Vonnie, the Times reviewer also said "Why did they not just plunk Kristen Scott Thomas down in the middle of the screen and call the show Mrs. Danvers? I would watch the hell out of that!"
Spike ,'Sleeper'
Streaming 1: There Goes the Weekend
A place for shows presented as streaming only — for example Netflix Originals, Amazon Prime Streaming, Hulu Plus, Yahoo, and other sites. (Note: Shows that are part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe shall be discussed in that thread.)
Spoiler Policy: Spoiler font two weeks for content presented all at once. Content presented as weekly episodes may be discussed with no restrictions as it is released.
I always hated the line from end of the film when Max says "You've lost that funny lost look I loved so well." He loved that she looked LOST? Poor her. Even though Olivier was delicious during that era.
Vonnie, the Times reviewer also said "Why did they not just plunk Kristen Scott Thomas down in the middle of the screen and call the show Mrs. Danvers? I would watch the hell out of that!"
I want THAT show.
Much like Wuthering Heights, I never thought of Rebecca as romantic. Lurid mysteries with some romance elements (and totally unlikeable male romantic figures), but not Epic Sweeping Romance.
(Maxim is a weak-willed patsy with no spine. No one can change my mind.)
(Yes, my favorite character in the book is Mrs. Danvers.)
There was a miniseries version from 1979 that I saw on PBS. Jeremy Brett was Maxim. That was my first Rebecca, and my one true Rebecca.
Actually, I'd be more likely to watch Mrs. Danvers - with Kristin Scott Thomas or someone equally good - than a(nother) remake of Rebecca. It would be interesting to see the story from her viewpoint.
But I WAS reminded of a Wuthering Heights with social distancing.
Given that they're setting the story in the Second Age, my first thought was "decadent Numenorean orgy."
On a more promising note, a glowing review from Vanity Fair of a Netflix miniseries that's dropping tomorrow, The Queen's Gambit: [link]
It stars Anya Taylor-Joy as a chess prodigy in 1950's Kentucky, who's one of the handful of young up-and-comers whose work I'm always willing to check out (also see: Florence Pugh, LaKeith Standfield.)
I read the book - it was very good. One of the few written by a man about a young woman that struck me as being more realistic than most such.
The Queen's Gambit
DH and I really enjoyed this.