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Becoming Jane Poster

Becoming Jane

Her own life is her greatest inspiration.
2007 | 120m | English

(67421 votes)

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Popularity: 4 (history)

Details

A biographical portrait of a pre-fame Jane Austen and her romance with a young Irishman.
Release Date: Mar 02, 2007
Director: Julian Jarrold
Writer: Kevin Hood, Sarah Williams
Genres: Drama, Romance
Keywords england, judge, new love, empowerment, country life, future, letter, lovers, biography, sister, author, ireland, family, portrait of an artist, biographical
Production Companies BBC Film, Ecosse Films, Fís Éireann/Screen Ireland, Blueprint Pictures, HanWay Films, UK Film Council, 2 Entertain, Scion Films
Box Office Revenue: $37,311,672
Budget: $16,500,000
Updates Updated: Aug 09, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Anne Hathaway Jane Austen
James McAvoy Tom Lefroy
Julie Walters Mrs. Austen
James Cromwell Mr. Austen
Maggie Smith Lady Gresham
Joe Anderson Henry Austen
Lucy Cohu Eliza de Feuillide
Laurence Fox Mr. Wisley
Ian Richardson Richter Langlois
Anna Maxwell Martin Cassandra Austen
Leo Bill John Warren
Jessica Ashworth Lucy Lefroy
Michael James Ford Mr. Lefroy
Tom Vaughan-Lawlor Robert Fowle
Chris McHallem Mr. Curtis
Helen McCrory Mrs. Radcliffe
Michael Patric Don Dogarty
Elaine Murphy Jenny
Tom Maguire Miscreant
Name Job
Julian Jarrold Director
Jeanette McGrath Script Supervisor
Kevin Hood Screenplay
Sarah Williams Screenplay
Eimer Ní Mhaoldomhnaigh Costume Design
Veronica McAleer Makeup Department Head
Emma E. Hickox Editor
Eigil Bryld Director of Photography
Eve Stewart Production Design
David McHenry Art Direction
Johnny Byrne Set Decoration
Jenny Oman Set Decoration
Tapio Salmi Makeup Artist
Paul Gooch Makeup Artist
Lucy Browne Makeup Artist
Mark DeSimone ADR Mixer
Donal O'Farrell Stunt Coordinator
Adrian Johnston Original Music Composer
Gail Stevens Casting
Name Title
Robert Bernstein Producer
Jeff Abberley Executive Producer
Douglas Rae Producer
Julia Blackman Executive Producer
Tim Haslam Executive Producer
Graham Broadbent Producer
Nicole Finnan Executive Producer
James Flynn Producer
Morgan O'Sullivan Producer
James Saynor Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 25 41 17
2024 5 23 36 15
2024 6 22 39 14
2024 7 24 35 14
2024 8 20 29 13
2024 9 14 21 10
2024 10 18 33 10
2024 11 19 44 11
2024 12 21 37 13
2025 1 20 35 15
2025 2 13 18 3
2025 3 7 23 1
2025 4 4 7 2
2025 5 3 8 2
2025 6 2 5 1
2025 7 2 2 1
2025 8 2 2 1
2025 9 2 3 1
2025 10 3 4 2

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 10 691 755

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Reviews

FilipeManuelNeto
4.0

**Romanticizing Jane.** Jane Austen was a nonconformist. She was the seventh child of an Anglican priest and belonged to what we might now call the middle class. She had many books at home, and both parents taught her to read and write, supported her, recognized in her the same talent we all know ... her now. Moreover, she was unlucky in love: it does not seem that her parents sought to marry her, it is quite plausible that she did not want to marry for economic reasons and the love affairs that we know of her were short and fruitless. With the publication, very shy, of her first editions, the writer's financial situation improved, and public recognition begin to appear. Sadly, the author died quite young, without collect the fruits of her talent. I am not an expert on Jane Austen, but this is, very briefly, the author's biography, almost sketched in a stream. The film focuses on her youth and builds romantic fiction around her. Personally, I'm dubious about much of what happens in this movie. I think much of it is romantic invention, almost turning Austen into one of her own characters, torn between the attention of two very different suitors. The film is not bad, but it is far from flawless and will never be one of the reference “biopics”, at least in my understanding. Julian Jarrold's direction was effective, but he gives us a work that bets more on the construction of the characters and the story than on the relationship between the film and the real life of the biographed person. The cinematography is good and there are some good effects. The soundtrack is mediocre. The period recreation was reasonably done, resorting to decent costumes and good locations and sets. In between, however, there are some grotesque errors and anachronisms: in the ball scene, Jane appears with a dress twenty years ahead of the time, in another scene we see wedding rings, something that did not exist at that time, and in another one we see Jane being recognized as the writer of a novel when, in fact, she published anonymously several of her books and got very little recognition in her lifetime. Even her epitaph, on her tomb in Winchester Cathedral, ignored her literary output until it was replaced by new text in the late 19th century. In the midst of all this, the extraordinary dramatic interpretation of the actors stands out, and especially Anne Hathaway, who gave the character a touch of kindness mixed with a marked rebelliousness and nonconformity. She didn't want to be like other women. James McAvoy also does a very interesting job in this film and deserves our full attention. The film also has good performances by James Cromwell, Julie Walters, Maggie Smith and Ian Richardson.

Aug 04, 2023