Will the real Mr Darcy please stand up? Ali Bacon mourns the end of an era
I’ve just been to see Bridget Jones’ Baby, which was never
going to be as good as the original film(s) but was still good fun and had
updated pretty well, even if some
current cultural references were possibly lost on older members of the Monday
tea-time audience. (Unlike my companion I at least recognised Ed Sheeran!)
However, this film has also marked the end of an era, that
era being the one in which I have lusted and/or romanticised at varying times
and in varying degrees over Colin Firth: the original Fitzwilliam Darcy of the
wet shirt, Mark in the original Bridget and of course Jamie in Love
Actually.
Photo by Geroges Biard* |
Because he is a fine actor and can turn that kind of charm
off and on at will, I didn’t romanticise over Mr Firth in The King’s Speech or
other roles, but it did come as a shock to discover that, as far as I’m
concerned, as Mark Darcy he has entirely lost his je ne sais quoi. In fact if I had been Bridget choosing between him
and Patrick Dempsey, it wouldn’t have taken me less than two minutes to make up
my mind.
For this I consider myself a weak and faithless woman, but
then all good things must come to an end and at least we now have Aidan (Poldark)
Turner to fall back for the odd romantic fantasy. But for me MD’s lack of charisma did detract from the new Bridget and it reminded me of how this
just doesn’t happen on paper, in a novel I mean.
BJB has never actually been a book (unlike Mad About the
Boy) but if Helen Fielding had written this one, there would have been no
problem: however stuffily MD behaved, she could have imbued him with whatever
it is that Bridget (and the rest of us) need. But on screen, the pictures (and
maybe the actor’s lack of self belief – did he really want to do this?) just
got in the way.
Of course we know that’s why books are better than films.
Apart from the damage to glorious original texts inflicted by editors and
producers, nothing can replace the people and stories that already exist in our
own imagination (which I touched on in another way in my St Andrews presentation) can they? My writing teacher, who was an actress in a previous life,
considered writing to be the only medium that gives us a character’s inner
thoughts. Now you could say that the first person voice-over in the Bridget Jones
films takes us into her head. But when Mark Darcy is on the screen we can’t see
him exclusively through her eyes as we could in a book, only through our own, and there
was nowhere to hide for a not very romantic hero.
Is this really a post about character and point of view? I’m
not sure. Even as I write it I’m remembering Colin Firth’s hottest moment - by the
lake at Pemberley - was never in any book at all.
(Exceptions, rules anyone?)
*Image credits: Georges Biard [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
*Image credits: Georges Biard [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
Ali Bacon writes contemporary and historical fiction and performs her work at live events in and around Bristol.
You can find her and her books at http://alibacon.com and on Amazon.
You can find her and her books at http://alibacon.com and on Amazon.
Comments
I think you're right though Fran B., CF should have given it a swerve. He always was a great actor and I think the surprise was more that he did romcom in the first place. A.