Vanity Fair (2004) Film Report
The film received mixed reviews; while critics praised Reese Witherspoon’s performance and the lush production design, some felt the adaptation softened Becky Sharp’s character compared to the more cynical tone of Thackeray’s original "novel without a hero."
The film follows the story of Becky Sharp (played by Reese Witherspoon), a young, ambitious, and cunning woman who navigates the complexities of high society in 19th-century England. The story begins with Becky's humble beginnings as a lower-class girl, her rise to becoming a governess for the Sedley family, and her strategic marriage to Rawdon Crawley (played by Gabriel Byrne). vanity fair -2004 film-
The novel’s pivotal scene is the Duchess of Richmond’s ball on the eve of the Battle of Waterloo. Thackeray uses it to expose aristocratic frivolity in the face of real danger. Nair’s film portrays the ball with breathtaking scale—candelabras, swirling gowns, martial music. However, her focus is intensely gendered. While male characters (George, Rawdon, Dobbin) react to military news with stiff-upper-lip duty, the camera lingers on the women’s dawning terror: the muffled cannons heard through the dance music, the sudden exodus of officers, the silent terror of Amelia.
A Stellar Supporting Cast: The film is a treasure trove of fantastic British talent. James Purefoy is heartbreaking as the good-hearted, ultimately betrayed Rawdon. Romola Garai is perfectly insufferable as the weepy, foolish Amelia. Bob Hoskins is gruffly magnificent as the vulgar but kind Sir Pitt Crawley. And Gabriel Byrne is pure menace as the predatory Lord Steyne, a man whose wealth is matched only by his ennui and cruelty. Vanity Fair (2004) Film Report The film received
The 2004 film is distinguished by its sumptuous production design and cinematography:
This rehabilitation is driven by the film’s altered narrative framework. The film opens with a prologue: Becky as a young girl bidding farewell to her impoverished, artist father, vowing to be a “governess, a lady, anything.” This invented scene establishes a Freudian, sympathetic root for her ambition—poverty and loss. Unlike Thackeray’s narrator, who scoffs at Becky’s pretensions, Nair’s camera often aligns with Becky’s perspective. The famous “diamond necklace” scene, where Becky manipulates Lord Steyne for jewels, is filmed with a mix of tension and triumph, making her a precarious heroine rather than a predator. Thackeray uses it to expose aristocratic frivolity in
It is known for its "compressed" storytelling, condensing a 1,000-page novel into a 2-hour feature. Common Sense Media specific differences between the 2004 movie and the original Thackeray novel? Vanity Fair TV Review | Common Sense Media