless, and the people who watch them go by are thinking badly of him for it (and a little badly of her for it, as well). It's all meant to show that he doesn't have good judgement about how to behave, and that's evidence of a deeper problem in him, of selfishness. To modern eyes, again, a bit of recklessness and rebellion against stuffy social expectations makes him seem attractive. But it reads very differently from the point of view of the time. So it's a shame that Brandon isn't freer to show the good-humored, breezy side of himself, or that Marianne doesn't get a glimpse of it earlier on. But it's definitely there.

    • @Liberteabelle
      @Liberteabelle Před 24 dny +1

      @@gryphonvert Totally agree! Undoubtedly Willoughby will have a miserable life. Oh he will marry well, but will likely ever reach a respectable or responsible level in his life because he is self absorbed in only what he wants. Maybe he’ll think beyond himself when he has children, because I think he can’t grow until he can stop being so self-oriented.
      I also agree re Col. Brandon. He has seen the havoc that being viewed as non-respectable can be, and does a great job on that. And yes we had a peek at him letting loose and happy. I’m thrilled! But I don’t think he will ever be a casually fun guy, he is inherently serious. And that’s okay, it’s great that he’s himself, and can also be happy!

  • @KirstenWakiesa
    @KirstenWakiesa Před 28 dny +150

    Yes! Alan Rickman was attractiv as hell and his voice was just earcandy. I miss him a lot.
    Have you guys seen Snow Cake? Alan Rickman and Sigourney Weaver are so good in this one.

    • @natashadavies9569
      @natashadavies9569 Před 26 dny +8

      Truly madly deeply. The first half of that film is just so good

    • @AgnesPelletier
      @AgnesPelletier Před 25 dny +3

      I think it was one of his best performances. That movie is not well known and I am so glad some people talk about it (see my comment above, wrote it before landing on yours!)

    • @tinaperez7393
      @tinaperez7393 Před 23 dny +2

      Never heard of it. Will look it up. I'm also a huge fan of Truly Madly Deeply. And Jesus of Montreal for some reason - not a Rickman film but the two films remind me of the other.

    • @rickwoman
      @rickwoman Před 19 dny +2

      Song of lunch Alan and Emma at their best❤

  • @kellylucyglostott918
    @kellylucyglostott918 Před 29 dny +27

    This is one of my all-time favorite movies. One reason is that the humor in it doesn't derive from someone being hurt or insulted. That is very rare. Plus, half the faculty of the Harry Potter movies are in the cast. Dolores Umbridge is married to House, and their dynamic is hilarious!

    • @gryphonvert
      @gryphonvert Před 25 dny +4

      You know what? You have just reminded all of us that they could have included the Palmers on this list! And the Middletons as well, while we're at it. They do, after all, serve as other examples of matches and partnerships. I really loved the handling of the Palmers; how unfriendly Mr. Palmer seems, right up until the moment when circumstances demand his action and participation, and he steps up and is decent and kind. (At the time this movie came out, of course, House was in Hugh Laurie's future, and everyone primarily knew him as a comedic actor. I think his most prominent role before this was in Jeeves and Wooster? So to say his turn as Mr. Palmer was against type is an understatement. It's funny to look back and it and see how it hinted at his House performance to come.)

  • @67LMcC
    @67LMcC Před 29 dny +87

    What I like about the Brandon-reads-to-Marianne clip that you selected is how it contrasts with Marianne's criticism of Edward's forced reading. She tells Eleanor that Edward is amiable but his reading lacked passion and feeling, and then Brandon reads in the exact way she wanted Edward to read. Further proof that Brandon is the perfect match for her.

  • @strngenchantedgirl
    @strngenchantedgirl Před 29 dny +36

    I love the scene where Edward comes to see Elinor because he goes there thinking she will chew him out or they will have a hard conversation about what he’s done. He goes anyway (in contrast to Willoughby) because he believes Elinor deserves his honesty and answers. He is shocked by her kindness and gift to him.

    • @imtiol
      @imtiol Před 26 dny +1

      That’s a lovely insight

  • @marganaapsinthia
    @marganaapsinthia Před 27 dny +26

    Emma Thompson's crying is one of my favourite scenes from cinema. It's so honest and intimate that, every time I watch the film, I feel the need to avert my gaze and leave them alone. Ang Lee directed a few of my favourite films. And I've always felt that Alan Rickman is somewhat like his character here: kind, talented but quiet, and devoted to his wife for his whole life. He's a man of character, and that cannot be not attractive.

  • @pszczolka80
    @pszczolka80 Před 28 dny +7

    My favourite thing about Hugh Grant's declaration scene is the fact that she doesn't stop crying until right at the end, nor do they significantly reduce the volume on the sound - nope, he gets his beautiful , romantic scene of declaring his undying love with the strings swelling...punctuated with loud sobbing and gasping. It's glorious. 🤣🤣

  • @kadinaator
    @kadinaator Před 29 dny +106

    One of my all time favorite Alan Rickman scenes is from Galaxy Quest: when the alien Quellek is dying, Rickman's character Sir Alexander Dane says his famous catchphrase, the one he's been hating all this time, suddenly realizing what it means to the other person. The way he says it... just fantastic.

