"To live for me, Jane, is to stand on a crater crest that may spew fire any day." Dalton delivered that line with ease and confidence, and a bit of tease. I shall never get tired of watching him.
@@zehei2497 He was classically trained so he should be very good but many just think of him as James Bond when he acted in a lot of meaty roles on stage and in films before becoming James Bond.
@@zehei2497 He was classically trained so he should be very good but many just think of him as James Bond when he acted in a lot of meaty roles on stage and in films before becoming James Bond.
They are wonderful to watch together. The scene where they argue about the money they are both clearly holding back laughter and it makes it that much more wonderful.
this is the best adaptation of jane eyre ever... zehah is brilliant as jane and tim dalton superb as edward rochester he must love the bronte sisters.... he was a superb heathcliffe
I see these awesome series at least 4 times a year. And I'll watch them again, and again... and again. That's what a MASTERPIECE can do to the human psyche. It hypnotizes you and you're glued to it. Be it a music, a poem, or a movie. Thanks for the great upload January's Moon!
The only masculine, worldly and sexiest Mr. Rochester ever! And for that it perfectly made sense that Jane fell deeply in love with him and left everything just to go back to him.
The best version. The acting, taking time to have the expressions together with the words, the themes well chosen. A master has been at work for the screening and the text. Actors are all, without a doubt fully engaged in the story. Especially the time they took without getting bored in any sense.
The book tells us that the reason Mrs Reed treated Jane so badly was because her husband had very obviously preferred Jane to his own children who had been spoiled by his wife. He'd also been very close to Jane's mother even after she had chosen to marry beneath her, albeit to a man she loved. There was a suggestion that Mrs Reed was jealous of Jane's parents' happy marriage and she and Mr Reed clearly had very little in common.
@Miss Poste *argw27 book: "...I hated it the first time I set my eyes on it-a sickly, whining, pining thing! It would wail in its cradle all night long-not screaming heartily like any other child, but whimpering and moaning. Reed pitied it; and he used to nurse it and notice it as if it had been his own: more, indeed, than he ever noticed his own at that age. ..." Chapter XXI
So what? Mrs Reed could correct Jane’s faults without spoiling her own children. She gave a bad example. And even if it was jealousy for the Eyre’s marriage, bullying Jen was not the way to fix her ones. An ass she was, an ass she is after this explanation
I was crying. I don't know whether bc I miss such love or bc Dalton is acting so well. I cried so much when Jane left the guests room and then they talked on the stairs
18:24 From the looks of Mr. Rochester's reaction, it seemed that he realized that calling Jane "little" can cause the latter to be mad and he was afraid that she might leave him forever because of it. Fortunately, Jane chose to smile instead of being upset. It was a nice touch to see that Jane has some triggers by showing that she doesn't like anyone who calls her "little" or makes fun of her height. Zelah and Tim have a nice chemistry there.
I usually don't like adaptations from book to film because there are so many nuances that have to left out in the interest of time..... but this is my favourite adaptation of Jane Eyre onto the screen. Timothy Dalton is the ultimate Mr Rochester - there will never be another to match him.
I agree. No screen adaptation ever did complete justice to the book. But this version, being a TV serial, was able to flesh out the book more compared to the film version where they had to condense the story considerably. :)
"You little niggard" he said. We all burst out in laughter with that remark! Upon referencing the word, its meaning is a stingy person and only that :-)
Does anyone else notice the double meaning of the part from 15.00-15.10? Here 'Belle' Blanche says: "That person appears to want you.", hereby referring to Jane. And Rochester answers: 'Now, does she?' I've read the book and cannot find these exact phrases, but nevertheless I like it! I like it because, on one side it is a very logical conversation where nothing strange can be found in. It's rahter obvious that Jane wishes to want to speak to her master. On the other side, here is the question that mr Rochester is asking himself throughout (almost) the whole story: 'does she? Does she want me?' r
@@anniemacneil8697 me too. I’ve been watching it over and over for 6 weeks and am now reading the book again for probably the 20th time in my life. I tried watching the 2011 version yesterday for a change of scene, and omg it was so bad.
13:18 Jane treats unimportant people with kindness. Here she remembers his first name. This makes her so much better than miss Ingram who treats servants, governess rudely.
Men never think of such things. In one organization I belonged to, we were playing an athletic game, and one of guys got a cut, and it bled into his T-shirt. "How do I get the stain out?" "Cold water," I replied. And he thought it hilarious that I knew that, as if I was habitually accosted by stabbing victims who wanted to make their laundry brighter. I merely replied to him that it's the stuff that all women know -- on a monthly basis.
