Added: 2 years ago
From: cat4fab
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  • "I'm so happy with these dreadful news"

  • She knows hes right; thats why shes still crying. God; you can see how much shes grown just by those words from him. AWW!! He looks like hes going to kiss her hand and stops why? Has he given up already?

  • Emma looks and sounds older here. I think regret and the realization of what her wrong doing meant to Mr. Kightley made her more mature.

  • I love John Knightley!! He's hilarious!!

  • "i'm so used to [knightley] sitting there, i haven't really looked at that chair in years" :)

  • i am so VERY HAPPY at this - .... dreadful news.

  • 4:15

    

  • "Mrs Churchill is dead."

    "And why do we care?"

    "John!"

    "Frank will be free!" Smiles, recovers self. Solemn expression. "Of course we're all very sad that Mrs Churchill has died."

  • @vai121121 LOL. I know! I giggled. :P

  • Poor Mrs. Bates. To see her cry is heartbreaking, the silly old fool.

  • The scene where she's crying and her father is questioning her about the trip is really heartbreaking. I really love her father's character.

  • "I am so very happy at this dreadful news!"

  • What a fantastic piece of music at 1:12, it is almost Vivaldic.

  • awww "You did not wish to take the boys to find frogs in the park?" that was so sad lol

  • Frank remembering how he was taken away... so sad!

    I wonder what he was thinking at this moment

  • i thought mrs weston was pregnant..?

  • Aww my heart broke when I saw Knightley's face at 9:28 D: That is the epitome of agony there :'(

  • Mrs. Westin's expressions crack me up!! lol

  • i thought i was going to hate this verson, but i realise now that it's definitely my favourite :) good job bbc

  • sorry completely

  • Love the way the stranger puts up her brolly in her face to snub her, it says more than a thousand words. Knightly, a copletely decent man.

  • 4:50 is such a moving moment, I almost cried myself. all in all it's such a good adaption, very well done, indeed.

  • lol "you can have too much of a good thing !" -Emma

    That was funny

  • At Box Hill - they say, there are 9 people... did you mention, there were two more people - the servants - which obviously were not counted people by Frank, he was saying " seven mute people"...

  • @unrox jane isnt really mad at emma, she just cant stand to see her because frank has been toying with emma in such a way to cause jane pain and now jane is broken hearted and resolved on leaving frank, so she is ill, out of spirits and cant bear to see emma probably because of the memories it would bring, she isnt angry with her, she just cant stand to see ner

  • its just so tragically romantic when knightly goes to kiss her hand and then leaves and emma is so sad hes leaving and hes so sad because he thinks she loves frank and she looks so unwell and he looks so sad :( so beautiful...yet so tragic

  • i love the scene starting at 1:15 i think Emma looks so beautiful when the sunlight hits the room. even though her hair is unkept and she looks like she didn't sleep the whole night, i think it makes her look beautiful.

  • @rbain007 Oh, she is beautiful! I love Romola Garai!

  • "I am so very happy at this...dreadful news"

  • i love how john knightly just speaks his thoughts with no regards to anyone else!

  • ok so why is Jane all angry with emma when it's partially jane and franks fault that emma doesnt know about their relationship... emma wouldn't be all chummy with frank if she knew but emma shud have been more sensitive towards miss bates i agree with that

  • "Mrs Churchill is dead!"

    "Why should we care?".

    LOL

  • Fantastic scene between Emma and Miss Bates, one of the best in my opinion...

  • ok i don't get it why doesn't jane want to see emma is it because of what emma said in boy hill or is it beacuse jane is ashamed for what frank is doing with emma....being charming seducing emma knowing he's engaged...

  • Jane thinks that Frank has fallen in love with Emma and doesn't want to marry her (Jane) any more. It would be natural - Emma with her looks, fortune and self-assurance would be formidable competition for any girl at the time.

  • oh i get it now....i kind of thought that she was feeling sorry for emma for the way frank was treating her...that jane thought that emma was in love with frank and he was just playing with her to avoid suspicions of their(jane and frank's) engagement...but now i get it...thanks

  • @chedylanmarleyshakur BOTH - you got it :)

  • @canterburybell thx...i was thinking about it while reading the book and watching this version...and i got the feeling it was because of one of those 2 things...but yeah now that i think about it it makes sense for jane to be upset for both....deff the bes version of emma so far...