    • @a.j.nunnaurbiz6535
      @a.j.nunnaurbiz6535 Před 28 dny +10

      Agreed. It's a HUGE revelation for him.

    • @erin2535
      @erin2535 Před 20 dny +4

      By Grapthar's Hammer... I Will Avenge Thee!

  • @maryhales4595
    @maryhales4595 Před 29 dny +283

    One of my favorite Jane Austen adaptations!! Love the casting, the writing, the direction, all of it. ❤

    • @CinemaTherapyShow
      @CinemaTherapyShow  Před 29 dny +24

      Agreed!

    • @VenusPower05
      @VenusPower05 Před 28 dny +1

      It's a masterpiece. Goes to show it doesn't always have to be 4+ hours. They did it in two and all the essential things from the book are covered so we get the gist. Actually, Lucy is a lot more bitchy in the boom so the character gets off lightly in this version.

  • @suonatar1
    @suonatar1 Před 26 dny +8

    In Edward's defence, he couldn't tell Elinor that he's engaged, because
    1) They didn't know eachother that well and it was not a custom to throw personal stuff on people, especially if they weren't a "public information".
    2) It was frown upon to get engaged without the blessing of both families, so he would admit to being dishonest to his family.
    3) Talking about secret engagement meant that he would break the secret that he promised to keep for his fiance. In contrast, Lucy breaks that secret out of vanity, which shows that she can't be trusted, she wants to feel the tryumph over Elinor.

    • @thedarkdane7
      @thedarkdane7 Před 26 dny +2

      Thank you so much for bringing this up. It is important to be fair.

  • @heatherthorn
    @heatherthorn Před 26 dny +8

    I was hoping you might highlight the subtle look on Colonel Brandon's face when Marianne says "thank you" after he brings her mother. It's such a chef's kiss.

  • @AudreysBiggestFan
    @AudreysBiggestFan Před 29 dny +169

    Could you make a part 2 about the other couples? Fanny and John Dashwood, the Palmers, Lucy and Edward. You could also throw in Elinor and Marianne as the foundation of the story

    • @lyneemcadams8120
      @lyneemcadams8120 Před 29 dny +11

      Oooh, LOVE this idea!! Yes, I vote yes! Thanks for this!

    • @jessegriffin4537
      @jessegriffin4537 Před 29 dny +7

      I would even through in Mr. Dashwood and their mom and talk about his affection and care for them, even in death.

    • @stitchingwithmygirls
      @stitchingwithmygirls Před 29 dny +2

      Yes!

    • @mpet483
      @mpet483 Před 29 dny +9

      Absolutely! If for no other reason than getting the scene where Fanny finds out about Lucy and Edward. 😂

    • @catarinaoliveira6852
      @catarinaoliveira6852 Před 29 dny +2

      Yess the sisters relationship pls!

  • @margaretlovecchio8316
    @margaretlovecchio8316 Před 29 dny +76

    Greg Wise & Emma Thompson started dating during the filming of this movie. Greg’s “witchy” friend told him he’d meet his partner on this shoot & he thought that was Kate Winslett. No sparks, so Kate suggested he go on a date w/Emma. Thanks, Graham Norton show for this fun fact

    • @hockeygrrlmuse
      @hockeygrrlmuse Před 29 dny +10

      It's so impressive that they have incredible on-screen chemistry and it's all just a performance!

  • @elisevandenberghe2901
    @elisevandenberghe2901 Před 28 dny +10

    The friendship between Brandon and Eleanor is the cutest thing ever

  • @alyzu4755
    @alyzu4755 Před 28 dny +7

    "He's the opposite of a Nice Guy, hes a good man". Perfect!
    I met Alan Rickman in 1991. He wasn't in a great mood, but still gave me time and an autograph. 😊

