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Becoming Jane
The car stumbled to a halt as my newfound Israeli friends and I made our way to the chaotic cinema city. It seemed that fortune had finally smiled upon me as I was lucky enough to escape my mundane duties as "the summer camp shop lady" who sells fruit drinks. So, imagine my excitement and sheer relief of managing to score a night out at one of Israel's most prided cinemas located just outside of Tel Aviv to see Becoming Jane. Not even having heard that a movie such as Becoming Jane was in existence, I had few expectations regarding the film. Free from any preconceived ideas fostered by cynical reviews, I eagerly sat in my little square seat with soda in hand as I was slowly absorbed into the world of Jane Austen. Set in eighteenth-century England, we first meet the headstrong and talented young Jane (played by American Anne Hathaway) as she fails to conform to society's conduct for young women. Born into a poor but solid family, Jane constantly finds herself pressured to marry a financially well-off man as a gateway out of poverty and into financial security and comfort.To Jane's dismay, and her family's delight, it seems that the conventional and seemingly emotionless nephew of the exceptionally wealthy Lady Gresham (Maggie Smith), Mr. Wisley (Laurence Fox), takes a liking to Jane. But she is seeking affection, not the cold comfort of cash. Instead, she has her heart set on the aspiring lawyer from Limerick with a 'reputation,' Mr. Lefroy (James McAvoy). Yet try as they might, it seems that life with the cheeky suitor is unobtainable time and time again.
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The Publisher — Women Express, Inc. The only magazine by, for, and about teenage and young adult women. |
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