This phrase is written originally by the woman Charlotte Bronte, which continued "better not to risk a faint now". And many woman and men, me too, collapsing by fallen blood pressure seeing, when blood flews or during blood draw. thats not disgust but a psychocological reaction. Happens also when the Menstruation is very heavy...
This is a really good adaptation, second only (so far!) to the 2006 version for me. Dalton is, for sure, the most handsome Rochester. What a good looking man!
Morgan le Fay I've read the book and have seen every adaption. 2006 first, then this then there is one from 73 very much the book but I wouldn't watch again. 2011 was the Absolute worst. I was sorely disappointed that I have never watched again and never will. It was dry and lacked any and all depth and emotion.
No, she had no chance to interprete 20 times more text in this version on this highest level of acting and declamation art. Film Actors of today hasn t anymore the chance for such vocal and speach education to pronounce, declamate, intonate and incoporate so much learned dialogues as his own. And Wiaskowsky had not this aura of selfconsciousness, independency and sense of humor, restraint, the awareness and consciount behaviour of the servant status like Zelah Clarke, and she weeped too much. And this is also the great skill of Dalton. His Rochesters nobility snobism, behaviour and souverainity is dominated completly by his social class till in the movements of his fingers or mien. Stephan, Fassbaender, Hint are not able even to present this unreachable rich superior role ot Rochester and play in a way that they be each civil low profession. You don t feel in these versions the social gradient and obstacle, which is the main theme of this novel. Here it is omnipresent: Socially and economical Rochester has nothing to lose, whether he marry her, marry Imgram, take Jane as Maitresse, or take a Harem. It doesn't threat his position and existance. For Jane Eyre and her class this step wife or mistress, be abused sexually, escape, be dismissed means: survive or not, lose all her Reputation for ever. Gott hin oder her. Wiaskowsky is not the Jane Eyre of the book. She would been played against the wall by Dalton without chance. Wiaskowsky was the main reason next to the reduction and loss on optical stimulationd, that I was so unhappy, that I researched for better versions and discovered this unreachable acting jewel. And the discovery of all Dalton films, among them "Hawks" is one of the best or most important films made ever.
Jane looks at him with her eyes full of love and pain. Doesn't he see it. And her "Farewell, Mr. Rochester sounds like "I'm desparately and hopelessly in love with you,Mr. Rochester.
He may very well see it. He is good at reading her expressions, but he has been hurt in the past and wants a full declaration of love. But she is desperately trying to conceal her feelings, so she will not. She has been conditioned to believe she is unlovable, their differences in class and station are a barrier, and she has been brought up to be very proper.
@@barbarabrown7974 I fully agree with your comment, and I will add that by this time of the story both of them are madly in love with each other. The "farewell scene " is very intense and superbly acted by these two actors
Colonel Dent and Mrs. Dent's portrayal in that version is accurate in the novel. They're some of the Mr. Rochester's guests who treated Jane with decency proving that not all of those people in the house party are mean like the Ingrams.
I was actually contemplating earlier too of the early deaths in Jane's family - her own parents who probably died in their 20s or 30s. Also the parents of the Rivers (Jane's cousins). And even Jane's uncle in Madeira, John Eyre, who was probably only in his 40s or early 50s too when he died.
No "Redemption" for Mrs. Reed as she rejected the forgiveness offered to her by Jane on her deatbed. Jane gave her forgiveness anyway and she did the right thing as a christian. In doing so, Jane proved to Mrs Reed that she was not the "vindicative" person Mrs Reed made her out to be. Mrs Reed is the vindicative one for never sending that letter to Jane to let her know of her good fortune....
The gypsy scene: Obviously Rochester has contrived this to get Jane to confess her love for him, thinking she'll admit it to a fortune teller. But Jane does not fall for the bait. She does reveal a few crumbs: the future school hope, that she does not think romance is in her future, and her belief that Rochester and Blanche will become engaged.
Actually, the more I think of it -- now we're talking about the book, not any video -- Jane reveals far more after the "gypsy's" true identity is revealed. Some of her comments after Rochester is stunned by learning Mason arrived expose a very high level of devotion to Rochester. Concern for Rochester's well-being makes her drop her guard.
The funny thing for me is when he tried to tell jane in a round about way that she was the one for him and then realised she did not get it. Then he decided to mention miss ingem but what he did not think about was that jane believed he would marry miss ingem 😱 and then she wanted to leave he did not see that coming🤯
He thought she is an orphan an could not know, that she has this aunt and thought, she could not go anywhere without money, and reference. And to "make her believe that he would marry Miss Imgram" was his plan from initial, for that he took the whole society home, first to make Jane Jealous, and to show her how entertaining he could be in society, how is respected etc. He never had Idea to marry Blanche, because he is married. And his Charade with the result "The well bride is Jane (Chaine) was the main rehearsal for his bigamist marriage try to. Jane should believe to be married. But her going away to Gatesheads, refugee from situation, was the parallel Refugee reaction by him after the fire night, get distance. And because he knew that there is no chance to get another Job without his reference by own, that she is dependent from his Job, and because he knew that she hadn't to go and that she don t need another Position, because he will marry herself not Blanche, he could easily promise her "to look for another Position in time". In this moment he knew that she had emotions for him, but his plan to make her jealous doesnt work. He knows, in the book, that she had same feelings since "Depression" scene, but also that she never would admit it because of the convention, no master marry his subordinates. First to threat her with distance and separation from him, because of her own decision not to be humiliated by Blanche, worked.