  • @WahleeUT
    @WahleeUT Před 29 dny +91

    In my not-so-humble opinion, the best Jane Austen adaptation ever filmed is the 1995 Persuasion with Ciarán Hinds and Amanda Root. It's understated and beautiful and faithful to the book (both literally and in spirit-- they even included the canceled chapter version of the proposal!), the small changes they made make sense and work (although the change of explanation of Mr. Elliot's character makes him slightly less despicable, but I can forgive that as he's still plenty evil), and best of all it's real. People's hair isn't perfectly styled and sometimes falls down; their clothes are period accurate but look like things that are actually lived in, including showing signs of wear and getting dirty; the lighting is all natural (you mean candlelight is kind of dark still? WHAT?!?); it was filmed on location in Bath and Lyme Regis in the exact places mentioned in the book and you can actually go and SEE them; the actors that are supposed to be attractive ARE attractive without being Hollywood beautiful (and if they're wearing any makeup at all it's so subtle that I can't detect it); Anne's transformation back into beauty is subtle and believable; and for a movie with absolutely no narrator they managed to capture the inner thoughts of the characters SO WELL. The camera work and Anne's grasping of a chair back when first seeing Wentworth again? Fabulous. The fleeting expressions on faces that convey sentences of emotions? Amazing. The reading of the letter, bouncing back and forth between Anne's voice and Wentworth's? I found it hard to understand at first when the voices overlap, but now, SWOON. Having a circus in the background to distract everyone around and allow the happy couple to kiss in a public street in defiance of all social norms? SO CLEVER.
    PLEASE do this version of Persuasion if and when you get to it. The 2007 one has a few good moments but ultimately completely undermines the message of the book (and what is up with making Anne run all over Bath to find Wentworth?), the 2022 Netflix one is just the worst (if you wanted to do a Fleabag version of Austen that would actually work, Northanger Abbey was RIGHT THERE, but I admit that casting Richard E. Grant as Sir Walter was inspired), but this 1995 adaptation is just perfection. It's my second-favorite Austen novel (tied with Northanger Abbey, of which there has still not been a fully satisfactory adaptation) but is my absolute favorite adaptation. The characters are SO well-drawn (poor Anne, a normal person in a family of narcissists, ugh), the relationships are fascinating, the love story SO satisfying, and I can watch this movie over and over and over and over. . .

    • @jennicathlin
      @jennicathlin Před 29 dny +19

      The final kiss in that 2007 version will go down in history as the most awkward and unwatchable kiss ever to be filmed. I was unable to get through the new Netflix one (I gave up when Anne started peeing in the woods). The 1995 one is my favorite, though. I adore it!

    • @starmy63
      @starmy63 Před 29 dny +9

      Hard agree! As an adult Persuasion has become my favorite Austen book, and this adaptation is the best imo.

    • @manicpixiefangirl4189
      @manicpixiefangirl4189 Před 29 dny +1

      Oh man, people sleep on that one so much and it’s criminal!

    • @Emma-tf9jg
      @Emma-tf9jg Před 29 dny +4

      i’ll have to watch, you’ve sold it so well!! i of course am in love with 2005 pride and prejudice and clueless but 2009 emma on the bbc takes the absolute cake, its so faithful to the book with fantastic performances!!

    • @Pip2250
      @Pip2250 Před 29 dny +4

      So agreed. Persuasion is the BEST Austen movie adaptation, hands down. It's not my favorite book, but it is my favorite movie. (My favorite book is also Northanger, which will always make me a little sad that there is not a great movie adaptation. The 2007 one for TV with Felicity Jones and JJ Field is not bad, but not great, either.)

  • @codenamelarry6518
    @codenamelarry6518 Před 29 dny +179

    You fellas are truly the epitome of masculinity, based on your security and ability to express your emotions.

  • @hjsimmer1742
    @hjsimmer1742 Před 27 dny +5

    So the first thing I ever saw Alan Rickman in was this movie. So seeing him later in villain roles was hard for me! This man will always be Colonel Brandon and there will never be a better one. ❤

  • @aud9931
    @aud9931 Před 26 dny +5

    Whoever is doing the editing is fantastic. The bit where Jono says “I like women.. I think” and it cuts to the X files theme with the bi flag in the back KILLED me

  • @cbpd89
    @cbpd89 Před 29 dny +126

    Never clicked on a video so fast. I adore this movie. It is peak High Grant, until Paddington 2 at least. Emma Thompson is such a a fantastic writer and actress!
    My family had this running joke for years where we'd act like we had a secret and then whisper "Edward and I have been secretly engaged these 5 years past."

    • @kelliehorn1082
      @kelliehorn1082 Před 29 dny +7

      FAVORITE COMMENT ❤🤣

    • @reikun86
      @reikun86 Před 26 dny +2

      Paddington 2 is a delightful movie. 🍿 ❤

    • @brumbybailey6599
      @brumbybailey6599 Před 23 dny +2

      Dang, that's a hilarious inside joke👌🤣

    • @fibanocci314
      @fibanocci314 Před 14 dny +1

      Did you not see The Man from U.N.C.L.E. 2015 remake?

  • @sarah.the.clumsy
    @sarah.the.clumsy Před 29 dny +254

    Colonel Brandon is PEAK Zaddy Alan Rickman!

    • @Missy3940
      @Missy3940 Před 29 dny +6

      Yes.

    • @onenanana
      @onenanana Před 29 dny +10

      Agreed. He could take me on any battlefield.

    • @SinHurr
      @SinHurr Před 29 dny +2

      Okay so I don't ruin my Google search history, what the hell is "zaddy"? Some portmanteau of "daddy" and something else, I figure?

    • @ladykilgore2337
      @ladykilgore2337 Před 28 dny +4

      @@SinHurr Basically an attractive older man with charisma and magnetism.

