Film Review: Jane Eyre (1997)
ITV and A&E’s 1997 made-for-TV film adaptation of Jane Eyre celebrates two decades of dividing viewers this year. The film stars the very fine Ciarán Hinds as Mr. Rochester and the young, pre-Oscar nominated Samantha Morton as our beloved Jane. Gemma Jones is a mesmerizing delight as Mrs. Fairfax and steals every scene she is in. A youthful, too-pretty-for-his-breeches Rupert Penry-Jones makes a brief appearance as St. John Rivers.
And in my head, I make this little connection of how two Captain Wentworths end up in the same film, which is never a bad thing: Ciarán Hinds played Captain Wentworth in Persuasion two years prior in 1995, and Rupert Penry-Jones played the role a decade later in 2007, after he’d gotten a decade-worth of wear on that pretty face of his. But I digress.
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At just under two hours, there is much that has been cast off. To condense a masterpiece of the English language into 108 minutes is a redacting feat. Much is gone, just gone. And relationships that have many hundreds of pages to build up can end up feeling rushed and curt in the visual representation. So, it goes. There is much to miss, much to hate, much to irritate and, even, much to eventually appreciate and love about this fallible adaptation of Jane Eyre.
Bellowing, Bad Hair, and Baggy Breeches
Vocal loathers of this Jane Eyre adaptation tend to focus on one thing: Ciarán Hinds’ Rochester. This is a brooding, brusque, bitter, bellicose brute of a man, who bellows and barks – that’s a lot of b’s. He commandeers, sports a bad ’stache, tromps around in baggy breeches and shares one of the most awkward first kisses ever captured on film. Gone are the gentle flirtations and playful teasings. He’s not mopey and withdrawn, he’s mad and blustering.
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That’s the knee-jerk reaction and, admittedly, that was my own first reaction to this film. I did not like, no, I did not like it one bit. But then, I saw it again and then again, and now my feelings are quite the opposite, to paraphrase Lizzie Bennett. Ciarán Hinds’ Rochester has grown on me, very much so. There is much tenderness to be found there, much vulnerability.
There is a lovely scene, after the marriage proposal of the evening before, where Jane is elated, but unsure if she just dreamed it all up, if, in the cold light of day, Rochester will change his mind. She sees him and refers to him formally and properly as Mr. Rochester. He smiles and tells her to call him Edward, and then looks at her, so lovingly, so tenderly, and says, “Mrs. Rochester.” It’s a lovely moment, one of many in this film.
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The baggy breeches are still there – and they do look comfortable, although not entirely flattering. The moustache is an acquired taste. The kiss is still awkward, gloriously so. I’ve come to really appreciate the open-mouthed ineptitude of Jane’s first kiss.
Hinds’ Rochester is at once mesmerizing and repulsive. There’s a raw magnetism there that is quite compelling. And while certainly an attractive man, Hinds is not a conventionally beautiful man, so he arguably fits more readily the book descriptions of Rochester than many of the hotties who have played Rochester on screen.
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But What of Jane?
Samantha Morton is a porcelain-skinned beauty (and always the question – is she too beautiful to be plain Jane?) with piercing blue eyes, who portrays a very fine Jane, at times severe, demure, otherworldly, spunky. Morton is young in this adaptation, only nineteen or twenty when the film was made, so she is the “right” age for our youthful Jane. Her youthfulness shines through, giving her Jane a very believable freshness and innocence. She narrates the film – there are voiceovers throughout. I found this initially irritating, but it too has grown on me. And Morton has a lovely, lovely voice, very feminine and lilting. Her Jane is a tad too enigmatic, spunky and even self-righteously haughty at times, but I’ve come to forgive that as well.
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And speaking of voices, there is a lovely singing scene in this adaptation with Blanche Ingram and Mr. Rochester, and if that is really Ciarán Hinds singing – which it very may well be, since he did sing in Phantom of the Opera (2004) – then the man has a lovely set of pipes on him.
All in all, Jane Eyre from 1997 is a solid adaptation that needs time to percolate. It needs multiple viewings. And it grows on you, so the initial loathing might just turn to tolerable and eventually to likeable and maybe even to loveable with time. Give it a chance or two or three.
RELATED: Literary Romantic Moment: Jane Returns to Mr. Rochester
Content Note: Rated PG.
Where to Watch: DVD and YouTube.
Photo Credit: ITV/A&E
OVERALL RATING
“Hello, Gorgeous.”
ROMANCE RATING
“In vain have I struggled. It will not do. My
feelings will not be repressed. You must allow me
to tell you how ardently I admire and love you.”
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Rupert Penry-Jones is in here? Might have to watch just for that reason 🙂
Very briefly, very briefly. There wasn’t a whole lot of time for all that convalescing stuff and teaching stuff and finding out that she’s an heiress stuff or even learning that they’re relatives stuff. They even dropped a sister, so there was just one Rivers sister…
I remember his St, John not being very…St. John-ey. He well…he emoted to much much for the infamously reserved and dour character. Overall I was kinda meh on this adaptation (Yes Stachy Rochester weirded me out. He seemed too much like a petulant child to me at times). I remember one scene I rather enjoyed in spite of myself. A new scene where Rochester takes Jane shopping post engagement and they run into Blanche and we get to see her taken down a peg. Not a very necessary scene, but oooooh it as satisfying XD
I was attracted by the same thing! Rupert Penry-Jones is a strong point in favour of this movie for me.
I love your writing style! Very nice review. I actually was not sure if I’d seen this adaptation before, but from your description I don’t believe I have, but I will try to catch it. It sounds like Ciaran covers one side of Mr. Rochester who is very brusque at times in the novel. I’m already not pleased that so much of the book is left out, but I’ll reserve judgement for now.
Thanks, Dixie-Ann (-: Be prepared to hate it at first, but it has seriously grown on me. I watched it twice as I was getting ready to write this review, and each time I saw something new and began to like it more and more. Rochester is not quite as bellowing as he first comes across….
This is the first adaptation of Jane Eyre that I watched and will always be my favorite. Even though so much is left out, I still find it perfect. The kiss is a little awkward, but I try to keep in mind that Jane had no experience and also that she had probably never even seen anyone kissing before. Great review, by the way. I enjoy your articles.
Thank you for the kind words, Melanie (-: And happy to find a fellow “liker” of this Jane Eyre. And I totally agree on the kiss — hadn’t really thought about her never having seen a kiss before, but you are totally right. She has lived a very cloistered life up to that point…