The Kiss
I just saw this film, and the one thing I cannot get over is how terrible and awkward the kiss between Anne and Wentworth was. It was so bad it almost ruined the movie for me! Anyone agree?
shareI just saw this film, and the one thing I cannot get over is how terrible and awkward the kiss between Anne and Wentworth was. It was so bad it almost ruined the movie for me! Anyone agree?
shareI certainly do. I thought Anne looked like a fish gasping for air. Not romantic or sexy in the slightest.
shareHey Adomination, I can see what you mean about the kiss but I still thought it was sweet. Of course, I wish we had seen more of it and the angles were better so we could see it in full but you take what you can. Then again nobody does a kiss like Richard Armitage in North and South, now that is a kiss that can start a war(and I am sure it did and still does)
shareI loved the kissing scene, it felt genuine and it was sooooo romantic. It did not ruin the film for me, on the contrary. It was moving.
The tear runnig down Anne's cheek , how poignant! I so felt her stake in this unexpected second chance for happiness. And Wentworth's hesitation as he was probably remembering that they had been at this point before but without a happy end. And then "THE kiss" which
makes you want to rip up the newspaper and turn it into confetti to spray around your room
Mrs. Thornton, you know a sweet kiss when you see one, don't you?
Wentworth's hesitation
yes dear Coira, I recognized it. Love your use for it.
Wentworth's hesitating gave the scene an intensely romantic tension. You could feel how Anne willed him to take that leap of faith and let himself fall into that ring of fire all over again. This time, we, the audience, know, Anne will stand by her decision. And when he finally did take his leap of faith, my heart went soaring, because I knew these two would be insanely happy. *sigh* DELIGHTFUL, just like the whole rest of the film!
Oops, I hadn't realized there was a thread on the KISS. I wrote my take on the kiss on Coira's thread, if anyone's interested.
shareI have to agree with the earlier poster that compared Anne to a fish, that is exactly what I was thinking. She looks like a goldfish gasping for air. The actor who plays Wentworth is wonderful in that role, however I really feel that the actress was totally miscast. If you look at many scenes she has her mouth open, almost as though her teeth are too big for her lips to cover them.
shareYou should watch Harry Hill's take on it: Is she going to kiss him, bite him, oo it's a kiss . . no a bite . . oh she's gone with the kiss. Lol.
He also points out the giant fingernail outside Kellynch Hall and the lady in the opening scene's who just stands there with an inkpot in her hands lol!
Yeah, what's up with the inkpot lady? Did they really have a servant who just stood there with an inkpot?
shareIf they did, then I highly doubt Anne Eliot would participate in the practice. I could probably understand having a servant walking around with her holding the ink, so she could keep writing. But to have her standing there? What, there are no tables around?
shareI was appalled by the kiss and came here to find this thread. I didn't think badly of Anne but how long it took for the Captain to kiss HER. In those days, I imagine kissing in public was not condoned. So, Anne must have had a great deal of patience while waiting for him to make his move.
"Two more swords and I'll be Queen of the Monkey People." Roseanne
Interesting you should say that. Last night, at the special screening, I heard people all around saying they wished she'd close her mouth because it was very distracting. This was all through the movie.
shareRe: coiragrigione
I loved the kissing scene, it felt genuine and it was sooooo romantic. It did not ruin the film for me, on the contrary. It was moving.
The tear runnig down Anne's cheek , how poignant! I so felt her stake in this unexpected second chance for happiness. And Wentworth's hesitation as he was probably remembering that they had been at this point before but without a happy end. And then "THE kiss" which
makes you want to rip up the newspaper and turn it into confetti to spray around your room
I loved it!
I'm gonna have to agree with the "fish" comparison other's have made. That's exactly how I felt about it. Sure, Wentworth's hesitation by your description was appropriate and could have enhanced the scene but it was made too long by Anne's gaping mouth and the whole thing was just painfully awkward.
shareI loved, it was sweet. I loved how they blocked out everyone around them.
sharecoiragrigione - I agree with the others, your analysis of why Wentworth was hesitating, just adds a whole new dimension to that scene. Thank you for your astute and clever observation and reasoning behind what he may have been thinking :) and why he was hesitating. Just makes me love him even more ! :)
shareIt was touching. simple, sweet, hesitant ... they hadn't been close for all those years. It was "fine."
shareThen again nobody does a kiss like Richard Armitage in North and South, now that is a kiss that can start a war(and I am sure it did and still does) []
ifeoma_6 - you just made me want to watch North and South, and I think I will ! :)
...nobody does a kiss like Richard Armitage in North and South, now that is a kiss that can start a war(and I am sure it did and still does)
"Then again nobody does a kiss like Richard Armitage in North and South, now that is a kiss that can start a war"
This!