  • @FullMoonHowl
    @FullMoonHowl Před 14 dny +2

    One of my very favorite moments is (not shown here) Colonel Brandon's reaction to a small show of gratitude from Maryanne after he brings Mrs. Dashwood to Marianne's sickbed. The subtle hints of SUCH deep emotions on Rickman's face was a masterclass of acting and masterpiece of art, simultaneously.

  • @katerufener2712
    @katerufener2712 Před 27 dny +3

    Alan crying about Alan is the REASON to watch this one... dang, kids. Now *I'm* crying about Alan all over again...

  • @ashleypenn7845
    @ashleypenn7845 Před 29 dny +24

    Emma Thompson's crying at the end was so brilliant because you can just see all the emotions she's stuffed down and tried to bury the entire film out of a sense of duty and responsibility just come spewing out all at once, like a clogged pipe that's finally been unclogged and all the filth and dirty water that's been held back just flows until it runs clean.
    As someone who identifies with Elinor very much (firstborn, type A, people pleaser, compliant) I've bottled up my own feelings for the sake of others to my own detriment many times and when it all bursts out, there's not much you can do but let it flow to till it's all out.

  • @WhatsAModderU
    @WhatsAModderU Před 29 dny +245

    Thank you Jono for praising Clueless as the best film Jane Austen adaptation. Also as much as I simp for Mr. Bingley I will die on my “Cnl Brandon is the ultimate fictional good guy chivalry model if you are a man and struggling with niceness please be like him” hill. Big Jane Austen fan is all excited that CinemaTherapy loves her work!

    • @crystalward1444
      @crystalward1444 Před 29 dny +8

      You need Northanger Abbey's Mr. Tilney and there's o going back!

    • @WhatsAModderU
      @WhatsAModderU Před 29 dny +7

      @@crystalward1444 My *Regency and Victoriana aunt has told me the same!!! She loves him! I’ll take your word for it and watch the one with JJ Feild because he is mega yummy.

    • @brynbailey7132
      @brynbailey7132 Před 29 dny +8

      Clueless is such a well done adaptation, it keeps the core of the story while making it 90s. Really clever!

    • @KristenMSnyder
      @KristenMSnyder Před 29 dny +3

      @@crystalward1444 Thank you! I was going to say that! Mr. Tilney is the GOAT. Or at least in the Austenverse.

    • @Tiffanyvirginia40
      @Tiffanyvirginia40 Před 28 dny +4

      @@brynbailey7132It really is, and I think Jane Austen would actually appreciate it. She had a sense of humor and would love to know her work was made to connect to newer generations for longevity

  • @vickismith2200
    @vickismith2200 Před 28 dny +22

    1995 gave us three AMAZING Austen adaptations - Sense and Sensibility, Persuasion and - yes - Clueless!
    Emma Thompson published her filming diaries for this production. She describes Eleanor's choke sobbing breakdown, upon discovering that Edward is still free, as an unplanned channelling of something from her own life. Shortly after the untimely death of her father (the amazing Eric Thompson), Emma completely lost it in a bank or post office; she'd been fine, she'd been coping okay and then suddenly she broke down completely.
    And Yes, Alan Rickman is as hot as hell. Even when he's playing a bad guy but especially in this film and in Truly, Madly, Deeply.

    • @Girl-rj3qe
      @Girl-rj3qe Před 28 dny +8

      You forgot the 1995 Pride and Prejudice

  • @Seldarius
    @Seldarius Před 20 dny +3

    In Edward’s defence: being open about his engagement sounds great on paper, but it was a secret engagement for a reason. He would’ve been disowned if it came out and eventually was when it did. So, he was not going to confide it to a random stranger he just met. Later, when things become more serious he does try to tell her but they get interrupted and then separated by his sister, who sees what’s going on.

  • @RavenDreamer
    @RavenDreamer Před 29 dny +70

    This was my first exposure to Jane Austin, I don't remember how old I was (in my early teen mebbe?) when I saw this movie but I remembering seeing Colonel Brandon and thinking 'this is the kind of man I want to marry' hopefully I'll find him someday

  • @user-hw1vq1wv9f
    @user-hw1vq1wv9f Před 29 dny +44

    I just finished reading Alan Rickman’s Diary. Who knew? He wrote in a diary every day up until a few days before his death. Such insight into his day to day life. Highly recommend.

  • @seasonsstarsstudios
    @seasonsstarsstudios Před 29 dny +9

    Brandon is so my type of guy - I’m much younger than my current boyfriend but one of the reasons why it works is because his kindness, much like Brandon, is bottomless. He’s continually by my side, morally supportive of me, respects my boundaries and choices, and most importantly he SHOWS UP. Everything I love about my boyfriend, is everything I love about Brandon. In turn it brings out the desire for me to be reciprocal to his support, helpfulness, respectful nature, and compassion.
    Plus, come on. Alan Rickman. I had such a huge crush on him starting at 12. It didn’t die until 3 years after he did.

