Love & Friendship

The title of Whit Stillman’s latest comedy may be Love & Friendship, but while both are certainly present in the film, other, more negative qualities also abound: deception, manipulation, even outright hatred. Underneath its elegant period-picture surface—most obviously evident in Benjamin Esdraffo’s Baroque-style orchestral score and Louise Matthew’s ornate art direction—lies a darker vision of humanity that gives the film more of an ironic kick than one might have anticipated from the outset.
Stillman’s film is based on Lady Susan, a posthumously published early novella by Jane Austen that, through a series of letters, chronicles the efforts of the recently widowed Lady Susan Vernon (played in the film by Kate Beckinsale) to get herself back into the comfort of the upper class by finding husbands for her and her daughter, Frederica (Morfydd Clark). Lady Susan, however, is as far from the traditional Jane Austen heroine as one can imagine. Selfish and ruthless, she proudly uses her sexual magnetism to lure in precisely the men she wants, and is unapologetic about dropping them if they no longer suit her needs. Her only true friend is the American Alicia Johnson (Chloë Sevigny), who shares Lady Susan’s view of the world and is herself stuck in an unhappy marriage; they commiserate and scheme with the zeal of two snickering teenage outsiders.
Austen had no interest in moralizing about Lady Susan’s behavior; Stillman pushes that amoral perspective further, filling in the details Austen left out of her novel’s epistolary structure and using his ear for witty dialogue to wring exuberant, black screwball comedy out of it all. Sharply funny lines abound. “Childbirth: We love it, but they turn against us,” she frustratedly says at one point about her daughter, imparting a difficult but universal truth about offspring in general. There’s a similar pithy toughness to her view of facts as “horrid things.” Perhaps Stillman’s most consistently hilarious touch, however, lies in his expansion of one particular supporting character: Sir James Martin (Tom Bennett), the wealthy buffoon with whom Lady Susan is determined to pair Frederica, despite her obvious discomfort with him. With his obsession with agriculture and mistaken belief in the existence of twelve Commandments, Sir James gets the most broadly memorable bits of comedy, and Bennett steals every scene he’s in.