I agree 100% :-)
As for this kiss I think what they were trying to achieve was the visualisation of Anne finally getting her man after so long and all the struggle with family etc... The kiss if you notice is all initiated by her. He doesn't even move...I think it was done on purpose to show that after all the struggle she gets there.
Fish gasping for air ... yes, that's exactly what I thought. Same words in fact, prior to reading yours. I do wish they had not changed this end scene so much - Austen's was SO good. I was SO MUCH looking forward to the speech, the frantic writing of the letter, the look!, the attempt at composure, the WALK up the street. All of it gone ... sigh ... I was disappointed. I don't mind A kiss being in the movie, but I do whole-heartedly agree that it should NOT have been on the public street in front of everyone. Can't we have these guys walk with them like a gentleman, then pull them into some secluded area like a lover? SIGH. That's what I think they would have done.
As for the kiss they did put in - I liked the tear, too. The hesitation was ridiculous. He was in just as much agony over separation as she was. Plus he's the GUY here, people. And why, oh why, did they have the camera angle on her chin, looking up into her mouth? With no shots whatsoever of Wentworth's feeling at the kiss?! Why is Anne the only one we're interested in when at last all is resolved? Gad!
And on another note, Rupert-Penry Jones was the PERFECT choice for this role. I didn't know he existed prior to seeing him walk in the room to be introduced to Anne. I almost screamed. I think I did scream. (Not like me, too.) He is EXACTLY what I pictured Wentworth to be. Maybe a little more tanned or weather-beaten in the face, but that's it. AHHH! I can't believe how stunning he is in this role. *raptures*
sparkle4513 I completely agree with you regarding - Rupert-Penry Jones being perfectly cast as Wentworth, he was so handsome and perfect as Wentworth, with his quiet sensitive demeanor.
It took too long......to drawn out and overly dramatic.
Be kinder than necessary, for everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.
She looked like a landed trout, gasping for air. Also NO ONE kissed in public, it simply wasn't done. Not even by whores. It was out of place and to modern for the time. I know they "
had to do it for modern viewers" but it should have been done in private and INSIDE.
I was at a special screening of the film last night (it doesn't air in the US officially until Sunday) and people laughed during the kiss. That kiss should not cause laughter, but looking at Sally Hawkins' fish-mouth was just too much.
The Bath Marathon got a lot of laughs too.
Overall, the crowd was not terribly impressed.
Interesting to hear that. How did the audience respond to the scene where Anne diagnoses and re-sets her nephew's dislocated collar bone? I laughed out loud the first time I saw that. I can see that the writer/director were trying to prove Anne was capable and sensible in a crisis, but that was a step too far IMO.
You pierce my soul. I am half agony, half hopeshare
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liked the movie...though I agree the kiss could certainly have been better....someone mentioned North and South (loved that movie)...also the new version of Jane Eyre with rochester and jane kissing in the rain...that was hot!!!
share If the goal was to show awkward, they achieved that. If not, they failed.
I didn't like the "Middlemarch" kiss either, and that was better concieved with more attractive participants.
i must admit the kiss made me feel really awkward . i do belive it was the worst kiss
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I have to agree about the kiss being awkward. It seemed as if she was standing there forever with her mouth open.
And as for Wentworth and Miss Elliot kissing on a public street... scandalous!
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"I miss Dwight. Congratulations, Universe. You win."
i thought that as well .. she could have caught flies with her mouth open for as long as it was :)
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Well, they kissed in the street in the '95 version too!
You pierce my soul. I am half agony, half hopeshare
I loved the kiss probably because it didn't feel 'movie-like', it didn't feel staged. It felt real, the stakes were high, the emotion, the longing overwhelming. The tear running down Anne's cheek, directorial and acting genius! We don't look our best in emotionally charged moments. I know I don't anyway. I am too wrapped up in the moment to worry about anything else. And Anne's eyes ... *heavy sigh*
And that urgency, that emotional immediacy is so well captured in the scene. The kiss is touching, so heartfelt, just seriously steamy.
The time which elapsed before the kiss took place was just too awkward for me. It makes sense that Wentworth might be hesitant (hence prolonging the kiss from happening), but I think the filmmaker could have shown this using better camera angles. I'm going to watch it again, but if memory serves me correct, we view Wentworth from behind and only a portion of him. It was an ill angle all around with Anne waiting, IMHO, uncomfortably for her desired kiss to be complete. I much prefer the Kellag (Sp?) Hall embrace and kiss at the very end when he reveals his wedding gift to her.
There were some parts I liked about this adaptation, but I prefered the earlier Ciaran Hinds version over this one.
