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Film: “North and South” – My Second Take

24 Jun

Since Kristie(J) was so kind to put me on her list of “North and South”-Crusaders, I’ll have to do better than the measly comments I scribbled down about it last year. So this weekend I battled The Boyfriend for control over the TV. At the moment, the European Football Championship is taking place here and for the last two weeks, every night there was football on TV, so TV time is scarce for me. But Sunday afternoon, it was my turn and I settled down to watch North and South for the ?th time.

Warning: freaking long post ahead and I still think there are things I didn’t mention. Anyway:

North and South

I’m not 100% sure but I like to think I first read about North and South on Kristie (J)’s blog. It’s fitting. After some difficulties – getting BBC DVDs here in Germany is rather expensive (here’s a bit more about that) – I got it at the end of November 2007. Which lead to the post linked to above.

The film itself

Right from the beginning, I was captivated. But the scene that made me feel punched in the stomach for the first time comes at the end of the first episode. Margaret fell asleep while writing a letter to her cousin Edith. Contrary to the optimistic spin she put on her new life in Milton in her letters until then, now we get her unvarnished view:

“I wish I could tell you Edith how lonely I am; how cold and harsh it is here. Everywhere there is conflict and unkindness.
I think God has forsaken this place.
I believe I have seen hell.
It’s white.
It’s snow-white.”

These words are accompanied by very moving and fitting music. In this scene, the camera moves through the mill. You see people working and white strands of cotton are floating through the air; it ends with John Thornton walking from the left to the right in the background. And really, the line: “I believe I have seen hell. It’s white – snow-white” – every time I see this scene, this line gets to me.

I knew then I was in for something great.

The actors. Of course, I have to mention Richard Armitage here. He’s able to convey so much with the expression on his face (most famous here probably the “look back” scene). And Brendan Coyle has an amazing presence on the screen in his role as Nicholas Higgins. I include two actors with smaller roles here because really, all actors are great in the role they play: Jo Joyner as Fanny Thornton and Ben Crompton as the police inspector.

Small things I liked:

  • the way the yellow rose is used
  • the contrast between warm and sunny colours for the south (Helston) and dark and muted colours for the north (Milton)
  • the handshake thing
  • the only time Margaret is dressed completely with white clothes is the day she saves John in front of the angry strikers
  • Boucher drowning in purple water and the next time Fanny Thornton is on screen, she’s wearing a purple dress

The story

North and South, at least in the way it is represented in the film, is a densely layered story. You can watch it multiple times, and every time, there’s something new to discover. The words that catch most of the things I see at play in it are (at the moment) change and morals (doing what is right). It’s change that is motivated by industrialization and it’s alluded to with the title. But there is also change that is not completely driven by industrialization, change on a personal, individual level. And combined with it is the question of what is the right thing to do. The romance between John Thornton and Margaret Hale is both representative of change on the greater scale of industrialization and on the smaller scale of individual life and intertwines these two (most notably in the proposal scene, I think).

The first hint of change is right in the first scene. A train is moving and in it sits a young woman who has a yellow rose (?) in her hands. She’s on her way north together with her parents because of her father’s decision to move there. It’s a change motivated by the conscience of Margaret’s father. They arrive in Milton, an industrial town, where life and people are clearly influenced by and live with the change brought about with industrialization.

Especially in the first two episodes, there’s a strong connection between change and morals. Early on, while Margaret is house hunting in Milton, she overhears a conversation about why her father moved to Milton. It’s the first conversation where a question is touched upon that gets asked again and again in North and South: What role should morals play in relation to work? Are there circumstances where conscience is appropriate when you have to work to live?

North and South illustrates this with a look at different families and persons and the way they deal with it:

  • There is Mr Hale, Margaret’s father. He uproots his family and leads them into an uncertain future because he couldn’t reaffirm his belief in the Book of Common Prayer with good conscience. He doesn’t think about how to make a living; his decision is completely ruled by his conscience. There is a great scene with his wife telling him what she thinks about his action. Did he do the right thing?
  • There’s the case of Margaret’s brother Frederick. He’s sought as a mutineer because he couldn’t stand by and see his Captain abuse his position (beating children). Did he do the right thing?
  • On the other hand, there is John Thornton. At a dinner (paraphrasing here) he answers Mr. Hale’s question about how he decides what to do that sound business sense governs his decisions not some moral law. Did he do the right thing?
  • There’s Nicholas Higgins’s family, and Boucher’s family and they again represent another side, obviously more directly opposed to John Thornton than Mr. Hale, for they are the ones who have to suffer the most under the changing working conditions. Did they do the right thing?

Whereas the first two episodes concentrate on asking the question about morals and change, I see the last two episodes as more about the consequences of the changes. The strike is over and there’s work to do. And at least at Marlborough Mill things get better with time: the cooking house where the workers can eat. But there is also a darker side: people die. Bessy Higgins dies as a result of her work; Boucher because he’s “driven mad” by circumstances related to work; Margaret’s mother with the implication being that her death was the result of the move from the South to the North. And later Margaret’s father dies also.

