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Mansfield Park

  • 1999
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
27K
YOUR RATING
Frances O'Connor in Mansfield Park (1999)
When a spirited young woman is sent away to live on the great country estate of her rich cousins, she's meant to learn the ways of proper society, but she also enlightens them with a wit and sparkle all her own.
Play trailer0:53
1 Video
99+ Photos
Period DramaComedyDramaRomance

Fanny, born into a poor family, is sent away to live with wealthy uncle Sir Thomas, his wife and their four children, where she'll be brought up for a proper introduction to society.Fanny, born into a poor family, is sent away to live with wealthy uncle Sir Thomas, his wife and their four children, where she'll be brought up for a proper introduction to society.Fanny, born into a poor family, is sent away to live with wealthy uncle Sir Thomas, his wife and their four children, where she'll be brought up for a proper introduction to society.

  • Director
    • Patricia Rozema
  • Writers
    • Jane Austen
    • Patricia Rozema
  • Stars
    • Frances O'Connor
    • Jonny Lee Miller
    • Alessandro Nivola
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    27K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Patricia Rozema
    • Writers
      • Jane Austen
      • Patricia Rozema
    • Stars
      • Frances O'Connor
      • Jonny Lee Miller
      • Alessandro Nivola
    • 223User reviews
    • 51Critic reviews
    • 71Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 0:53
    Official Trailer

    Photos122

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    Top cast30

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    Frances O'Connor
    Frances O'Connor
    • Fanny Price
    Jonny Lee Miller
    Jonny Lee Miller
    • Edmund Bertram
    Alessandro Nivola
    Alessandro Nivola
    • Henry Crawford
    Hannah Taylor Gordon
    Hannah Taylor Gordon
    • Young Fanny
    Talya Gordon
    • Young Susan
    Lindsay Duncan
    Lindsay Duncan
    • Mrs. Price…
    Bruce Byron
    Bruce Byron
    • Carriage Driver
    James Purefoy
    James Purefoy
    • Tom Bertram
    Sheila Gish
    Sheila Gish
    • Mrs. Norris
    Harold Pinter
    Harold Pinter
    • Sir Thomas Bertram
    Elizabeth Eaton
    • Young Maria
    Elizabeth Earl
    • Young Julia
    Philip Sarson
    • Young Edmond
    Amelia Warner
    Amelia Warner
    • Teenage Fanny
    Victoria Hamilton
    Victoria Hamilton
    • Maria Bertram
    Hugh Bonneville
    Hugh Bonneville
    • Mr. Rushworth
    Justine Waddell
    Justine Waddell
    • Julia Bertram
    Embeth Davidtz
    Embeth Davidtz
    • Mary Crawford
    • Director
      • Patricia Rozema
    • Writers
      • Jane Austen
      • Patricia Rozema
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews223

    7.026.9K
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    Featured reviews

    7MovieGuy-10924

    A Work Must Be Allowed To Stand Or Fall On Its Own

    Jane Austen wrote gold. Its It's a shame that the people making this movie didn't have any faith in the author. The changes were enough that this is almost a different story.

    If the story wasn't what they wanted to produce, maybe they could have called it "Fanny Price - Based On Jane Austen's Mansfield Park". Then maybe I wouldn't have felt deceived.

    Jane Austen was a spectacular author. In this book she was able to take the loan of a gold chain and turn it into the biggest dilemma of the century. It's a storyline that really shows Fanny's character and it really stood out to me in the book, but it was left out of this movie.

    The character of the uncle was extremely changed. It was quite annoying.

    The actors and actresses all did a tremendous job in this movie. That's why I gave it a 7. I wish I could have seen them all in Mansfield Park.
    alfa-16

    Mansfield Park on speed

    This isn't an awful movie. It's quite watchable. Some of the acting, especially from Pinter is excellent.

    But the rest resembles those films made from classic novels in the 30s where no one concerned in making it had time to read the book. A quick treatment by a college student, a quick script conference, then off we go. Rozema has almost no idea of what the book is about but is entirely unembarrassed by her ignorance in her interview on the DVD.

    Austen fans don't have to wait long to discover just how far off the wavelength she is. The first contact between Sir Thomas and Fanny is a reproof for running through MP's corridors shrieking like a banshee. Lines are taken from Mary Crawford in the book and given to Fanny in the film. How's that for missing the point? One by one characters appear looking no more recognisable than if they were appearing in a literary celebrity edition of Scooby Doo.

