Austenland (2013)
Starring Keri Russell, JJ Feild, Bret McKenzie, Jennifer Coolidge, James Callis, Georgia King, Ricky Whittle, and Jane Seymour
Directed by Jerusha Hesh
My Keri Russell fandom isn't unknown to those who know me. I crushed on her when she first appeared on the 1990s incarnation of the
Mickey Mouse Club during my formative early teen years and my fondness for her continues to this day. Hence, she's the reason I desired to check out
Austenland, a comedy in which Russell plays Jane, a dowdy office worker who is obsessed with Jane Austen's
Pride and Prejudice. With her apartment decked out from ceiling-to-floor in Austen memorabilia, Jane jumps at the chance to spend a boatload of money to visit Austenland in England -- a immersive Victorian-era experience that places guests squarely in the Jane Austen era. While there, she finds herself in her own love triangle with a somewhat lowly stable man/maintenance guy named Martin (Bret McKenzie) and the uppity, cantankerous, and more aristocratic Mr. Henry Nobley (JJ Feild).
Unfortunately, it's the love triangle aspect of
Austenland that never lands quite right and ruins much of the good will and humor that the rest of the script and the actors bring. The film squarely sets forth her relationship with Martin and does so in a rather lovely and charming manner, but I kept feeling like the third part of the triangle -- her dalliances with Mr. Nobley -- felt forced and not well thought out. There was never any sense of connection between the characters of Jane and Mr. Nobley, but rather a sense that the script was just forcing them together for want of tension.
Ms. Russell is charming as usual with that nice, calm, and sweet
Felicity vibe being present for this one. I loved seeing Bret McKenzie onscreen -- I'm not sure I've seen him in anything since
Flight of the Conchords (with the exception of his fantastic behind-the-scenes songwriting for the past two Muppets movies). Jennifer Coolidge is playing her typical brash, larger-than-life, idiotic, ditz persona...but for some reason I've failed to tire of it from her. She's just so darn good at it that I'm able to overlook the fact that nearly every single one of her characters is interchangeable from one movie to another. Still, despite these actors' charms, the script does them in on this one and, despite my goodwill going into it, I left a little disappointed. (However, should you watch, make sure you stick around through the credits for a nice Victorian-era music video set to Nelly's "Hot in Herre" which was hilarious to me for some reason.)
The RyMickey Rating: C