It's always the case...all these wild bad boys get old, finish doing their dirt, and then want to settle down and get married to a nice young church girl!
Only difference here is that Rochester was once as innocent and sweet and mischievous as Jane when he was her age, until after he was tricked into marrying a woman who tormented him and he went around the world "doing dirt" in an attempt to avoid the dirt he was stuck with and trying to cleanse it with beauty, but kept looking for it in the wrong place. Thus getting plagued with more dirt, until he finally found Jane, who was the thing he had been searching for for so many years.
Rochester must in truth be an unworthy fool not to see the obvious shallowness of Miss Ingram. But what did Rochester the Gypsy predict that so disturbed Miss Ingram?
Nothing. He didn’t really expect anything. I think it’s just his way of expressing the fact that he will miss her, and that he is now stuck with guests he dislikes.
Why does Rochester tease Jane by pretending Blanche Ingram is the one he loves?!? She’s far too kind, trusting and naive to know how to counter him!!! 🙁
He was at that point, madly in love with her (he says so himself, later), and wanted to make her wild with jealousy. It did make her jealous and convinced that he was going to marry her even though she could tell he did not love her. That is why she despaired so before he proposed to her and didn't believe him at first when he confessed his love. But ye gods, who wouldn't want to be entangled with Timothy Dalton in that way *swoon*
Rochester has always been used to women pursuing him because of his name, money, or both. He's been burnt a few times too in love. Jane is the first woman he's ever had to pursue, and she's making a great effort to conceal her feelings. It's important to him to have her confess her feelings, but she will not do so. To provoke her into confessing her feelings, he is trying to make her jealous.
It was his plan after the fire, realizing that he felt in real love to her, but he is married and he knows that he is not attractive enough that women would love him without money. He saw how cold /inexperient and reserved she is and that she as poor orphan paid subordinate would never dare to show her feelings to him or even to become immmoral as his maestresse. To offer her a riskant bigamy marriage (risk of jail) he cant ask her as employer to marry him. Therefor has at least to show emotions, that he don t commit sessual harrassement and lose her. So he wanted provoke her, demonstrating that he is desired ny other ladies, that he can be a charming host mot only a grumbling depressiv, and he wants her make mad of. love, that she is anymore able to hid her feelings. thst he can propose her marriage. And he wanted show Jane that she has a higher Niveau than the rich and worthless, that she learns to be in society. Blanche is only his charade. double charade. He proposals Jane (chaine) is the well bride 3 times, and dhr didnt understand. even when ghe gypsy pretends her to gather her fortune (havent you seen the love in his eyes?), second time than after Mason. He brought only for her and the whole Party and Blanche, miscalculating for regenation new life but with his old conservative, not sincer social plays and charades, which he is costumed to do, to get a woman in his bed.He still not know thst vor true lovd he need truth and authenticy and no games. Therefore, because she didnt trust him (not for moral reasons) she left him. At the end he has learned to be sincer:He proposal, you are sure to "marry and care for a old, ugly, grumpy, blind cripple? "again and again?
20:25 from this scene, we can tell which cousin turned out to be good or jerk like Georgianna turns out to be the jerk like to me and snobbish and far too posh.
Why bertha had tell Rochester things he should know.( he went away and left her) guess Mason wife who attacked him or Rochester he was blackmailing him for years used work for Rochester why didn't Jane know he has a wife when her painting was through out the house even given some of her clothes. Jane dislike it family n friends took it away rest clothes and shoes he followed them to her house in another country.he met old neighbors.i made my book into picture one for my mom. Guess this actor and production team has book of different scenes .
Does anyone by any chance know what it is exactly supposed to be that Rochester gives Mason to drink? Somehow I doubt it is a substance that the physician would have given in these circumstances.
Thank you January's Moon! Probably laudanum since it turns red (absinthe would be green according to several Google results). Laudanum seems to have narcotic characteristics so that makes sense. Learned something today 😉 This also leads me to another question: why would Rochester carry that with him, so casually in his pocket?🤔
January's Moon. Indeed, I presume the same. That is precisely the reason why I find it odd that Rochester carries this with him and gives this to Mason and not the physician. Maybe I am suspicious, however, might this suggest some sort of recreational drug(ab)use by Rochester?
