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Jane

Original title: Becoming Jane
  • 2007
  • Tous publics
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
67K
YOUR RATING
Anne Hathaway and James McAvoy in Jane (2007)
CT #3, post
Play trailer2:28
1 Video
99+ Photos
Costume DramaPeriod DramaBiographyDramaRomance

A biographical portrait of a pre-fame Jane Austen and her romance with a young Irishman.A biographical portrait of a pre-fame Jane Austen and her romance with a young Irishman.A biographical portrait of a pre-fame Jane Austen and her romance with a young Irishman.

  • Director
    • Julian Jarrold
  • Writers
    • Jane Austen
    • Kevin Hood
    • Sarah Williams
  • Stars
    • Anne Hathaway
    • James McAvoy
    • Julie Walters
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    67K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Julian Jarrold
    • Writers
      • Jane Austen
      • Kevin Hood
      • Sarah Williams
    • Stars
      • Anne Hathaway
      • James McAvoy
      • Julie Walters
    • 179User reviews
    • 140Critic reviews
    • 55Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos1

    Becoming Jane
    Trailer 2:28
    Becoming Jane

    Photos150

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    Top cast42

    Edit
    Anne Hathaway
    Anne Hathaway
    • Jane Austen
    James McAvoy
    James McAvoy
    • Tom Lefroy
    Julie Walters
    Julie Walters
    • Mrs. Austen
    James Cromwell
    James Cromwell
    • Reverend Austen
    Maggie Smith
    Maggie Smith
    • Lady Gresham
    Anna Maxwell Martin
    Anna Maxwell Martin
    • Cassandra Austen
    Lucy Cohu
    Lucy Cohu
    • Eliza De Feuillide
    Laurence Fox
    Laurence Fox
    • Mr. Wisley
    Ian Richardson
    Ian Richardson
    • Judge Langlois
    Joe Anderson
    Joe Anderson
    • Henry Austen
    Leo Bill
    Leo Bill
    • John Warren
    Jessica Ashworth
    Jessica Ashworth
    • Lucy Lefroy
    Eleanor Methven
    Eleanor Methven
    • Mrs. Lefroy
    Michael James Ford
    • Mr. Lefroy
    Tom Vaughan-Lawlor
    Tom Vaughan-Lawlor
    • Robert Fowle
    Elaine Murphy
    • Jenny
    Guy Carleton
    Guy Carleton
    • Coachman
    Russell Smith
    • Second Coachman
    • Director
      • Julian Jarrold
    • Writers
      • Jane Austen
      • Kevin Hood
      • Sarah Williams
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews179

    7.067K
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    Featured reviews

    9jonesnicola2

    Loved It

    I thought it was a great story and very well cast. I didn't enter the theatre with expectations of learning the truth about Jane Austen's world, who was in it and what made her tick. I understood the movie was loosely based on the life of Jane Austen. The writers have simply devised a beautiful and clever story from only a small shred of evidence that there was a true love in her life. From what I gather the movie was really meant to be an fictional intervention in her life devised from what was known of her. I thought Becoming Jane was funny, beautifully shot and it made me giddy with lust over McEvoy. I loved the sexual energy and meeting of the minds between the love interests. I saw quite a few parallels between this story and Jane's novels. I really believe that Jane would absolutely adore this version, if not find it amusing how it was crafted. I do agree that to create a story about a much loved female author is risky territory, as there are devoted fans of Austen's who are looking for a representation that they personally feel fits their idea of what motivated her as a writer.
    9waterlilly85

    Lovely Movie!!

    Seldom does one go to a movie with high expectations and ends up having them fulfilled, but Becoming Jane is an exception in this case. I was charmed by Anne Hathaway's turn in Brokeback Mountain and The Devil Wears Prada and couldn't really understand the outcry resulting in her being cast as Jane Austen and after having watched the movie I know for sure Anne Hathaway was the right person for the role.

    Hot on the heels of 2005's Pride and Prejudice this movie offers a look into the early years of a spirited Jane Austen and her encounter with a man who could have formed the basis of one of her most famous literary characters Mr Darcy.

    I have to say this movie is without a doubt one of the BEST period films I have ever seen. Not only is it visually stunning but the performances from everyone are superb.

    Maggie Smith a delightful as the shrewd old Aunt.

    Julie Walters excellent as the mother who would give anything to knock some sense into her daughter ( Jane Austen that is ).

    Anna Maxwell Martin is also very good as the sister and confidante of Jane Austen.

    The director Julian Jarrold has done a wonderful job of making an amazing movie that will appeal to all generations.

