The film’s most revolutionary act is shifting the point of view. In Austen’s novel, we are firmly inside Elizabeth’s head. Wright, however, keeps cutting to Darcy’s perspective. We see him watching her from across the ballroom at the Meryton assembly. We see him smile faintly when she bickers with him. This is not a story about a woman being won over; it is a story about two people failing miserably at ignoring a magnetic pull.
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It is, most ardently, a masterpiece of the senses. ★★★★★ Streaming on: Peacock, Netflix, Prime Video pride and prejudice 2005
In the pantheon of literary adaptations, few films have sparked as much gentle warfare among purists and casual fans as Joe Wright’s 2005 Pride & Prejudice . Released to a world already saturated with memories of the 1995 BBC miniseries—complete with Colin Firth’s wet-shirted Mr. Darcy—the film had everything to lose. It was shorter, scrappier, and audaciously messy. The film’s most revolutionary act is shifting the