"Very likely, but it is _blank and cold!_ Farewell"
I'm squealingggg 😭😂 he wants her affection so badly :')
"To live for me, Jane, is to stand on a crater crest that may spew fire any day." Dalton delivered that line with ease and confidence, and a bit of tease. I shall never get tired of watching him.
I had no idea he was such a great actor! totally missed it. but I found him now and he is amazing!
@@zehei2497 He was classically trained so he should be very good but many just think of him as James Bond when he acted in a lot of meaty roles on stage and in films before becoming James Bond.
@@zehei2497 He was classically trained so he should be very good but many just think of him as James Bond when he acted in a lot of meaty roles on stage and in films before becoming James Bond.
He also played Heathcliff in the 1970 production of Wuthering Heights. :)
Perfect acting. Timothy Dalton is such a great actor.
They are wonderful to watch together. The scene where they argue about the money they are both clearly holding back laughter and it makes it that much more wonderful.
Zelah Clarke is absolutely adorable!
"A strapper...a real strrrrrrrrapper!" I love the way this man speaks!!!❤❤❤❤❤❤
Timothy dalton here is so very handsome it hurts my eyes :((
The best version of Jane Eyre ever made.
this is the best adaptation of jane eyre ever...
zehah is brilliant as jane and tim dalton superb as edward rochester
he must love the bronte sisters....
he was a superb heathcliffe
The acting is excellent. The best version of this classic I've ever seen!!
Susan U. 8
Susan U. 2006, my favorite.
All is perfection👍
The best quality of 1983 version we can find on TH-cam.
Even in the entire internet, I daresay.
ah that great big dimple on his cheek when he asks for his money back and she tells him off. The chemistry between them just crackles
Kasuni Thewarapperuma that scene was great...I was laughing along with them!
18:21 CHU SAY???
So much better in 2006
I see these awesome series at least 4 times a year. And I'll watch them again, and again... and again. That's what a MASTERPIECE can do to the human psyche. It hypnotizes you and you're glued to it. Be it a music, a poem, or a movie. Thanks for the great upload January's Moon!
You're welcome!!!
Really a masterpiece. So close to the book ✔
I too am a Masterpiece Binger, it's a Beautiful Escape from the stark reality of 2020....
@@anniebieber19 Oh yes indeed
@@sarahbrightmore3749 Come the end of October & first part of November I might just binge 24/7 to escape the ugly of Election 2020.✌️
I feel in love with Timothy Dalton as a teenager with this movie❤
The only masculine, worldly and sexiest Mr. Rochester ever! And for that it perfectly made sense that Jane fell deeply in love with him and left everything just to go back to him.
"Mr Rochester" (almost bites her lip) "I thinks it's time to mention another matter..." - great acting.
The best version. The acting, taking time to have the expressions together with the words, the themes well chosen. A master has been at work for the screening and the text. Actors are all, without a doubt fully engaged in the story. Especially the time they took without getting bored
in any sense.
OMG such brilliant actors
The book tells us that the reason Mrs Reed treated Jane so badly was because her husband had very obviously preferred Jane to his own children who had been spoiled by his wife. He'd also been very close to Jane's mother even after she had chosen to marry beneath her, albeit to a man she loved. There was a suggestion that Mrs Reed was jealous of Jane's parents' happy marriage and she and Mr Reed clearly had very little in common.
she also called Mr Reed weak :(
@Miss Poste *argw27 she said all that when Jane came to see her, the first night
Yes, this is correct.
@Miss Poste *argw27 book: "...I hated it the first time I set my eyes on it-a sickly, whining,
pining thing! It would wail in its cradle all night long-not
screaming heartily like any other child, but whimpering
and moaning. Reed pitied it; and he used to nurse it and
notice it as if it had been his own: more, indeed, than he
ever noticed his own at that age. ..." Chapter XXI
So what? Mrs Reed could correct Jane’s faults without spoiling her own children. She gave a bad example. And even if it was jealousy for the Eyre’s marriage, bullying Jen was not the way to fix her ones. An ass she was, an ass she is after this explanation
Timothy Dalton seems so easily to bring to the surface what goes on inside of Rochester.
Wow that look when he says farewell
My favorite Rochester. Dalton is also my favorite Heathcliff!
Absolutely brilliant language here! Totally romantic, Bronte captures such a beautiful romance so left apart from the reader.