    And finally the two very charming leads who are the very heart of the movie : Anne Hathaway and James McAvoy. In one word both are AWESOME. James although has little screen time then Anne makes you understand the sheer cockiness and arrogance of Tom Lefroy, from his live free attitude in life to his transformation as a man who begins to care for Jane Austen.His chemistry with Anne Hathaway is sizzling and a very important factor in maintaining the movie's momentum.

    And at last to the leading lady Anne Hathaway. The lady is a marvel as Jane Austen, her determination and spark is vividly captured by Anne in what can be called a very career defining performance. Not only does one feel the pain for Jane but one does marvel at what holds her together and her writing makes her pull through in life.It is Anne Hathaway's spirited portrayal of the literary icon that forms the essence of the movie.

    From her determination to write and her heart break to her feisty attitude to succeed as a writer is uniquely captures by the young actress. One can't really find the exact words to describe the actress's performance as Jane Austen , which is if simply put great.

    This movie has the makings to become the period drama of the year. A fine job by the actors and entire crew of the movie for giving us an insight to what could have been very important years in the young authors life.

    A delight to watch in every sense 8/10
    8F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    I applauded the art direction.

    It is a truth universally acknowledged that reviews of Jane Austen movies must begin with the phrase 'It is a truth universally acknowledged...'.

    I know very little about Jane Austen's life, although I spotted an error in this movie anyway: her deaf-mute older brother George was NOT raised at home with her (as seen here); he was institutionalised, and the hand-signing which Anne Hathaway briefly uses here is partly anachronistic. I confess that I've very little interest in Miss Austen, nor in her novels. But I'm hugely interested in the Regency period in which she lived. As I watched 'Becoming Jane', I was pleasantly astounded by the incredible period detail throughout the film: the houses (inside and out), the books, the churchyards, the carriages and coaches, the clothing. Even the musical instruments, the music and the dances are authentic! Well done! Of course, all these late 18th-century people have 20th-century orthodontia, and their hair is too clean. And the cricket bats don't look (or sound) as if they were made of willow, as they should have been.

    I know that some people will be watching this movie for the costumes, so let me assure you that there are plenty of Empire waists, coal-scuttle bonnets, top boots and Kate Greenaway frocks. Several of the ladies wear delightful gloves.

    This movie follows most of the rules for costume-drama chick-flicks. We get the de rigueur scene in which fully-clothed young women surreptitiously watch naked young men. (But not the reverse, of course.) We get the de rigueur scene in which a young woman performs a traditionally male activity and (of course) she beats the men at their own game. At a cricket match, Jane Austen steps into the crease. The bowler gives her an easy one, and (of course) she knocks it for six.

    I suspect that most of this movie is fiction, and there is indeed one of those 'based on facts' disclaimers in the end credits. I was annoyed that various characters in this film constantly tell Jane Austen that, as a woman, she cannot hope to be the equal of a man, nor can she expect a happy life without a husband. These may indeed have been the accepted realities of Austen's time, but I had difficulty believing that so many people (especially young men who hope to win her) would make a point of making these comments so explicitly and so often.

    Also, everyone in this movie keeps telling Jane that she cannot possibly write about anything which she hasn't experienced. (So she can't write about sexual passion unless ... nudge, nudge.) However, even in Austen's day, this premise was demonstrably untrue. If I want to write a murder mystery, do I need to commit a murder?

    The performances in this film are universally excellent. Any movie with Dame Maggie Smith in it, I'm there. Ian Richardson (in his last role) is superb, wringing the full value from some succulent dialogue. James Cromwell has matured into one of the finest character actors I've ever seen, progressing light-years beyond the infantile Norman Lear sitcom roles of his early career.

    As Jane Austen, Anne Hathaway has the sense to attempt only a very slight English accent, but she is far too pretty for this role. The real Jane Austen was apparently not pretty, and this was a major reason for why she never married. It beggars belief that the Jane Austen seen here -- the one who looks like Anne Hathaway -- would have so much difficulty attracting suitors. However, I'm a realist: there's simply no way that any production company would spend this much money on a costume romance and then cast an unattractive actress in the lead role.

    Evidence indicates that Jane Austen's sister Cassandra was the prettier of the two, and that this discrepancy strongly shaped their relationship. But, again, there's no way that the makers of this film would upstage their own star actress by casting someone more beautiful as her sister. Anna Maxwell Martin, cast here as Cassandra, is a splendid actress and fairly attractive but certainly no beauty in Hathaway's league.