John Thornton and Margaret Hale are the characters where change and the question of morals is at play and intertwines on both the larger (social) and smaller (individual) scale the most. Margaret Hale is the character whose change is chronicled best in North and South. With her, the film starts and with her, the film ends. At the beginning, her life changes because of her father’s decision. At the end, her life changes because of her decision. (By the way, I really like the mirroring of the first and last scene in this film.) During these two points in her life, she learns a lot about herself and about other people and their way to live. She learns to appreciate them. There’s for example the scene where she wants to write a letter to her cousin Edith, finds she can’t confide in her and then goes to visit Bessy to talk with her about what’s on her mind. At the end of the film, Margaret went from a”traditional” way of living to someone who engages with the change brought about by industrialization.

John Thornton’s life is maybe touched the most by industrial change of all the characters in that he knows about the ups and downs first hand. After the speculation of his father went wrong, he worked his way up from poverty. At the start of the story, he and his family are wealthy (again, I assume) but the mill gets in trouble and at the end, he loses all. And Margaret represents change on the personal level. She challenges and changes him (as he does she). For example, he goes out to speak to the strikers because she urges him to do it. He “befriends” Higgins which, in some way, makes their HEA possible.

The romance

The romance in North and South uses one of my favourite premises: unrequited love. John is attracted to Margaret very early. He on the other hand had a very bad start in regard to her opinion of him. The first time they meet, he beats one of his workers for smoking while at work in the mill. So he starts at the lowest possible point in Margaret’s estimation. His attraction keeps growing even though it becomes clearer and clearer (and in an ever more painful way) that she doesn’t care for him and “won’t have him.” At the beginning there’s for example the not given handshake. Margaret’s rejection of his marriage proposal confirms his believe that she doesn’t care for him. But it doesn’t stop there. He comes to think she has a lover and it ends with the lowest point possible for him: he compromises his principles for her (there are at least two instances where his adherence to truth are mentioned). He knows Margaret lied when she said she wasn’t at the train station but he doesn’t say so. This leads to the brilliantly filmed scene where he tells Margaret that he looks to the future and he no longer has any passion for her.

Margaret’s father asks her at one point what brought about the transformation in her opinion about John. At the exhibition in London it’s clear that some change in her opinion about him has occured. She “defends” him when she sees how he’s treated and perceived by others. There are some more instances and then there’s the marriage of his sister Fanny where she sees him with another woman and realizes that and what she has “lost.” In that view, Margaret follows a reversed path to John’s in terms of admiration: he starts out with admiration that diminishes over the course of the story (but he can’t help himself with the attraction thing) whereas Margaret goes from zero admiration to a lot until she says to him at one point: “I have a better opinion of you than you of me at the moment, I feel” (paraphrased).

I know I’m so far out of the window with what I’ll say next that I’m standing on thin air, but anyway. The famous scene with the carriage driving away and John looking at it and saying: “Look back. Look back at me” always makes me think of the scene at the end of episode 1 when Margaret speaks of hell and white (above). The carriage and the swirling snow flakes are only filmed for a short time but they remind me of that scene. The most part of this scene is a close up of Richard Armitage’s face while he looks after the carriage (and isn’t it heartbreaking when you know she didn’t turn back because of the expression on his face?) But I also imagine what he sees and that’s a dark (black) carriage driving away from him through swirling white snow flakes and taking Margaret away from him. So I like to believe he also thinks he’s looking at hell, and that hell is snow-white. Awwwh!


I’ll finish this freaking long post (anyone read it all?) with a youtube video. It’s not a very surprising one but it’s the best in terms of a fitting end to a great story. It also features one of the best first kisses ever in a film. Here it is:

"North And South" (+ Books)

26 Nov

What can I say? I watched North and South Friday night, went to bed at 2 a.m. – WOWed and “this was really good” – dreamt about it, got up and watched it again. How’s that for a comment?

There are many great scenes, and many wonderful-not-that-important-for-the-plot-but-nevertheless great scenes, I don’t know which one(s) to single out. But then, it wouldn’t be wrong to say that each and every one scene is just right. Really. Also, I’m still just too “wowed” to say anything more coherent and thoughtful than that and it’ll have to do.

Maybe I’m watching it again tonight because right now I’ve a small reading slump (at least I hope it’s small). I just can’t sit still to read, although I obviously can do it to watch movies. Go figure. The last novels I finished were Kristin Hardy’s Always a Bridesmaid and C. L. Wilson’s Lord of the Fading Lands. I started to read Searching for Memory. The Brain, the Mind, and the Past by Daniel L Schacter last week and find the things I “learn” fascinating and interesting, but it’s sure no book to sit down and read in one sitting (my favourite kind of reading).

The good news is, apparently I’m still able to order new books.

Today, amazon shipped

  • Linnea Sinclair – The Down Home Zombie Blues (pre-ordered long ago)
  • Lara Adrian’s Kiss of Crimson (added this weekend)
  • The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath (added this weekend)

In the near future:
– Julia Brigg’s Virgina Woolf: An Inner Life (ordered this weekend)

I’m pretty sure to order:

  • Hope Tarr’s Strokes of Midnight
  • Kristin Hardy’s Her Christmas Surprise

I think about ordering:

  • Robin D. Owen – Heart Choice
  • Eloisa James – Desperate Duchesses, or The Taming of the Duke
  • Laura Lee Guhrke – And Then He Kissed Her

There are more. These are just the ones I looked at today.