    I agree with other reviewers that if the film was called something else and the characters had different names, it would be impossible to trace it's origins to Austen's book which is definitely not a conventional love story about bright young things getting together having overcome a few obstacles.

    There's very little to choose between the morals of Rozema's characters, so nothing of the catastrophic descent into the abyss is associated with the production of Lover's Vows, nor do we have any glimpse of Rushworth and Crawford vandalising Sotherton. Mrs Norris is one of the most deliciously evil creations in literature - Rozema reduces her part to a few lines. Thomas Betram is a "modern" artist - yikes! William Price, Fanny's brother and one of the key relationships in the book, is missing altogether. Susan, her sister, has been reading too many Style magazines.

    Mansfield Park might have been a bit like this had it been written by Georgette Heyer or even Jackie Collins. As an Austen adaptation it is execrable. But it's so far off the mark, that as something else entirely, it's not all that bad. Maybe they should just change the title.
    Psyche-8

    Jane Austen is spinning in her grave!!!

    What has this movie done to a book as charming as 'Mansfield Park'?! The storyline has been altered until it is virtually unrecognisable! Fanny Price is nothing like she is in the book, the other characters have been equally changed for the worst and as far as I could tell hardly any of Austen's witty prose has been retained!! It seems this adaptation is 'Mansfield Park' in name only.

    This is probably the most difficult of Austen's novels to bring to the big screen because the characters are so much a product of their time. Fanny is supposed to be shy, submissive, compassionate and pious. She was never outspoken, headstrong or feisty. In short, she is not Elizabeth Bennet and she never will be. To attempt to portray Fanny in this light is missing the point of her whole character. She is dull and boring by today's standards, but her disposition was admirable during the time that she lived.

    I really don't know what the filmmakers were thinking with this adaptation - they probably weren't!! At any rate, it is only because Jane Austen is long dead that they would dare to produce this version. If you haven't read the book you'll probably enjoy it. If you have read the book, don't bother with this. It will ruin your whole experience of the novel.
    Julie-30

    A travesty, from start to finish.

    I have to wonder if the folks who are praising this film to the skies have ever read the book. I am not a Jane Austen purist - if I were, I could not say that the Root/Hinds version of Persuasion was my favorite Austen adaptation, which it is. This is Patricia Rozema's Mansfield Park, NOT Jane Austen's.

    First, Rozema gives us a feisty, spirited Fanny Price, who tells off Aunt Norris and Sir Thomas, who accepts Henry Crawford's proposal, and then rejects it the next day (a la JA herself with Harris Bigg-Wither). In this MP, Sir Thomas deserves to be "told off." He is portrayed as a lecherous "dirty old man," who leers at Fanny and Mary Crawford throughout the film.

    We have all heard about the additions Rozema made to the film. She deals with the slavery issue in a very heavy-handed way, beating us over the head with it whenever possible. Tom Bertram is not the empty-headed fop he is in JA's book; here he is just as much an abolitionist as Fanny, and it is his sketchbook filled with incriminating drawings of Sir Thomas abusing the slaves in Antigua that Fanny finds. In fact, Rozema's take on Tom is rather bizarre; in the book, his arguments with his father center around his irresponsibility and his profligacy. In the film, while Sir Thomas tries to scold his son for these faults, Tom takes him to task for his activities in Antigua. What I found odd was that, if Tom is such an abolitionist, why would he be so free and easy with money tainted by the slave trade?

    Rozema left out what I consider to be some very important people and scenes. William Price and the Grants are nowhere to be seen; as a result, there is no amber cross bought with prize money, no distress over which chain to wear to the ball, no one to accompany Fanny to Portsmouth. Fanny's dislike and distrust of Henry are never fully explained. We never get to see the outing to Sotherton and, while we do see Maria flirting relentlessly with Henry, we never see him playing one sister off against the other. Fanny's disapproval of the theatricals is never explained either. In Rozema's version, it seemed as if Fanny was simply not invited to be in the play, instead of being unalterably opposed to it. The scene with Fanny playing Anhalt to help Mary Crawford rehearse is also completely wrong. Mary starts caressing Fanny, while Edmund watches with his eyes almost popping out of his head. So, instead of Edmund giving in and joining the play in order to spare his family the embarrassment of publicity, we are left with the impression that he takes on the role of Anhalt just so that he can justify having Mary run her hands all over him.

