Far From The Madding Crowd (Review)

DIRECTOR: Thomas Vinterbergfar_from_the_madding_crowd

CAST: Carey Mulligan, Matthias Schoenaerts, Michael Sheen, Tom Sturridge, Juno Temple, Jessica Barden, Rowan Hedley, Chris Gallarus, Penny-Jane Swift, Don J Whistance, Jamie Lee-Hill

RUNNING TIME: 119 mins

CERTIFICATE: 12A

BASICALLY…: Independent farm owner Bathsheba Everdene (Mulligan) attracts three suitors: sheep farmer Gabriel (Schoenaerts), prosperous bachelor William (Sheen) and reckless Sergeant Frank (Sturridge)…

 

NOW FOR THE REVIEW…

Costume drama fanatics are likely to be in cinematic heaven with Far From The Madding Crowd, the latest adaptation of Thomas Hardy’s classic novel which had previously been famously adapted into a 1967 film with Julie Christie and Terence Stamp.

Now with Carey Mulligan and Tom Sturridge filling those roles, as independent farm owner Bathsheba Everdene and reckless army Sergeant Frank Troy respectively, the stage is set for director Thomas Vinterberg – previously Oscar-nominated for his Danish flick The Hunt – to bring his own vision of the classic story to life, and it is nothing less than gorgeous and even at times breath-taking.

There’s something very old-fashioned in the way that Vinterberg has brought this new film, adapted by One Day novelist and screenwriter David Nicholls, to the big screen. Atmospheric landscape shots of 1870s Wessex Dorset, shot beautifully by cinematographer Charlotte Bruus Christensen, capture the enchantment and eroticism of the countryside that only masters like David Lean could accomplish; never before has a field of mud looked so inviting. The costumes, as one can expect from this type of film, are all extraordinary and highly suitable for each individual character; Troy’s uniform is a blindingly stunning red, while tragic destitute Fanny Robin (Juno Temple) earns our continuing pity in her fanciful rags. Some of the shots, camera movements et cetera even look, bizarrely enough, like a Spielberg movie at times, just in terms of how grand and triumphant some of the imagery can be – a scene where Bathsheba arrives at her inherited farm after a fire, there’s smoke floating around everywhere which, mixed with the rays of the sun, paves the way for this understated but visually exciting (re)entrance for our main character. There is certainly great cinematic influence on Vinterberg’s part, and it’s made for one extremely impressive production

Nicholls, as a writer, paces his adaptation gently, allowing all the important plot beats of Hardy’s original story to occur whilst compromising some of its outdated attributes. Bathsheba’s strive for independence, for example, is much more prominent and centre-stage than perhaps in other versions before it, and though the romance element is still a very large part of it (with not just Sturridge’s Sergeant Troy in the mix but also Matthias Schoenaerts’ sheep farmer Gabriel Oak and Michael Sheen’s mature bachelor William Boldwood as well, it’s more of a love square than it is a triangle) it’s handled in a way that doesn’t wholly betray her original goals and prospects. By its end, she is still more than willing to make her own decision with no obvious influence, as opposed to Hardy’s novel where, let’s face facts, she didn’t turn out to be as strong as was intended. In favouring the female empowerment aspect of the story, Nicholls has managed to adapt a modernised, yet still timeless, version that will earn the admiration of audiences everywhere amidst a depressing insurgence of sexism and discrimination against women within the industry.

Performances are almost pitch perfect from the entire ensemble, with only Sturridge failing to completely convince as the hardened and domineering presence of his character; for whatever reason, he’s simply too boyish for the part. Everyone else fares much better, with Mulligan proving to be a sparky and engaging interpretation of Bathsheba and Schoenaerts perhaps turning in his finest performance to date as the ever-loyal Gabriel (then again, after his bland performance in A Little Chaos, anything would seem Shakespearian by comparison). However, it turns out to be Sheen who impresses the most as the older suitor Boldwood; a man who has clearly been wronged in the past by a lover of sorts, his social awkwardness and worrying lack of true self-confidence makes him a character who would otherwise come across as hugely pathetic, but Sheen is able to humanise him in a way that enables him to be sympathetic and overall good-natured.

Any literary geeks will mostly be satisfied with this interpretation, though from what one understands about Hardy’s novel there has been a lot of dialogue and even a little bit of character removed for the sake of timing, and while we’re certain that some people will prefer the 1967 version a whole lot more, you can rest assured that the 2015 film incarnation of Far From The Madding Crowd is a worthy version for a whole new audience.

SO, TO SUM UP…

Far From The Madding Crowd is a splendid adaptation of Thomas Hardy’s novel, thanks to Thomas Vinterberg’s carefully balanced direction, gorgeous production values, David Nicholls’ faithful and modernised screenplay, and pitch-perfect performances by its main cast. Don’t stray too far from it upon your next cinema visit…

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