  • @SannaiSan
    @SannaiSan Před 22 dny +3

    You can almost hear the switch in Elinor's crying as it goes from processing what she heard, to relief that she doesn't have to carry the burden of love alone any more, to disbelief that she had ever considered carrying it alone to begin with, and finally to joy as she realises its real. She really made it feel as if she'd been holding her breath the whole time and somebody just told her it's ok to breathe. Her acting is so amazing in this!

  • @andreaguillade7120
    @andreaguillade7120 Před 29 dny +26

    Ok, Regency ghosting just killed me dead! Seriously though, Alan Rickman was so so sooooo amazing in this role, you can't help but love him. As much as i love Elinor and Edward in all their awkward, duty-bound glory, Colonel Brandon is just so wonderful... that I can forgive Marianne for her blindness since she came to her senses in the end. Loved your reactions, you had me tearing up a couple of times!

  • @clarasundqvist6013
    @clarasundqvist6013 Před 29 dny +143

    To answer your question Alan: yes, this is in fact the best Jane Austen adaptation of all time. I do in fact make the rules

    • @wellhellothere6347
      @wellhellothere6347 Před 29 dny +2

      No you don't. Northanger Abby is by far the best.

    • @korganrocks3995
      @korganrocks3995 Před 29 dny +17

      If we're talking strictly movies, then I agree. If not, then it's the 1995 Pride and Prejudice miniseries, which is my favorite adaptation of any kind.

    • @melanie62954
      @melanie62954 Před 29 dny +3

      @@korganrocks3995 Agreed. Or, I'd rank them side by side, at least. I watch P&P more often, but Sense and Sensibility takes the cake as an example of beautiful filmmaking!

    • @ApequH
      @ApequH Před 29 dny +2

      I prefer the Lizzy Bennet Diaries

    • @korganrocks3995
      @korganrocks3995 Před 29 dny +6

      @@melanie62954 Sense and Sensibility is certainly more cinematic and dramatic, which is something that can also be said about the 2005 Pride and Prejudice, which is what I tell myself the fans of that movie enjoy in order to not go crazy at the thought of someone preferring it to the 1995 version! 😄

  • @eowyn237
    @eowyn237 Před 19 dny +4

    "He is the polar opposite of a nice guy... he is a good man" 👏👏👏 Colonel Brandon being my favorite Austen hero (and just one of my faves in general) I relished this greatly indeed.
    "In every circumstance he's going to do right by people, he's going tobe respectful, and he's going to make himself useful"... you're putting everything into words that I've felt about him. This was all so good!!

  • @juukiii
    @juukiii Před 27 dny +7

    Any discussion of Alan Rickman hotness should cite Truly, Madly, Deeply which is one of the best rom-coms of all time. There would be lots in that movie to apply cinema therapy to, as well.

  • @frostkiss2
    @frostkiss2 Před 29 dny +49

    Sense And Sensibility from Ang Lee is one of those movies I can watch daily and NEVER be sick from it. Because the acting is so accentuated and has depth, that I always, ALWAYS find something new in every scene. Masterfully done.

  • @Redrally
    @Redrally Před 29 dny +43

    I so want to see you two react to Galaxy Quest. The movie's a goldmine of acting, meta humour and a commentary on fan culture.

    • @carolineben-ari2798
      @carolineben-ari2798 Před 29 dny +3

      I only went to see that movie because my husband wanted to see it and I went along. It's now one of my favourites.

    • @korganrocks3995
      @korganrocks3995 Před 29 dny +10

      By Grabthar's hammer, that's a great idea!

    • @not-identified
      @not-identified Před 29 dny +4

      I just saw that movie 2 days ago and it became an instant favourite. It has so much heart.

    • @melaniefrancisco2942
      @melaniefrancisco2942 Před 28 dny +2

      ​@@carolineben-ari2798I had to make my husband see Galaxy Quest in the theater. I used the unassailable logic: I don't care how cheesy the promos are! It's an Alan Rickman film, that means it doesn't suck.

    • @reikun86
      @reikun86 Před 26 dny +4

      Also an excellent commentary on actors who’ve hated being pigeonholed by one role, only to embrace it many years later.

  • @Natalia_Bagranovskaya
    @Natalia_Bagranovskaya Před 28 dny +6

    The way Jonathan said he remembered the down the nose look that he had gotten in high school a lot, so relatable. Thank you guys for making these videos, not being afraid of looking vulnerable. A bit of a tear in the Alan's eye when he spoke about how much Alan Rickman is missed now. Thank you. i'm going to revisit the movie, even though I know it by heart already. Love from Russia. PS: and yes, Alan Rickman has always been hot. Even as greasy haired Snape.

  • @vesper180
    @vesper180 Před 26 dny +4

    This film is my fave version of this novel. Colonel Brandon is the worthy man. He is like the eye in the storm. I'm always glad when Marriane overcomes the age difference and realizes/falls in love with, what a wonderful person he is. (Alan Rickman was such an amazing actor!)