I was crying. I don't know whether bc I miss such love or bc Dalton is acting so well. I cried so much when Jane left the guests room and then they talked on the stairs
18:24 From the looks of Mr. Rochester's reaction, it seemed that he realized that calling Jane "little" can cause the latter to be mad and he was afraid that she might leave him forever because of it. Fortunately, Jane chose to smile instead of being upset. It was a nice touch to see that Jane has some triggers by showing that she doesn't like anyone who calls her "little" or makes fun of her height. Zelah and Tim have a nice chemistry there.
I usually don't like adaptations from book to film because there are so many nuances that have to left out in the interest of time..... but this is my favourite adaptation of Jane Eyre onto the screen. Timothy Dalton is the ultimate Mr Rochester - there will never be another to match him.
I agree! This was his best work and he is still so young here. Thoroughly enjoyable.
I agree. No screen adaptation ever did complete justice to the book. But this version, being a TV serial, was able to flesh out the book more compared to the film version where they had to condense the story considerably. :)
And....it didn't mess around with the chronology or the 'real' storyline too much
my favorite version thus far!
This Rochester is adorable
"brandy and biscuits" at daybreak. Sounds good!
"You little niggard" he said. We all burst out in laughter with that remark! Upon referencing the word, its meaning is a stingy person and only that :-)
of course
The nerve to talk about Miss Ingram infront of Jane so carelessly. Mr Rochester was crafty, lol
How can Jane be this sweet and kind and perfect and patient and not have killed him yet by this point 🤣🤣🤣🤣
when he wiped the towel that was soaked with blood on mason’s forehead i facepalmed
I know! I was horrified and disgusted but still pitied them for that stupid mistake (action?).
Thank you for this version 💗😘
You're welcome!
This is my favourite adaptation. It is very convincing.
Does anyone else notice the double meaning of the part from 15.00-15.10? Here 'Belle' Blanche says: "That person appears to want you.", hereby referring to Jane. And Rochester answers: 'Now, does she?'
I've read the book and cannot find these exact phrases, but nevertheless I like it! I like it because, on one side it is a very logical conversation where nothing strange can be found in. It's rahter obvious that Jane wishes to want to speak to her master. On the other side, here is the question that mr Rochester is asking himself throughout (almost) the whole story: 'does she? Does she want me?' r
eeeekk this is so romantic to think about lol
Yes, I love that part because Mr Rochester is clearly very much whipped by Jane and just wants to know, does she want me! Please say you do, Jane.
Yes. Everyone notices that.
Always has been my favorite go to movie
Who is watching in 2021
binging repeatedly... this is so good..
Love love this movie in 2022😘🇦🇺
@@anniemacneil8697 me too. I’ve been watching it over and over for 6 weeks and am now reading the book again for probably the 20th time in my life. I tried watching the 2011 version yesterday for a change of scene, and omg it was so bad.
2024 😂
i loooooove this story and Timothy Dalton!!!!!
13:18 Jane treats unimportant people with kindness. Here she remembers his first name. This makes her so much better than miss Ingram who treats servants, governess rudely.
16:48 awww she is so sweet. Best Jane ever!
Mr. Rochester: "You don't turn sick at the sighr of blood?"
Jane: "Of course, I don't! I'm a woman!"
Mr. Rochester: "OK. TMI!"
I thought the same thing.
Men never think of such things. In one organization I belonged to, we were playing an athletic game, and one of guys got a cut, and it bled into his T-shirt. "How do I get the stain out?" "Cold water," I replied. And he thought it hilarious that I knew that, as if I was habitually accosted by stabbing victims who wanted to make their laundry brighter. I merely replied to him that it's the stuff that all women know -- on a monthly basis.
@@barbarabrown7974 lol
This phrase is written originally by the woman Charlotte Bronte, which continued "better not to risk a faint now".
And many woman and men, me too, collapsing by fallen blood pressure seeing, when blood flews or during blood draw. thats not disgust but a psychocological reaction. Happens also when the Menstruation is very heavy...
Great upload, thank you so much, I have the dvd but your copy is much more complete. Thank you!!
You're welcome!
This is a really good adaptation, second only (so far!) to the 2006 version for me. Dalton is, for sure, the most handsome Rochester. What a good looking man!
Have you read Charlotte's novel? This adaptation reads to the T.. 2006 does not. Toby is good but will never be Timothy Dalton's Rochester.
Morgan le Fay I've read the book and have seen every adaption. 2006 first, then this then there is one from 73 very much the book but I wouldn't watch again. 2011 was the Absolute worst. I was sorely disappointed that I have never watched again and never will. It was dry and lacked any and all depth and emotion.
Toby is dreamy my first choice 💕
Then Dalton 😊
Oh how I wish to be loved like this but with out the looney business 😭😂
Many hearts have been won over by that face.
... and that voice!
I love this series
This is the best version of Jane Eyre. Thanks for posting -🤗
I enjoy imagining Mia Wasikowska as Jane and Timothy Dalton as Mr. Rochester.
