| Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
| Geraldine James | ... |
Jane Austen
(voice)
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| Felicity Jones | ... | ||
| JJ Feild | ... |
Henry Tilney
(as J J Feild)
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| Sylvestra Le Touzel | ... | ||
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Desmond Barrit | ... | |
| Carey Mulligan | ... | ||
| Hugh O'Conor | ... |
James Morland
(as Hugh O'Connor)
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Catherine Walker | ... | |
| Liam Cunningham | ... | ||
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Bernadette McKenna | ... | |
| William Beck | ... | ||
| Mark Dymond | ... | ||
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Julia Dearden | ... | |
| Gerry O'Brien | ... | ||
| Liam McMahon | ... |
Sedley
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When Catherine Morland is given the opportunity to stay with the childless Allen family in Bath, she is hoping for an adventure of the type she has been reading in novels. Soon introduced to society, she meets Isabella Thorpe and her brother John, a good friend of her own brother, James. She also meets Henry Tilney, a handsome young man from a good family and his sister, Eleanor. Invited to visit the Tilney estate, Northanger Abbey, she has thoughts of romance but soon learns that status, class and money are all equally important when it comes to matters of the heart. Written by garykmcd
I've really enjoyed that adaptation. It's witty, charming and the necessary changes brought to the book narrative are clever and do not jar too much with the original. It made me reread the book, which I think should always be the effect of a good adaptation.
The actor playing Henry Tilney was charming (maybe more than the book Henry Tilney in fact) and all the others seemed to fit their roles. Carey Mulligan makes a very effective Isabella Thorpe and plays her part with subtlety while Felicity Jones looks just naive enough for the role of Catherine. I was only bothered by the choice of William Beck of Robin Hood to play John Thorpe. His physical appearance simply did not seem to fit the character. He is a very good actor but hardly attractive enough to make a valid love-interest for romantic Catherine.
The only reason I do not give it "10" is because of the absurd over-sexualisation of Catherine's dreams or the lending to her of "The Monk" by Thorpe.
This is taking incredible liberties with the historical period in order to "make it relevant" to 21st century viewers which TV film-makers must assume to be incapable of viewing anything with interest if it does not contain overtly sexual contents, though the contrary has been proved again and again.