The Jane Austen Book Club Movie Review
The Jane Austen Book Club Review

"The Jane Austen Book Club" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Robin SwicordProducer : John Calley,Julie Lynn,Diana Napper
Screenwiter : Robin Swicord
Starring : Maria Bello,Jimmy Smits,Emily Blunt,Kathy Baker,Amy Brenneman
You need neither a deep appreciation for author Jane Austen nor an
understanding of her six novels to recognize that The Jane Austen Book Club
stinks.
A chick-lit-flick, Book Club is poorly directed by Robin Swicord from her own
inconsistent adaptation of Karen Jay Fowler's novel about five women (and one
coerced man) who use Austen's novels as a means to escape their broken lives.
They cover one book a month, and we roll our eyes as their individual problems
mirror the quandaries found in Austen's chapters.
The ladies in Swicord’s cast are perfectly capable. Amy Brenneman emotionally
breaks down -- then builds back up -- as Sylvia, a divorcee dealing with the
uncomfortable truth that her husband (a blasé Jimmy Smits) has found a new
love. Maria Bello is sweet and spunky as Jocelyn, a loner so wrapped up in her
friends' relationships that she doesn't notice the good man (Hugh Dancy)
interested in her. I particularly liked Emily Blunt's turn as a closed-off high
school French teacher married to an oaf (Marc Blucas) but falling for one of
her students.
But the actresses serve a preposterous script that cheats its material with
lame coincidences and phony resolutions. Sacramento, Swicord's setting, appears
so small on screen that characters keep running into each other at inopportune
times. Character quarrels could be (and usually are) lifted directly from
Austen's text, but what worked on the page feels bogus when applied to real
life.
If you can not figure out where Book Club is going, you've never read Jane
Austen -- or any novel, for that matter.
You got Lunchables on your chin.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