No, she had no chance to interprete 20 times more text in this version on this highest level of acting and declamation art. Film Actors of today hasn t anymore the chance for such vocal and speach education to pronounce, declamate, intonate and incoporate so much learned dialogues as his own. And Wiaskowsky had not this aura of selfconsciousness, independency and sense of humor, restraint, the awareness and consciount behaviour of the servant status like Zelah Clarke, and she weeped too much. And this is also the great skill of Dalton. His Rochesters nobility snobism, behaviour and souverainity is dominated completly by his social class till in the movements of his fingers or mien. Stephan, Fassbaender, Hint are not able even to present this unreachable rich superior role ot Rochester and play in a way that they be each civil low profession. You don t feel in these versions the social gradient and obstacle, which is the main theme of this novel. Here it is omnipresent: Socially and economical Rochester has nothing to lose, whether he marry her, marry Imgram, take Jane as Maitresse, or take a Harem. It doesn't threat his position and existance. For Jane Eyre and her class this step wife or mistress, be abused sexually, escape, be dismissed means: survive or not, lose all her Reputation for ever.
Gott hin oder her.
Wiaskowsky is not the Jane Eyre of the book. She would been played against the wall by Dalton without chance.
Wiaskowsky was the main reason next to the reduction and loss on optical stimulationd, that I was so unhappy, that I researched for better versions and discovered this unreachable acting jewel. And the discovery of all Dalton films, among them "Hawks" is one of the best or most important films made ever.
Jane looks at him with her eyes full of love and pain. Doesn't he see it. And her "Farewell, Mr. Rochester sounds like "I'm desparately and hopelessly in love with you,Mr. Rochester.
Maybe he does see it, but so what, if he can't get any other words or gestures out of her... ;)
These two actors are marvellous. Their eyes and voices are so expressive! I just wonder how thrilling they both are! The best for ever.
He may very well see it. He is good at reading her expressions, but he has been hurt in the past and wants a full declaration of love. But she is desperately trying to conceal her feelings, so she will not. She has been conditioned to believe she is unlovable, their differences in class and station are a barrier, and she has been brought up to be very proper.
@@barbarabrown7974 I fully agree with your comment, and I will add that by this time of the story both of them are madly in love with each other. The "farewell scene " is very intense and superbly acted by these two actors
Gee, Mrs Reed, you might want to study this little pamphlet Mr Brocklehurst gave me nine years ago, all about the fate of liars! 😂
Ms. Reed was the devil...........No one has come as close to the book as this version, simply the best!!!!
Great movie! Thanks for sharing it.
The music is great
mason looks like jimmy fallon's long lost twin.
Lmao for real. Looks like Fallon with a wig on
Love this movie 🤗🇦🇺
Yes Timothy, once we were young!
Why does this movie want to make me cry
thanks for posting.
Marry me rochester
He looks sooo handsome in the money exchange scene.
Best jane ever
12:42 nice to see some of the rich guests being nice to Jane (plus the man next to her in the charades scene)
Colonel Dent and Mrs. Dent's portrayal in that version is accurate in the novel. They're some of the Mr. Rochester's guests who treated Jane with decency proving that not all of those people in the house party are mean like the Ingrams.
Then again, I suspect Rochester does see Miss Ingram for what she is, and perhaps feels that someone like himself deserves no better.
He never thought of Blanche. He is married to Bertha.
Blanche is only his paesant chess figure to get the dame, Jane.
She did well to leave him and go to her parent,he was not so caring of her.
Why is Jane always sad...?! I keep watching and re-watching and wishing more :(
She walks like a ballerina.
that's because of her training at the abbot... :v stomach in, chest out
Filiomena f
I love "our" Daisy as Aunt Reed, looks exactly like Onslow's Daisy
I thought I recognised her
Useless trivia: The same actress who played Mrs. Reed in the 1973 miniseries, plays Mrs. Fairfax in this version.
Oh dear, strapper is not a compliment 😂😂😂
😆
Thank alot January moon😎
You're very welcome.
I can imagine. Mrs. Reed was 35, when Jane left. 10 years later she sent for her and soon died. She died only in 45 of age. So young.
She had a stroke, caused by the news of John's suicide
I was actually contemplating earlier too of the early deaths in Jane's family - her own parents who probably died in their 20s or 30s. Also the parents of the Rivers (Jane's cousins). And even Jane's uncle in Madeira, John Eyre, who was probably only in his 40s or early 50s too when he died.
Mrs Reed is flabbergasting
Aw, he does look like Olivier. He does.
Oh, how arrogant this Mrs Reed is. Just incredible! Even before her death she could not be a little bit kind and nice to poor Jane. What a shame!