  • @nekocutie
    @nekocutie Před 29 dny +103

    Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility!!! On my birthday!!! 🎂 Thank you!!! 😊

  • @tammywilson985
    @tammywilson985 Před 29 dny +120

    Yes, its the best adaptation of Jane Austen. Ang Lee's beautiful shots and Emma Thompson's screenplay are magic together. Thompson was technically still married to Kenneth Branagh at the time, but he was fooling around with Helena Bonham Carter while he filmed Frankenstein. Thompson and Wise met on this film and are still married. Also, I've heard interviews with Hugh Grant about her crying throughout the end 'really, you're going to cry over all my dialogue?' Too funny. She's my all-time favorite actress.

    • @jennicathlin
      @jennicathlin Před 29 dny +17

      Emma Thompson also wrote much of the script for the 2006 Pride and Predjudice adaptation. Joe Wright, the director, mentions in his commentary that some of the most powerful scenes were written by Thompson, and you can tell because they are such great scenes for an actor to work with. She's pretty great.

    • @ThaliaVitalis
      @ThaliaVitalis Před 29 dny +1

      ❤❤❤

    • @lilaccilla
      @lilaccilla Před 28 dny

      you are right !

    • @lilaccilla
      @lilaccilla Před 28 dny

      @@jennicathlin is this the movie with the older British Bill Nye in it ? I loved that one !

    • @lilaccilla
      @lilaccilla Před 28 dny

      Hugh is also handsome and has amazing hair too

  • @krisbee6573
    @krisbee6573 Před 27 dny +6

    Persuasion (1995) has my vote for best Austen adaptation.

  • @Celestialnavigator-nr6sb
    @Celestialnavigator-nr6sb Před 26 dny +4

    If you saw him and truly madly deeply, you already knew Alan Rickman as a devastatingly wonderful leading man. That remains one of my favorite movies.

  • @RainbowSunshineRain
    @RainbowSunshineRain Před 29 dny +14

    I love how the dog is caring dor Alan each time he’s crying.

  • @zizzy0093
    @zizzy0093 Před 29 dny +54

    You shoud do the 1995 Persuasion. It's definately in the running for the best Austen adaptation!

    • @tanjakaiser7432
      @tanjakaiser7432 Před 29 dny +3

      Yes! Colin Firth is a league of its own! His Mr. Darcy and Alan Rickman's Brandon are my favourits!

    • @SuperMeglen
      @SuperMeglen Před 29 dny +10

      Oh, agreed, whole-heartedly! Amanda Root and Ciaran Hinds are pitch-perfect as Anne and Wentworth. I love Amanda Root's casting, especially.

    • @heltaku9397
      @heltaku9397 Před 29 dny +5

      I loooove that movie. Ciaran Hinds and Amanda Root are great in it.

    • @360shadowmoon
      @360shadowmoon Před 28 dny +1

      Why did I not know this existed? I have to check it out now. I thought we were done for with the Netflix adaptation.

  • @waterjewel7592
    @waterjewel7592 Před 26 dny +5

    I like this ranking for how it acknowledges that relationships with big age gaps can be healthy too. Getting tired of how such relationships are often judged as 'disgusting' or inappropriate, even if it would be based on genuine respect and understanding.

  • @lunaslove2871
    @lunaslove2871 Před 29 dny +8

    Gandalf comforting Alan at the end so cute!

  • @mikis4863
    @mikis4863 Před 29 dny +29

    My favorite romantic comedy with Alan Rickman is Truly, Madly, Deeply. He is very over-the-top though. If you want to see a truly subtle interaction, he is excellent in the movie Close My Eyes. There's a scene when his wife comes home from cheating on him, and he knows it, he's discovered it by accident... He is so quiet and restrained in his reactions to her, but you know it's tearing him apart inside.

  • @Alinda1308
    @Alinda1308 Před 29 dny +69

    One of my favorite movies together with pride and Prejudice with Keira Knightley. Alan Rickman here played the perfect man ❤ Gentle, attentive, deep, etc...

  • @littleshiver
    @littleshiver Před 26 dny +4

    The moment when Alan said "God, I miss that guy" and soaked into tears makes me crazy emotional all over again. I miss Alan Rickman too and barely can watch this movie, especially the moment when Col. Brandon was reading Shakespeare’s sonnets to Marianne. Kate Winslet is incredibly lucky to be there at the time.
    Also, Jonathan's bisexual panic is SO relatable. I thought for a really long time I was gay, but my heart has always been absolutely blessed to see Alan's performance.
    And for a ranking - coudn't agree more!
    Thank you so much for this particular video (as long as many others) ❤

  • @lughcifer
    @lughcifer Před 29 dny +5

    The first time I saw Alan Rickman was in an indie British romantic comedy - "Truly, Madly, Deeply." The performances were *chef's kiss* and though I haven't seen it for a while, would recommend it. He was so deeply talented and versatile.