Best Of 2008: Books and Games (And More)

31 Dec

Most Viewed Post

Film: “North and South” – My Second Take

Books

I read (= recorded as read) 101 books this year. I know there are some I didn’t catch (mostly non-fiction) and nearly 40 of the books are category novels, but all in all, and thanks to the huge effort in December, I managed to read over 100 books. Yeah!

My favorite reads by grade:

Top Ten of Books read in 2008:

  • Meljean Brook – Demon Bound
  • Kresley Cole – Dark Needs at Night’s Edge
  • Jennifer Crusie – Manhunting
  • Meredith Duran – The Duke of Shadows
  • Susan Fromberg Schaeffer – The Madness of a Seduced Woman
  • Laura Kinsale – The Prince of Midnight
  • Lisa Kleypas – Sugar Daddy
  • Kathleen O’Reilly – Sex, Straight Up
  • Brandon Sanderson – Mistborn
  • Linnea Sinclair – Shades of Dark
  • Special Mention:
    – Joanna Bourne (for the writing)
    – Kristin Hardy
    – Caroline Linden
    – Sherry Thomas

My favorite novel 2008:

This is really difficult because you’re comparing apples to oranges and depending on mood and day and whatnot, this changes but anyway, here goes:
I was a really close decision between Meredith Duran’s The Duke of Shadows and Laura Kinsale’s The Prince of Midnight, with Brandon Sanderson’s Mistborn: The Final Empire a close third. In the end, I decided on

kinsale-laura-prince-of-midnight

Laura Kinsale – The Prince of Midnight

The fact that decided it was that I didn’t think I would like The Prince of Midnight all that much before I started to read it (the cross-dressing heroine).

This makes
Meredith Duran’s The Duke of Shadows
my favorite of the books published in 2008
(that I read).

Additional thoughts:

  • I had to read my comments about Karen Rose’s You Can’t Hide again. I didn’t remember…
  • I also don’t remember much about Jennifer Crusie’s Manhunting. But I gave it a 5/5 so it’s on the list.
  • I got really into category novels this year. I like that they are fast to read and focused on the romance – a good way to fix my contemporary romance cravings. But most of all, I really appreciate how authors manage to turn out good stories with all the constraints on this format.
  • The most pleasant surprise: that I like Kresley Cole’s “Immortals After Dark” series after all.
  • Looking at all the books and the grades, I have really a lot of books graded in the 4/5 range. Maybe I’m too generous, I don’t know, but grading is probably something I have to think about (once more).

~ * ~

Games

I finished 4 games:

and started/played ? number of others, most notably Civilization IV (PC), Divine Divinity (PC), Spell Force (PC), Puzzle Quest (PS2), and some Diablo 2 (PC) and Civilization III (PC).

My favorite game:

Okami (PS2)

okami

It’s one of my most favorite games on the PS2. It’s beautiful and original.

Music

Usually, this is not part of my end-of-the-year post, but this year, there are two CDs I listened to a lot:

  • James Blunt – Back to Bedlam
  • Any MacDonald – This Is the Life

I already wrote about the significance of James Blunt’s Back to Bedlam so I want to conclude this year with a video by Amy MacDonald. I really like every song on her album This Is the Life, and since I already linked my favorite of her songs, Let’s Start a Band, I chose the title song of her album, This is the Life, as the last thing to post this year:

Amy MacDonald – This Is the Life

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Film Nights

18 Dec

The Boyfriend went out of town on a business trip a few days ago; I watch films in the evening to take a break from reading (I finished three books over the weekend).

I started with:

Pride and Prejudice – BBC

pride-and-prejudice-bbc

What I especially like in this version is that important (positive) developments for Elizabeth’s and Darcy’s relationship happen outside. The letter, the conversation with the aunt, and the second proposal – all outside, whereas the first proposal is inside. I just like to think it’s a fitting connection because Elizabeth is so fond of being outside and of walking.

Then of course I had to see:

Pride and Prejudice, the film version from 2005

pride-and-prejudice

I like this movie. It’s beautifully filmed and has some really good scenes – the hand thing, the near kiss at the first proposal (outside!), Elizabeth in the white room with the statues. One problem: What’s with Keira Knightley scrunching up her face to show whatever?

And then, to make it complete, I watched:

Bridget Jones’s Diary

bridget-joness-diary

My favorite scenes: the one in the hallway when Mark tells Bridget that he likes her just the way she is; the interview, at the end of Mark’s answer to Bridget’s question about the trial – I like his look. He seems like he wishes for himself what he says then.

Yesterday evening, it was time for:

north-and-south-mr-thornton

Ahm, I mean:

North and South – BBC

north-and-south

Those who know of my blog very probably know my post about this film. So I’ll just say: it was the fitting conclusion to my evenings of girly romantic films.

But tonight, it’s definitely time for something different:

Battlestar Galactica

battlestar-galactica-season-1

LOVE THIS SERIES!