  • @canterburybell the one with gwyneth was ruined by her acting and accent, the one eith kate i didn't like because it wasn't much understandable and mr. knightley was too uptight...i haven't seen the 1972 version so i can't comment on that one...

  • Frank WILL be free!....hahaha

  • Her father was right...the trip did end in disaster

  • OMG the goodbye was so beautiful !! *u*

  • My eyes were tearing up when I saw Emma crying. Why did they have to be so reserved! Just come out and say it! Then again, that is sort of the beauty of the era.

  • Poor Emma. You can tell she had a long night of thinking over her actions. She looks a complete mess walking through the town. I really felt for her. But it is a lovely sequence. I must echo the question from BubbbaGumps "is it in her head? or not?" in reference to way everyone is acting towards her. I think they know because Miss Bates probably would had said something w/o realizing that she was telling on Emma. Kind of like when she told of Mr. Elton's marriage in front of Harriet.

  • Another cool shot at 9:56

  • Just like with Mr. Woodhouse, I think it's interesting that they tried to rationalize Miss Bates in this version. In the book she is just non-stop ridiculousness that goes on for pages and pages. (I actually wish someone had told Austen to edit most of it!) But, after all, she is human and she must have feelings too.

  • Yes, I love this version. They added a lot of subtext.

  • I love those neckcloths. Very sexy.

  • the way people are acting towards her at around 2:00, is it in her head? or not?

  • Emma looks a little like Robin Wright from the Princess Bride when she's been crying all night and with her hair falling about...

  • @DiscoLemonade11 She does, just a little.

  • It's amazing how one night can make you look and feel five years older....

  • I love the scene where Emma is with Mrs. and Mr. Western and she sais: I am so VERY happy at this... dreadful news.

    Haha LMAO

  • That goodbye was a good idea. She thinks he's still angry with her when he's actually trying to restrain his love :)

  • Agreed! Beautifully performed by both parties, too...

  • 6:43 aww, he didn't kiss her hand

  • That "s ok. She didnt deserve to, insensitive bugger.

  • How many episodes are there. I am loving it, but want to know how much longer I have to stay at home

  • If it is so stinkin hot outside, why do they have a fire going?????

  • 'cos they are English

    stinking hot possibly means 19C :)

  • lol that is 66 F, which is not hot at all!!

  • LOL, oh I miss 19C... It's summer here in Brazil, and temperature in my town has been between 23C (at night) and - aaargh: 35C (sunny days) for like 3 months. 35C is so awful!

  • Because Mr Woodhouse always needs a fire, whatever the weather might be. It may be uncomfortable for Emma and anyone else who visits, but Mr Woodhouse, like some older people, does not feel the heat as much as he used to.

  • Her father is a hypochondriac and afraid of any sort of draft. Plus, it gets  A LOT cooler when the sun goes down, and those houses weren't very well insulated.

  • @MsDarcyfan it's the english evening - the temperature drops at least more than 10 degrees!!! lol -- the only sensible explanation for this little error :P

  • @MsDarcyfan They have a fire because of the size of the rooms and the fact that it's the evening. Temperature in the summer evenings in the UK can drop quite significantly very quickly and in a large room, all heat is zapped away into the tall ceilings.

  • @MsDarcyfan emma's father is always in need of a fire :) - so he doesn't catch a chill

  • @MsDarcyfan LOL! That comment made me laugh so much! But yea...in the book Emma's father's such a hypochondriac and he's always complaining about drafts and keeping windows closed etc.

  • @MsDarcyfan have you ever been in England my dear??? Even when is sunny outside houses are so huges, that their practically freezers

  • @MsDarcyfan with the sun shining its hot and in the night its cold, isn't it? :)

  • @MsDarcyfan

    Old houses and old people are always feel cold

  • @MsDarcyfan I believe houses kept the shadow and were cold...that's usually what happens in old houses

  • Hey anybody saw the 1996 movie? I think that part was sweeter. "Friends do not doubt... but hope"

  • I loved that part! "The truest friends do not doubt, but hope..."

  • thanks for posting!!

  • thank you very much

  • Thanks, been waiting for this! I am so excited!

  • thank you SO much for posting!!!

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