RTÉ Guide Christmas Edition

New Year’s Eve Jane Eyre (2011)

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12.30pm BBC Two

Charlotte Brontë’s most famous literary e ort has been adapted for the screen on numerous occasions over the years, with varying degrees of success. The most striking Rochesters have included Orson Welles and Timothy Dalton, while Joan Fontaine and our own Sorcha Cusack have both delivered memorable performanc­es in the title role. The latest director to tackle the classic Gothic tale is Cary Fukunaga (the cinematogr­apher who made his directoria­l debut in 2009 with the critically acclaimed drama,

Sin Nombre) and it’s a sterling piece of work. It’s never easy to squeeze such a multi-layered story into a two-hour feature (Dalton’s BBC production had the luxury of a ve-hour running time) but a combinatio­n of Moira Bu ni’s deft screenplay, Fukunaga’s eye for the landscape, and a raft of strong performanc­es compensate for the inevitable shortfalls. The movie adopts a non-linear approach, beginning with a grown-up Jane (Wasikowska) staggering around the Yorkshire Moors before she knocks on the door of

Jamie Bell’s benevolent churchman. From here the ashback kicks in and we see young Jane (a splendid Amelia Clarkson) experienci­ng a bleak childhood, rst at the hands of unloving guardian Sally Hawkins, and later among the unforgivin­g teachers at Lowood school. Naturally, Jane’s story gathers momentum when she takes up the position of governess at Thorn eld, where she meets housekeepe­r Judi Dench (typically excellent) and, in one of the great literary encounters, inadverten­tly knocks her patron, the mysterious Mr Rochester (Fassbender) o his horse. The growing relationsh­ip between the demure but feisty Jane and the blu but sensitive Rochester is expertly handled, and the director never loses sight of the gothic chill that permeates Brontë’s Yorkshire milie

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Jane Eyre

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