Old habits die hard, I guess
And it was so sad because Jane wanted to make up and put the past behind them at the end.
No "Redemption" for Mrs. Reed as she rejected the forgiveness offered to her by Jane on her deatbed. Jane gave her forgiveness anyway and she did the right thing as a christian. In doing so, Jane proved to Mrs Reed that she was not the "vindicative" person Mrs Reed made her out to be. Mrs Reed is the vindicative one for never sending that letter to Jane to let her know of her good fortune....
If Mr. Mason loved his sister so much he would have taken her and let her live among the gardens of Madeira
The gypsy scene: Obviously Rochester has contrived this to get Jane to confess her love for him, thinking she'll admit it to a fortune teller. But Jane does not fall for the bait. She does reveal a few crumbs: the future school hope, that she does not think romance is in her future, and her belief that Rochester and Blanche will become engaged.
Actually, the more I think of it -- now we're talking about the book, not any video -- Jane reveals far more after the "gypsy's" true identity is revealed. Some of her comments after Rochester is stunned by learning Mason arrived expose a very high level of devotion to Rochester. Concern for Rochester's well-being makes her drop her guard.
And to tell Blanche subtly what his feeling were for Blanche
when he put the blood all over his face XD
20:30 Cousin Georgiana is sooooo pretty!
Messylin Yup she's one of those people who could be pretty in any time period.
In the book, Jane scarcely recognizes her because she's put on so much weight. She calls Georgiana "a very plump damsel."
She's supposed to be pretty.
Erm excuse me Mr Rochester can you not look at Jane like that because if he looked at me like that, I’ll swoon! 10:09
I want a bonnet.
I would love a Jane Eyre audio book where all of Rochester's parts were narrated by Timothy Dalton. Sigh!
The funny thing for me is when he tried to tell jane in a round about way that she was the one for him and then realised she did not get it. Then he decided to mention miss ingem but what he did not think about was that jane believed he would marry miss ingem 😱 and then she wanted to leave he did not see that coming🤯
He thought she is an orphan an could not know, that she has this aunt and thought, she could not go anywhere without money, and reference. And to "make her believe that he would marry Miss Imgram" was his plan from initial, for that he took the whole society home, first to make Jane Jealous, and to show her how entertaining he could be in society, how is respected etc. He never had Idea to marry Blanche, because he is married. And his Charade with the result "The well bride is Jane (Chaine) was the main rehearsal for his bigamist marriage try to. Jane should believe to be married. But her going away to Gatesheads, refugee from situation, was the parallel Refugee reaction by him after the fire night, get distance.
And because he knew that there is no chance to get another Job without his reference by own, that she is dependent from his Job, and because he knew that she hadn't to go and that she don t need another Position, because he will marry herself not Blanche, he could easily promise her "to look for another Position in time". In this moment he knew that she had emotions for him, but his plan to make her jealous doesnt work. He knows, in the book, that she had same feelings since "Depression" scene, but also that she never would admit it because of the convention, no master marry his subordinates. First to threat her with distance and separation from him, because of her own decision not to be humiliated by Blanche, worked.
It's always the case...all these wild bad boys get old, finish doing their dirt, and then want to settle down and get married to a nice young church girl!
Until they got bored again their mousy wives and go seek mistresses.
Only difference here is that Rochester was once as innocent and sweet and mischievous as Jane when he was her age, until after he was tricked into marrying a woman who tormented him and he went around the world "doing dirt" in an attempt to avoid the dirt he was stuck with and trying to cleanse it with beauty, but kept looking for it in the wrong place. Thus getting plagued with more dirt, until he finally found Jane, who was the thing he had been searching for for so many years.
That person does seem to want you.
Does she.
;-)
Rochester says he wants Jane after Mason has been stabbed. (It's in the book.) That could be taken two ways too.
Rochester is too handsome!According to the book,he's supposed not to be.
yes ... but sometimes you got to suffer
Judy Cornwell, pre-"Keeping Up Appearances"!!!!!
At the gates of the death, Mrs Reed free her" christian" bad conscience. As it often said: "what comes around, goes around"
1:52 that's why people in the past died so easily! The hell is that!?
Rochester must in truth be an unworthy fool not to see the obvious shallowness of Miss Ingram. But what did Rochester the Gypsy predict that so disturbed Miss Ingram?
That Rochester's fortune was a third of what she had heard and thus confirmed to Rochester that she was only after his money and titles.
What did he expect her to say?He keeps bringing up his marriage to Blanche Ingram.
Nothing. He didn’t really expect anything. I think it’s just his way of expressing the fact that he will miss her, and that he is now stuck with guests he dislikes.
16:49 She gets 30 pounds a year, and he is carrying more than 50 pounds on his person!