    Next, we have the scenes at Portsmouth. Here, we have Henry sending Fanny a display of fireworks and doves, and then we see her accepting his proposal and sealing the bargain with some less-than-chaste kisses - in public, no less! The (in)famous sex scene between Maria and Henry takes place at Mansfield Park rather than in London and, because Rozema has played with JA's chronology of events, Fanny is already back from Portsmouth, and it is she who catches them in the act. Edmund is present for the aftermath, where Maria tries to defend her actions.

    Another thing that galled me no end is that Mary Crawford's defense of her brother's actions is done in person, at Mansfield Park. She is patronizing towards all concerned, including Sir Thomas, who has finally stopped leering by this point. The newspaper item announcing Maria and Henry's behavior to the world is read by Fanny, and the culprits' full names are used, which is also not the way it happened in the book.

    A couple of people walked out about 1/3 of the way through the screening I attended, and several others walked out just as the credits began. The Wishbone versions of Pride & Prejudice and Northanger Abbey resemble the source material more than this trash does. Shame on you Ms. Rozema, shame on you!
    6kmccabe-

    Even cute-as-a-button "Frances O'Connor" couldn't save this pointless exercise...

    They say the great thing about Shakespeare's work is that it is so open to interpretation. Every director can bring his or her fresh eyes to a play and make it new. Even so, I think we are obliged to stay true to the basic tennents of the text. Are the works of Jane Austen as open to interpretation? Maybe, but I doubt it; Certainly not if MANSFIELD PARK is anything to go by.

    MANSFIELD was always my favourite of Austen's six novels. Many modern critics, while not denying its basic greatness, have problems with the book. Many find FANNY PRICE unlikeable, many find her judgemental, and feel that her Stoic, Augustan approach is hard to relate to. Stand-by, do nothing, and eventually he'll see the error of his ways and come to love you. Not very modern, is it?

    OK, so if you don't like the main character, if you don't like what she has to say, then what do you do? Look for other aspects of the story you can relate to. In recent years some critics have chosen to see MANSFIELD PARK in Post-Imperial terms, as a critique of Slavery. After all, the family's wealth is based on plantations in Antiga, which were run by slaves. Is that what the book's about? Is it? I don't know. I think the evidence is a little slim, but who am I to deny the possibility? Maybe it plays a part in the subtext of the novel.

    So, I'm a modern script-writer who doesn't like the novel, it's pre-occupations or even Fanny Price. What do I do? I completely re-write the story to take a possible minor sub-text (slavery) and turn it in to the driving narrative force. I then take smart as a whippet, stubborn yet passive Fanny and turn her into a ballsy version of Bridget Jones. With an attitude. I then string together a couple of scenes from the book with a few invented bridging scenes to advance the romance. Et Voila! I have a completely different story!

    I don't know what this film is, but it isn't Mansfield Park. Enjoy it on its own terms, but don't ever get the idea that your watching Austen on the screen. But, jeeze. I think that if you're going to adapt a novel for the screen, you ought to at least like the source material; Otherwise, what's the point? If you don't like the main character, you shouldn't be able to completely re-invent her. Or if you do, you should have the decency to be a little ashamed.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The various stories Fanny Price writes are actually Jane Austen's Juvenilia, written when she was a teenager.
    • Goofs
      When Fanny is undressing after being caught in the rain, she undoes her corset by unhooking a metal busk at the front, this style of busk was not invented until the mid 19th century, and the film is set in 1806. Her busk instead should have been wooden or whalebone, and if it unfastened in front it would have been laced.
    • Quotes

      Fanny Price: Life seems nothing more than a quick succession of busy nothings.

    • Alternate versions
      One sex scene was cut from the US version in order to obtain a PG rating.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Sleepy Hollow/42 Up/The World Is Not Enough/Mansfield Park/Rosetta (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Djongna (Slavery)
      Written and Performed by Salif Keïta

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    FAQ

    • How long is Mansfield Park?
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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 15, 2013 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Менсфілд Парк
    • Filming locations
      • Kirby Hall, Corby, Northamptonshire, England, UK(Mansfield Park)
    • Production companies
      • Arts Council of England
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • HAL Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $4,775,847
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $85,608
      • Nov 21, 1999
    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,775,847
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 52 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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