"Jane Eyre"
By Steve Sailer
03/16/2011
My review of the new movie adaptation of Jane Eyre is up at Taki’s:
What we are left with seems rather like Jane Eyre if Jane Austen had written it. Austen, who died in 1817, was a witty, levelheaded product of the 18th century. She would have gotten along well with Ben Franklin. In contrast, the Bront?«s were the quintessence of the 19th century’s Romantic mood.After the neo-Romanticism of the 1960s-70s, tastes have moved away from the Bront?«s and toward Austen. (The name "Emma," Austen’s second-most-famous heroine, was merely the 448th most popular girl’s baby name in the 1970s. By 2003, it was the 2nd.) Thus, the new movie features much about the Austen-like topics of class and gender battles. Fassbender’s Mr. Rochester comes across more like a bigger, bolder version of Pride and Prejudice’s Mr. Darcy than like Wuthering Heights' demonic Heathcliff. Yet Jane Eyre is so expansive and lively a source that this rendition remains authentic and entertaining.
Read the whole thing there.