😂💵
💘
Why does Rochester tease Jane by pretending Blanche Ingram is the one he loves?!? She’s far too kind, trusting and naive to know how to counter him!!! 🙁
He was at that point, madly in love with her (he says so himself, later), and wanted to make her wild with jealousy. It did make her jealous and convinced that he was going to marry her even though she could tell he did not love her. That is why she despaired so before he proposed to her and didn't believe him at first when he confessed his love. But ye gods, who wouldn't want to be entangled with Timothy Dalton in that way *swoon*
Rochester has always been used to women pursuing him because of his name, money, or both. He's been burnt a few times too in love. Jane is the first woman he's ever had to pursue, and she's making a great effort to conceal her feelings. It's important to him to have her confess her feelings, but she will not do so. To provoke her into confessing her feelings, he is trying to make her jealous.
It was his plan after the fire, realizing that he felt in real love to her, but he is married and he knows that he is not attractive enough that women would love him without money. He saw how cold /inexperient and reserved she is and that she as poor orphan paid subordinate would never dare to show her feelings to him or even to become immmoral as his maestresse. To offer her a riskant bigamy marriage (risk of jail) he cant ask her as employer to marry him. Therefor has at least to show emotions, that he don t commit sessual harrassement and lose her. So he wanted provoke her, demonstrating that he is desired ny other ladies, that he can be a charming host mot only a grumbling depressiv, and he wants her make mad of. love, that she is anymore able to hid her feelings. thst he can propose her marriage. And he wanted show Jane that she has a higher Niveau than the rich and worthless, that she learns to be in society. Blanche is only his charade. double charade. He proposals Jane (chaine) is the well bride 3 times, and dhr didnt understand. even when ghe gypsy pretends her to gather her fortune (havent you seen the love in his eyes?), second time than after Mason. He brought only for her and the whole Party and Blanche, miscalculating for regenation new life but with his old conservative, not sincer social plays and charades, which he is costumed to do, to get a woman in his bed.He still not know thst vor true lovd he need truth and authenticy and no games. Therefore, because she didnt trust him (not for moral reasons) she left him. At the end he has learned to be sincer:He proposal, you are sure to "marry and care for a old, ugly, grumpy, blind cripple? "again and again?
isn't Blanche supposed to be beautiful lol
This just romantic part of book no one i know likes read why he talk about sex to jane so much half book is missing sad twelve episodes .or more
how old is Jane because she says she was a child nine years ago so she can only be about 18 at the most
+pandasnakez She is 18 years old indeed, when she goes to Thornfield.
Arithmetic, you see, is useful.
She is younger than Rochester. Read the book.
Without it, we would never be able to guess her age.
Zelah Clarke was 29 when she portrayed Jane Eyre. That's why Jane looked old here
Have you noticed that he left the room without turning his back to her, like James Bond?
20:25 from this scene, we can tell which cousin turned out to be good or jerk like
Georgianna turns out to be the jerk like to me and snobbish and far too posh.
Why I can’t find it continuously? where are others episodes ?
Try this link: th-cam.com/play/PLWBUT4nrnPf6McwQlEJoGdlbbiGvv90Nt.html It is the channel's Jane Eyre playlist.
He helled roschester he one attacked him did want him find some hidden money in trunk grace pool often sit on.
Why bertha had tell Rochester things he should know.( he went away and left her) guess Mason wife who attacked him or Rochester he was blackmailing him for years used work for Rochester why didn't Jane know he has a wife when her painting was through out the house even given some of her clothes. Jane dislike it family n friends took it away rest clothes and shoes he followed them to her house in another country.he met old neighbors.i made my book into picture one for my mom. Guess this actor and production team has book of different scenes .
The money he gave her was almost twice the size of an actual...
Does anyone by any chance know what it is exactly supposed to be that Rochester gives Mason to drink? Somehow I doubt it is a substance that the physician would have given in these circumstances.
It is possible to be lauldalnulm or absinthe.
Thank you January's Moon! Probably laudanum since it turns red (absinthe would be green according to several Google results). Laudanum seems to have narcotic characteristics so that makes sense.
Learned something today 😉
This also leads me to another question: why would Rochester carry that with him, so casually in his pocket?🤔
Who knows? Was it probably a medice during that ages?
January's Moon. Indeed, I presume the same. That is precisely the reason why I find it odd that Rochester carries this with him and gives this to Mason and not the physician. Maybe I am suspicious, however, might this suggest some sort of recreational drug(ab)use by Rochester?
Probably a opium based drink. They all drank the stuff considering there really wasn’t the pain relief we have now.
Maybe if Young Adele wore a French Bob as a child and a French Braid as a teenager.
Este episodio en español!😠ya sabía yo que había algo malo hay desde el principio y msl llevado aunque en aquella época.😭