More
    HomeFashionEverything We Know So Far About Daisy Edgar-Jones’s ‘Sense & Sensibility’

    Everything We Know So Far About Daisy Edgar-Jones’s ‘Sense & Sensibility’

    Published on

    spot_img


    Who’s in the cast of Sense & Sensibility?

    Daisy Edgar-Jones will play the older sister, Elinor Dashwood, in the new Jane Austen adaptation.

    What’s the plot of Sense & Sensibility?

    The story follows Elinor and Marianne Dashwood, two sisters who, upon the death of their father, find themselves suddenly destitute. Both then pursue love and financial security.

    When will Sense & Sensibility be released?

    There’s no release date yet, but read on for everything we do know thus far.

    The details:

    It’s Daisy Edgar-Jones’s most high-profile big-screen project to date

    Yes, Twisters was big, but playing Elinor Dashwood, one of Jane Austen’s most beloved heroines—previously brought to the big screen by double Oscar winner Emma Thompson, no less, who secured her second statuette for her adapted screenplay for Ang Lee’s classic—somehow feels even bigger. The star of Normal People, Fresh, Under the Banner of Heaven, and Where the Crawdads Sing recently proved her acting chops on stage too, with her starring role as the ferocious Maggie in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof opposite Kingsley Ben-Adir’s Brick, so we have no doubt that she’ll soar.

    And as for her co-stars? Well, they have yet to be selected, meaning there is still much fan-casting fun to be had. If we remain within the Sally Rooney televisual universe, we could perhaps see Conversations with Friends and Saltburn’s Alison Oliver playing Elinor’s more naïve younger sister Marianne, previously embodied by a rosy-cheeked Kate Winslet, and Paul Mescal as the handsome and dastardly John Willoughby, previously played by Greg Wise. And as for Hugh Grant’s floppy-haired Edward Ferrars and Alan Rickman’s solemn Colonel Brandon? We could, maybe, see the talented Johnny Flynn as the latter, while the likes of Josh O’Connor and Callum Turner could duke it out to play the former. (Helpfully, the trio are all Austen veterans thanks to Autumn de Wilde’s 2020 take on Emma.) The possibilities are truly endless.

    It’s the somber older sister to Pride & Prejudice

    If Pride & Prejudice is a fizzy glass of champagne, Sense & Sensibility feels like a cosy cup of tea—its mood is more serious, sedate, and contemplative. The plot centers on the three Dashwood sisters—the eldest and most sensible, Elinor; the more free-spirited Marianne; and the much younger Margaret—who are devastated by the passing of their father. Along with their mother, they’re left with only a small inheritance, with their father’s grand estate instead falling into the hands of their half brother. Cast out, they move to a modest cottage, and Elinor and Marianne are drawn to a swirl of suitors: the older Colonel Brandon, the dashing John Willoughby, and the kindly Edward Ferrars. It’s still unclear how faithful this new film adaptation will be (Netflix’s Carrie Cracknell-directed, Dakota Johnson-led Persuasion, for instance, was freewheeling, to say the least), but it seems likely that it will at least echo the gentle and melancholy spirit of its Ang Lee-helmed predecessor.

    The women-led behind-the-camera team is incredibly impressive

    Georgia Oakley, the lauded filmmaker behind the BAFTA-nominated breakout Blue Jean, will be in the director’s chair, marking a splashy follow-up to her widely respected debut, while Diana Reid, the author of Love & Virtue, Seeing Other People, and Signs of Damage, will adapt the novel—a pairing that raises our expectations even further.

    It’ll capitalize on our recent bout of Austen fever

    This year marks the 250th anniversary of Jane Austen’s birth, as well as the 20th anniversary of Joe Wright’s wonderful, sun-dappled, Keira Knightley-centered Pride & Prejudice, which was re-released in theaters to mark the occasion—and there’s even a new, Netflix-produced adaptation of the latter on the way. Here’s hoping this new Sense & Sensibility arrives at the same time as that Pride & Prejudice—that’s a Barbenheimer-style double bill guaranteed to set the internet alight.





    Source link

    Latest articles

    More like this