  • @charisleighmusic
    @charisleighmusic Před 29 dny +14

    Sense & Sensibility was the first movie I saw him in. And he plays perfectly the attraction at first sight trope during the piano scene. I’ve been crying for a few years now over the loss of Alan Rickman. “We shall never see his like again.”

  • @anastasiarugel1396
    @anastasiarugel1396 Před 29 dny +40

    No Mr and Mrs Palmer?! What about Fanny and John Dashwood?! Their relationships are so interesting, even if fleeting, in the movie. Hugh Laurie was magnificent.
    You are completely correct with the ranking of course. ❤COL Brandon

    • @almaguzman9010
      @almaguzman9010 Před 29 dny +2

      John was a fool. He didn't know Fanny was in love with him all along. He is just thinking getting the pretty girl 1st. He takes the whole movie or book to realized she is the right person for him.😢

    • @priyasinha3889
      @priyasinha3889 Před 29 dny +4

      I’ve been watching a lot of Dr. Octavia Cox on CZcams, she does a lot of breakdowns of Jane Austen’s books, and the relationships and society depicted, that are SO interesting. I believe she goes into the relationships you mentioned

    • @heathergarnham9555
      @heathergarnham9555 Před 28 dny +2

      The Palmer marriage is definitely not a good one, he mocks her constantly, he degrades her opinions. It reminds me of the Bennett marriage.

    • @reikun86
      @reikun86 Před 26 dny +1

      I love the Palmers. 😊

  • @alilbitofawesomeness
    @alilbitofawesomeness Před 29 dny +4

    This was one of my favorite movies when I was a teen and it was solely because I had a massive crush on Alan Rickman. That man could have carved my heart out with a spoon and I would have been grateful.

  • @friisab
    @friisab Před 17 dny +2

    Emma Thompson understands Jane Austen so well. I'm still waiting for her to adapt the other Austen books into screenplays.

  • @dinahbacher551
    @dinahbacher551 Před 29 dny +47

    Have you ever considered talking about Fiddler on the Roof?

    • @laceyroo5992
      @laceyroo5992 Před 29 dny +3

      That would be fantastic! That's one of my favorite movies!

    • @hansbmd20
      @hansbmd20 Před 29 dny +9

      YES!! A video on how Tzeitel, Hodel, and Chava make their own choices, how each one is more progressive, and how Tevye responds to them and to the changing times. That'd be great!!

    • @priyasinha3889
      @priyasinha3889 Před 29 dny +2

      And it’s SUCH a tearjerker! “Do you love me?”

    • @brumbybailey6599
      @brumbybailey6599 Před 23 dny +2

      YES, PLEEEEASE! All my votes for that!

  • @SuperMeglen
    @SuperMeglen Před 29 dny +118

    I just don't see how any true Austen fan (or at least, fan of this Austen adaptation) will debate Brandon/Marianne winning out over Elinor/Edward. Brandon wins. Hands down. He is one of the best. And how Alan Rickman plays him makes him even more so. I could watch for ages simply his introductory scene, when he's mesmerized by Marianne singing. I am mesmerized in turn. I recently re-read the book, so this was excellent timing and even further motivation to watch the movie again. Thanks! I must admit, though, I was hoping you would include John and Fanny Dashwood in the couples ranking, just so the audience could enjoy the brilliant Harriet Walter being so horribly awful in the most hilarious way to poor, spineless James Fleet. Gosh, how I both hate and love her in this film. Okay, I just love all the cast in this film. (Ooh, or Imelda Stauntion and Hugh Laurie as the Palmers! I would have LOVED to see a reaction to them, minimal as their parts are. They make an impression.)

    • @cbpd89
      @cbpd89 Před 29 dny +2

      Those two are so funny in this movie, are they a worse couple than Marianne and Willowby? Or are they slightly better?

    • @hansbmd20
      @hansbmd20 Před 29 dny +13

      @@cbpd89 Worse, definitely worse, and I'll tell you why. John Dashwood has the makings of a decent man and he would be, if he were married to someone like Jane Bennet or Jane Fairfax or Anne Wentworth (a.k.a. women who care about their relations). Instead, John Dashwood is married to Fanny Ferrars, who is obsessed with wealth and position. She and her brother, Robert, are two peas in a pod - how that family even got such a gentleman as Edward, I'll never know. Anyway, the first scene of the movie is John Dashwood going to visit his father on his deathbed. The estate and the money pass to John as the eldest son, so his half-sisters get almost nothing. They get 500 pounds a year while John gets the rest. In today's money, that would be close to 35,000 pounds a year, so not easy to live on, especially if you're used to more, but doable depending on where you are. Mr. Dashwood, the dying father, makes his son promise to help his half-sisters financially, give them money for their dowries, help them live. Fanny Dashwood, almost immediately, starts conniving how to keep the money. John means to give them 3,000 pounds, which would set them up for the rest of their lives, but Fanny says that would put their baby son's future in ruins. (No, it wouldn't.) She manages to talk him out of giving them any money, then proceeds to kick the women out of the only home the girls have ever known. So yeah, they're the worst simply because she married him for his cash, relationship aspects had nothing to do with it, and she brings out the worst in him. Go look up Dr. Octavia Cox's video on the worst marriages in Jane Austen, which is where I got some of these talking points. Spoiler alert: John and Fanny Dashwood are #3 for this exact reason. Leagues worse than Marianne and Willoughby.

