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- By Kenneth Turan

Invariably astute in all things, Jane Austen got it unaccounta­bly wrong with regard to one of her own characters, a young woman she called “a heroine whom no one but myself will much like.”

That would be snobbish, self-centred, errorprone about everything but somehow endearing Emma Woodhouse, the central figure in Emma and someone whose popularity as far as movies, as well as books, are concerned has never waned.

Not only have stars of the calibre of Gwyneth Paltrow and Kate Beckinsale played her in period costume, but Alicia Silverston­e and writer-director Amy Heckerling had great fun transposin­g her story to contempora­ry Beverly Hills in 1995’s wickedly funny Clueless.

Emma partisans, fortunatel­y, never say die, and a very satisfying new version of Austen’s sprightly novel has been directed in high style by Autumn de Wilde. Working from a crackling script by Booker Prize-winning novelist Eleanor Catton (The Luminaries), De Wilde has been able, very much as Greta Gerwig did with Little Women, to put her own personal stamp on classic material while remaining true to its spirit.

The particular line that De Wilde’s Emma walks is between the snarky and satirical and the emotional, emphasisin­g the sharp societal skewering often present in Austen while not neglecting the writer’s trademark love, romance and the happy ending devoutly to be wished.

Getting that balance right cannot have been easy, but De Wilde knew exactly what she wanted and has been willing to pay meticulous attention in multiple areas to make it happen.

Noticed first is the care given to the film’s immaculate­ly bright and colourful look, courtesy of cinematogr­apher Christophe­r Blauvelt, production designer Kave Quinn and the sparkling Regency costumes of Alexandra Byrne.

Wearing those clothes to the manor born, so to speak, is a cast that cannily combines proven veterans like Miranda Hart and the great Bill Nighy with a shrewd selection of gifted young performers, starting with Anya TaylorJoy, very different than in her breakthrou­gh role in Robert Eggers’ The Witch, in the title role.

Though the film’s tart dialogue and arch mocking tone is one of its pleasures, Emma opens with a wordless albeit pointed scene, as our heroine picks flowers at her estate’s greenhouse at dawn, oblivious to the discomfort she is causing her servants.

Those blooms are for Miss Taylor (Gemma Whelan), Emma’s governess and surrogate mother who is about to be married to neighbour Weston (Rupert Graves), a match Emma is very proud to have made. Woodhouse, the most prosperous man in the village of Highbury. Delightful­ly played by Nighy at his best, he’s a grumpy hypochondr­iac forever feeling a draft.

As the indulged mistress of Hartfield, her father’s estate, Emma is wealthy enough not to have to be married, so she feels free to unleash her romantic imaginatio­n on the unwary, and no one is more unwary than Harriet Smith (Mia Goth).

A naive girl of unknown parentage, Harriet becomes Emma’s most willing protege and has no objection when Emma comes to believe that the unctuous local vicar Elton (Josh O’Connor) wants to marry her.

Also on Emma’s radar, but not in a good way, are kindly chatterbox Miss Bates (Hart is letter perfect), and her accomplish­ed but poor niece Jane Fairfax (Amber Anderson).

The man Emma is most interested in is Frank Churchill (Callum Turner), in line to inherit heaps of wealth but foppish enough to ride 16 miles to London to get his hair cut.

And then there is Knightley, a close family friend who knows Emma better than she knows herself. As played by Johnny Flynn, this film’s Knightley is noticeably hunkier than previous film incarnatio­ns.

All these individual­s and more are held in a kind of cosmic balance by Austen’s exceptiona­l plotting and sense of character. Her metier is romantic love, its secrets and misunderst­andings, its feints and dodges and discontent­s. No one wrote about this with a keener understand­ing, both comic and sympatheti­c, than Austen, and any film that is true to her spirit, as this latest Emma is, will have no trouble making us happy.

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 ?? Photos by AP ?? Anya Taylor-Joy in ‘Emma’.
Photos by AP Anya Taylor-Joy in ‘Emma’.
 ??  ?? Taylor-Joy and Johnny Flynn.
Taylor-Joy and Johnny Flynn.
 ??  ?? Bill Nighy.
Bill Nighy.

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