    At the end of the film, a title card alludes to Jane Austen's 'short life'. She actually lived to age 41: a longer lifespan than any of the Brontë sisters', and fairly normal for Regency England. In the last scenes of this film, we see Hathaway in some dodgy 'age' make-up which makes her look rather more sixtyish than fortyish. Near the end of her life, the real Jane Austen had an unidentified illness which darkened her skin: again, I have no expectations of a big-budget film doing anything to compromise the beauty of its leading actress.

    This film's title 'Becoming Jane' is a subtle pun, since Hathaway's embodiment of Jane Austen is so very 'becoming'. Geddit?

    The makers of 'Becoming Jane' have gone to considerable trouble to give their target audience precisely what that audience want, which is only marginally related to the facts. On that score, they have succeeded. And the art direction in this movie is astonishingly thorough, and good. I'll rate 'Becoming Jane' 8 out of 10 as an excellent FICTION film.
    8SnoopyStyle

    Great chemistry with Hathaway and McAvoy

    This is an imagined semi-biographical story of Jane Austen. It's around 1795, and Jane Austen (Anne Hathaway) is a rebellious young woman before her great works. She forms a combative relationship with rogue Tom Lefroy (James McAvoy) while her family wants a more aristocratic match in Mr. Wisley (Laurence Fox) and stability of money.

    It's very doubtful that this has much relationship to reality, but it's still a very good movie. Hathaway and McAvoy are great young actors, and they have magnetic chemistry. It's really an interesting way to create an Austen-like story by using her own life. And I do like the ending and the depressing tone no matter how little it has to do with her true life. We must allow for poetic license. I do wish for a faster start to the drama. Once it gets started, there are great performances such as Julie Walters as Jane's mother in addition to the two leads. I like to think of this as a Jane Austen novel that she never got to write herself.
    7alicefinklestein

    Stumbled and fell on an excess of endings

    I was fortunate to come across an article explaining this film. It is a speculative fiction based upon a few facts. Speculation was aroused by the fact that a woman who never married and apparently never had a love affair came to have such a deep and intelligent understanding of relationships. I shan't expand on how potentially offensive that is. But story line is based on a few simple facts. While he was in the country Jane Austen would have almost certainly met Mr Lefroy; while on a journey to see her sister she had a rather long stop off in London during which time she began writing Pride and Prejudice and there was the mention of some letters.

    It started out so well; the stifling quiet of a country life broken by our future genius at work. The structure of this opening sequence was very effective. I was thinking I'm going to love this film. But there was a niggling in the back of my mind. None of the reviews had been great, but I didn't know why (I hadn't actually read any only seen the 2 ½ or 3 stars).

    I continued thinking it was wonderful through most of the film. James McAvoy was beautifully intense, Anne Hathaway was solid, Maggie Smith delightfully amusing and Anna Maxwell Martin underused. There were some beautiful scenes, some so intense. For example a scene in a ball when they are both standing back to back apparently to talking other people but having a very deep conversation.

    But then, as with far too many movies we moved through the climax to an ending of this story line and that story line oh and we'd better conclude this one as well and now everything is tied up in a neat little bundle.

    This is a film that would have benefited from an ambivalent ending, because, aside from the fact that we know she ends up the Western World's highest selling female author the film wasn't actually about that. The film was about the journey toward it. To have left us hanging when, perhaps, she was leaving Lefroy or back in her stiflingly quiet house would have been much more effective in terms of the story and strengthened the film. It simply is not a happy ending but they tried their damned well hardest to make it one.

    I'm afraid I must give this a very generous 7 rather than what could have been a deserving 8 had the film makers (or the studio or whoever the twats are that decide on these things) the courage to make this a film, not Hollywood.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Dame Maggie Smith is a patron of the Jane Austen Society.
    • Goofs
      Throughout the film, Jane wears costumes almost 20 years ahead of the other characters. At the ball scene, she is the only one in short sleeves and an empire waist- all the others are dressed as fits the period, which is 1795. Presumably, this was to make Jane more recognizable to popular audiences more familiar with the empire style dresses her later characters wore.
    • Quotes

      Tom Lefroy: What value will there ever be in life, if we are not together?

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Rush Hour 3/Daddy Day Camp/Becoming Jane/Stardust/Rocket Science/2 Days in Paris (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      Hole in the Wall
      (Hornpipe from "Abdelazer")

      Written by Henry Purcell

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    FAQ20

    • How long is Becoming Jane?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 17, 2007 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Ireland
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Becoming Jane
    • Filming locations
      • Higginsbrook, Trim, County Meath, Ireland(Steventon rectory)
    • Production companies
      • HanWay Films
      • UK Film Council
      • Bord Scannán na hÉireann / The Irish Film Board
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $16,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $18,670,946
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $972,066
      • Aug 5, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $37,311,672
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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