    • @SuperMeglen
      @SuperMeglen Před 29 dny +6

      @@cbpd89 Ooh, good question. Because as individuals, they're not great. Fanny is greedy and elitist, and John, while a little more good-natured, is still at heart rather selfish and pretty spineless. So maybe that means as a couple they're well-matched? But you do still see her dominating him and wheedling him to go against any of his more generous instincts, which is not indicative of a healthy couple, either. Hmm. So where would they rank? At this point I'm not exactly sure, haha.

    • @onenanana
      @onenanana Před 29 dny

      ​@@hansbmd20great analysis! And I agree 💯

    • @korganrocks3995
      @korganrocks3995 Před 29 dny +7

      @@hansbmd20 I read a fanfic once called "a more amiable woman" or something, which switched wives for John Dashwood and Mr Palmer, which explores the concept. I don't remember much about it except that it was fun to see John Dashwood's tentative attempts at selfishness and greed get misinterpreted by his amiable wife into something more generous, like him suggesting he give them each a thousand pounds, and his wife assuming he meant as a gesture of good faith to prove to his stepmother that he means to take good care of her and his half-sisters, forcing him to pretend that of course that's what he intended all along! 😄

  • @amidthephantomsrose
    @amidthephantomsrose Před 29 dny +7

    As ive gotten older, sense and sensibility has become my favorite adaptation

  • @roamingjay7110
    @roamingjay7110 Před 19 dny +2

    I think I have a new favorite Jane Austen male protagonist tbh the Colonel is legit the most ride or die dude she ever wrote! He’s both the best friend and best life partner anyone could ever ask for! Need to watch this movie in full

  • @avengefullgirl95
    @avengefullgirl95 Před 29 dny +9

    what I personally see and love about Brandon's character (as portrayed by Alan Rickman) is the sense that he met marianne where she was at. He fell in love with her but also respected her. he seemed to accept the role he was given by her be it friend, annoyance, older brother, even a father figure. When she fell in love with him, he never pushed her. like instead of going "you love me now so you are mine," it felt more delicate and genuine of "she may seem to return my feelings but i wont act on it unless she is absolutely sure," he courted her yet made sure she was comfortable and the ball was in her court (in a mature way, often guys that leave things to the woman come across as almost manipulative and disinterested, like Willoughby lol)
    Im not usually one to care about age gaps but this one always felt strange since he essentially has an adopted daughter marianne's age. But still, I really loved how kind, good, and genuine colonel brandon is.
    if you guys every cover Jane Eyre Id love your insight on that relationship, I personally hated it and could NOT see how it was romantic but curious what you guys would have to say about it

  • @WoodenFeather-xm3vl
    @WoodenFeather-xm3vl Před 29 dny +21

    You have no idea how grateful I am this came TO-DAY. This movie is and has been in my top favorite movies of all time.
    Alan and his epic scenes! "Give me an occupation or I shall go mad" and then his action. wow! His willingness. wow... what a man! No matter how often I see it, my mouth still drops.

  • @acidsupernova
    @acidsupernova Před 25 dny +2

    I think Colonel Brandon and Marianne are a great example of how a May-December romance should be. Even though Brandon is older and vastly more wealthy than Marianne, he doesn't ever abuse the power that he has. He doesn't dominate her and shows respect to her as a full person and doesn't see her as someone younger and more naive that he can control and remake to his own taste. There is mutual respect

  • @puggynugz922
    @puggynugz922 Před 27 dny +4

    I also appreciate the movie A Little Chaos with Kate W and Alan R. Not a romance between them, but an excellent movie.
    RIP Alan. My God, he could read cereal boxes to me!

  • @sakunaruful
    @sakunaruful Před 29 dny +23

    Cinema Therapy should analyze Jane Eyre or Wuthering Heights next for relationship therapy.

    • @Xiroi87
      @Xiroi87 Před 29 dny

      Is there a good film adaptation if Wuthering Heights? Haven't seen any myself, just a couple of sappy love stories that had little to do with the original story

    • @sakunaruful
      @sakunaruful Před 29 dny

      There’s the 1939 version with Laurence Olivier as Heathcliff. 1992, version, 1998

  • @shayzcactus833
    @shayzcactus833 Před 29 dny +18

    Jono saying "Watch movies" while Alan cries is perfect. sums up this channel. haha

  • @ilurvsharrypotter
    @ilurvsharrypotter Před 29 dny +3

    I love that y'all are just thirsting over Austen leads