I actually thought Frederick was punishing her by not bending down to kiss her - and making her stand there so awkwardly. "Beg for it!" Ick.
shareI was all happy for them until the Kiss and it just let me down. The open gasping mouth after all that running was gross, sorry.
There is only light, my light, my naked light, my gift to you all. Experience my bliss.
Don't be sorry. It WAS gross.
share[deleted]
Beg to differ. He wasn't given enough to do. Austen's Captain Wentworth doesn't just stand around and glower.
Not that this is Rupert's fault. I know he's a fine actor, so it's got to be the fault of the writer and/or director. But, as far as I am concerned, nothing could save this from being a not-very-good film and a terrible adaptation (there is a difference).
So glad it worked for you. For many of us, he was just a good looking bore. Where was the humor, the spark, the kind of man who would capture the attention of the lively Musgrove girls?
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No, the consensus view on a fair number of Jane Austen websites since 2007, when this film first aired.
There's a great deal to admire about RPJ, just not in this particular adaptation. I've said it before and I'll say it again. I had very high hopes for this film. I wanted to like it -- the cast looked great. I keep watching it again in hopes of finding something to praise, but the people who made this adaptation just didn't get the story or the characters.
And I look forward to 39 Steps.
And I look forward to 39 Steps.
I approach all new adaptations with an open mind and a sense of optimism! A Broadway production of 39 Steps with 4 actors all, except one, playing different roles just closed after a run of about two years. It was fantastic. If that production ever comes near to you, see it!
shareIf that production ever comes near to you, see it!
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You really need to take a chill pill.
If I hate anything, it's the movie, not Rupert. Rupert is a terrific actor and a good-looking man, but this is a terrible movie and a worse adaptation and no amount of good-looking, terrific actors is going to change that.
I'm wrecking the British economy? That's probably one of the most unusual comments I've ever read on this board. I think that's known as "blaming the victim." In truth, the makers of this film are responsible for this disaster, not I.
the presence of all those good and good looking actors just makes it worse -- all that unrealized potential!
shareThe RPJ-starring version of 'The 39 Steps' is very poor indeed. Couldn't care less that the 'plane used in one of the scenes was the wrong sort, but was concerned that the pilot was able to shoot a machine gun through propellor blades without harming them [eyeroll] Was very, very bothered by the incoherent script, tin ear for dialogue and the silliest ending I'd seen in ages. Watch it with the sound down to see Rupert run 'cos he scrubs up well in this, and then watch the Hitchcock version, which is just as unfaithful to the source novel, but a HUGE amount of fun!
Having said that, it wasn't as awful as the new adaptation of 'Day of the Triffids'. Talk about damning with faint praise !
He looks like what happens when you punch a cow!share
Turn down sound...apply mustard. Works for me!
shareInteresting, I was going to say that this kiss reminded me of the one in the A&E version of Jane Eyre with Samantha Morton. It also gets mixed reactions when shown in class.
shareAnd with good reason...Not well executed either.
shareHe hesitated so long that I wondered if, as he closed in, he discovered that she had bad breath and wanted to back out, but was too polite to do so.
share
The kiss was wonderful and sweet.Ann was breathless from running and Wentworth had waited so long for her declaration of love he couldnt believe it. They fell into each others armss so happy that at last they could know the other loved them. HOW STUNNING
"The kiss" didn't ruin the entire movie for me but it certainly wrecked that particular scene. I understand why it was directed in that manner (romantic tension and all) but the conclusion of the kiss took too darn long and the back-and-forth camera angle was distracting, too.
When Wentworth took Anne to her former home and presented it as her wedding gift, now that was romantic! The way he gently held her and let her into a spontaneous waltz...wow! The kiss in that scene left nothing to be desired.
This adaptation is okay but, as with most films, lacks the details and character development the author provides. Read the book if you have the chance; it is much more compelling!
I agree completely Judy. It was a nice idea that was staged incorrectly. She looks like she is going to take a bite out of him, after she moistens him up with all that saliva (geez, that was gross). I do like his making her come to him. She did need to prove something to him. that was a nice aspect.
I did really like the ending too. Very romantic. Although I cannot imagine his buying that house when her connections never approved of him. Seems to me he would have swept her off somewhere away from it all. Although it is a nice thought that he knew her desire to be the mistress of her house again and conceded to that wish out of his love for her.
"I prefer to be unsociable and taciturn"
Yes, the kiss was kinda awkward (I agree) to look at but at least they finally kissed after their years apart, and those torturous, longing gazes, that's the main thing.
"I promise you, before I die I'll surely come to your doorstep"
I loved it!!!! It teased the audience something terrible, but I loved it anyway.
shareShe was a HUMAN BEING gasping for air, the oxygen that only love can give, and I thought it was an extraordinarily moving moment.
If we are to be brothers, let us be brothers for life, die together.