Emma review – sweetness, spite and bared bottoms | Peter Bradshaw's film of the week

Anya Taylor-Joy revels in the role of the handsome, clever heroine with a sadistic streak in this amiable adaptation of Jane Austen’s great romcom

Not badly done, Emma. Novelist Eleanor Catton has scripted this amiable, genial and interestingly unassuming new adaptation of Jane Austen’s Regency classic, the great prototype romantic comedy, though it may be truer to call it a marriage comedy or marrcom. Music video specialist Autumn de Wilde makes her feature directing debut, with cinematographer Christopher Blauvelt often confecting a buttery sunlight in which to shoot. De Wilde and Catton are pretty content to let the story itself do the work, getting the big moments, letting the subtleties go, but showcasing a very watchable lead turn from Anya Taylor-Joy whose eerily unblinking gaze has something calculating and predatory.

This movie does take a bit of time to settle down, with a frantically intrusive musical soundtrack at the very beginning, chirruping away under the action to make sure we understand how sprightly and amusing things are supposed to be. There is also what I can only describe as some startling buttock action. Dishy Mr Knightley is briefly glimpsed stark naked from the, ahem, rear. And Emma herself, standing alone with her back to the chimneypiece on a winter’s day, bizarrely hoists her skirts to get the full benefit of a roaring open fire, without obviously troubling herself to ascertain that the servants are not nearby. But these indiscretions happen at the very beginning, after which the movie keeps its full period costume sedately in place.

Taylor-Joy is the famous Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever and rich but, most importantly of course, unmarried, subverting sexual politics by bearing the previous three attributes as coolly as any eligible bachelor. She passes her time by matchmaking, a passion into which she diverts her own romantic frustrations. Emma has found a suitor for her former governess Miss Taylor (Gemma Whelan), who leaves their home to marry Mr Weston (Rupert Graves) – thus grieving Emma’s pernickety old dad, in which role Bill Nighy is inevitably, amusingly cast. Emma can’t wait to set up her low-born friend Harriet Smith (Mia Goth) with the oleaginous clergyman Mr Elton (Josh O’Connor), despite Mr Elton’s socio-sexual intentions being elsewhere engaged, and despite sweet-natured Harriet’s tendresse for local farmer Mr Martin (Connor Swindells).

Arrogant heir-to-a-fortune Frank Churchill (Callum Turner) intrigues Emma, though he is perhaps more enamoured of Jane Fairfax (Amber Anderson) and Emma is continuingly piqued by the intimate, needlingly flirtatious criticisms of Mr Knightley (Johnny Flynn), whose brother is married to Emma’s sister. Their meet-cute has been going on since childhood.

Taylor-Joy is interestingly cast, especially for Emma’s legendary nasty moment, a flash of spite and sadism in which Taylor-Joy suddenly resembles the sinister rich kid she played in Cory Finley’s recent thriller Thoroughbreds. Emma waspishly humiliates tiresome old Miss Bates (Miranda Hart) in front of everyone during an outing to Box Hill, an act of despicable cruelty for which she is famously criticised by Mr Knightley – it was “badly done” – and for which she gets karmic justice. Yet Emma is so conceited that afterwards, when she is very contrite, her sense of status is such that she cannot quite bring herself to apologise to Miss Bates explicitly, leaving us to wonder how intentional a character revelation this is.

Sometimes the casting and staging work well, sometimes not so well. That excellent actor Josh O’Connor is forced into a pantomime role as Mr Elton, an unsympathetic Uriah Heepy-creepy performance that does not really suit him. Maybe he would have brought something more interesting to the role of Frank Churchill. Sometimes the look of the movie is a bit bland, and the “Gypsies” who at one stage attack Miss Smith are kept coyly off-camera.

But Johnny Flynn is virile and demanding as Mr Knightley (Jeremy Northam was a more cerebral one opposite Gwyneth Paltrow in the 1996 version), with a prickly moral sense conflicting with something robustly sensual. I wonder if Flynn shouldn’t at some stage play Alec d’Urberville? But the real revelation for me was Mia Goth as Harriet, a gawky, maladroit yet engaging and touching portrayal of a lonely and rather scared young woman who looks as if she has been crying herself to sleep. Goth was surely influenced by the late, great Brittany Murphy who played the Harriet-equivalent character Tai in Amy Heckerling’s Jane Austen homage, Clueless. A sweet natured Emma, though a little too modest.

• Emma is released in Australia on 13 February, in the UK on 14 February and in the US on 21 February.

Contributor

Peter Bradshaw

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
The Worst Person in the World review – Nordic romcom is an instant classic
Renate Reinsve is sublime as a young woman veering between lovers in a film that reminds us of the genre’s life-affirming potential

Peter Bradshaw

24, Mar, 2022 @1:10 PM

Article image
A Rainy Day in New York review – Woody Allen romance is a damp squib | Peter Bradshaw's film of the week
Bad weather leads to adventure as young lovers Timothée Chalamet and Elle Fanning take a trip to Manhattan

Peter Bradshaw

04, Jun, 2020 @8:00 AM

Article image
Mr Malcolm’s List review – Regency romcom served with cake-icing of irony
A snooty eligible bachelor gets his comeuppance in an ‘alt-historical’ tale told with precisely the right amount of seriousness – and no more

Peter Bradshaw

24, Aug, 2022 @10:00 AM

Article image
Border review – into the woods for a body-horror romance | Peter Bradshaw's film of the week
Ali Abbasi’s dark drama focuses on transgression and taboo as two troubled people living on the edge of society develop a strange friendship

Peter Bradshaw

07, Mar, 2019 @11:00 AM

Article image
Paris, 13th District review – Jacques Audiard’s sexy apartment-block anthology
Audiard brings his typical visual fluency to this entertaining collection of interlocking stories about characters hooking up in the 13th arrondissement

Peter Bradshaw

18, Mar, 2022 @9:47 AM

Article image
Emily review – love, passion and sex in impressive Brontë biopic
Director Frances O’Connor shows author’s creative path to writing Wuthering Heights through the two great loves of her life

Peter Bradshaw

12, Oct, 2022 @12:26 PM

Article image
Passages review – Ira Sachs strikes gold with sophisticated love triangle
A gay man cheats on his husband with a straight woman in this fiercely sexy and heartbreaking tale of young Parisians

Peter Bradshaw

30, Aug, 2023 @6:00 AM

Article image
All of Us Strangers review – Paul Mescal and Andrew Scott tremendous in a beautiful fantasy-romance
Scott, Mescal and Claire Foy shine in a drama about a screenwriter who visits his childhood home to find his parents, who were killed in a car crash, still living there

Peter Bradshaw

25, Jan, 2024 @3:03 PM

Article image
Rebecca review – overdressed and underpowered romantic thriller | Peter Bradshaw's film of the week
Ben Wheatley’s take on the Daphne du Maurier story has moments of spectacle and disquiet but hunky Armie Hammer is miscast as the troubled widower

Peter Bradshaw

15, Oct, 2020 @4:00 AM

Article image
Pink Wall review – time-hopping down romance's rocky road | Peter Bradshaw's film of the week
Director Tom Cullen reshuffles events in an intimate drama about how the messiness of life jeopardises a new relationship

Peter Bradshaw

11, Dec, 2019 @1:00 PM