
The Courier-Mail Edition
News and Magazines & Newspapers
App
Experience today's Edition of The Courier-Mail, including The Sunday Mail, like never before, with...

SmartKids.
Education and Games
App
When learning becomes an adventure! Your kids can have fun and develop their intellectual skills by...

Real Pool 3D Plus
Games and Entertainment
App
The best 3D pool game is here! The ultimate addictive fun pool game. Challenge your friends to...

LearnEnglish Grammar (UK ed.)
Education and Reference
App
LearnEnglish Grammar is a free grammar practice app designed to help improve English grammar...

Prince of Persia Classic HD
Games
App
"Faithful recreation of one of the most famous games in the history of the medium, with revised...

Real Cricket™ 17
Games and Sports
App
Real Cricket™ is here and here to stay! We have migrated to a brand new experience with Real...

Rises The Night (The Gardella Vampire Hunters, #2)
Book
The second installment in award-winning, New York Timesbestselling author Colleen Gleason's...

Pandemic: Fall of Rome
Tabletop Game
At the height of its power, the Roman Empire held more than two million square miles of territory...

Bondage Rescue (Kiss of Leather #3)
Book
Kyle’s best friend Marshall resurfaces and he’s in a lot of trouble. Can the men at Kiss of...
BDSM M_M Contemporary Romance

Bob Mann (459 KP) rated Love And Friendship (2016) in Movies
Sep 29, 2021
Playing many different ends against the middle, Lady Susan – with the collusion of her American friend Alicia (Chloë Sevigny) – attempts to both find a suitably rich suitor for her daughter Frederica (Morfydd Clark) as well as finding a rich husband for herself to allow her to stay in the manor (sic) to which she has become accustomed. A tale of deception, pregnancy and a marriage of convenience follows: does Lady Susan have to choose between her sexual desires and the rich, stupid and dull Sir James Martin (Tom Bennett, “David Brent: Life on the Road”). Or can she have her cake and eat it?
Based on a Jane Austen short story, “Lady Susan”, this is a delight from beginning to end. However, it does require the attention of the viewer: characters get introduced to you in rapid fire succession, and keeping track of who’s who and how they interrelate is quite a challenge.
But this is a tour de force for Kate “Underworld” Beckinsale who delivers a depth of acting ability that I’ve not seen from her in the past. Her comic timing is just sublime, and while comedies are often overlooked in Awards season, this is a role for which she richly deserves both BAFTA and Oscar recognition.
Stephen Fry joins what is a superb ensemble cast. But outstanding among them is Tom Bennett who is simply hilarious as the nice but dim Sir James. The comic routine about his misunderstanding of “Churchill” (Church – Hill) – a running gag – is sublime and a challenger (with “Was that it t’were so simple”) for the comedy routine of the year.
Directed by Whit Stilman (“The Last Days of Disco”) from his own screenplay, this is one for the more sophisticated viewer: requiring of your full attention, but a treat for the eyes, ears and brain.