Skip to main content

What to Watch Now?


Gentle readers, it feels like EVERYTHING enjoyable to watch on TV has ended this past week, and I am at a loss as to how to fill my time now. (Not really. I don't have time to fill, but I'm going to pretend like I do.)

First, Season 2 of Victoria ended in a wonderfully beautiful Christmas final episode that made me wish for December all over again. If you haven't heard of Victoria, check out my last post about the series. Watch Season 1, then go start Season 2. You won't regret it until you reach the end of Season 2 and realize you have to wait until next January.

Love me some Shib Sibs.
Second, the Winter Olympics has ended, and my competitive and patriotic heart is suffering without my figure skating, skiing, hockey, and curling fix. I have to wait 4 YEARS until I watch ice dancing again?

And Tessa and Scott will have retired! *Sob*
My only small consolation now is the Little Women series that will be coming to PBS in May. But that means I have to wait until May. Which is 2 months away. Ugh.


So, I'm looking for suggestions! What period drama, Jane Austen-type movies/series are out there? What do you recommend?

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Austen Illustrations

One of my favorite nerdy Janeite things to do is to find illustrations of Jane Austen's novels, particularly ones from the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th. There is something so intriguing about seeing how someone else many years ago viewed a particular scene or character, yet we both read the same words on the page. I particularly love the illustrations by C.E. Brock and H.M. Brock, which were done during the 1890s and early 1900s. They were brothers who created most of the classic and beautiful illustrations. Seriously, look at the picture above. The colors and drawings are exquisite. If you want to learn more about the pair, check out this  site . Hugh Thomson is another artist who did classic Jane Austen illustrations at the time as well. This one just cracks me up. C.E. Brock totally captured Mr. Collins and his horrific proposal in this drawing. He's so tall, awkward, and pompous. Elizabeth is slanted away from him and desperately doing any...

The 200th Anniversary of Emma

Romola Garai as Emma in the 2009 BBC miniseries This year marks the 200th Anniversary of the publication of Jane Austen's Emma . Now, its not until December 25th, but since Emma is one of my favorite novels, we are going to talk about it this week.  Before she started the novel, Jane Austen said, "I'm going to take a heroine whom no one but myself will much like." Then she proceeded to write one of the greatest novels in the English language.  The first line of the novel captures that statement and sets the tone for the rest of the novel: " Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever, and rich, with a comfortable home and happy disposition, seemed to unite some of the best blessings of existence; and had lived nearly twenty-one years in the world with very little to distress or vex her." Emma is practically perfect; her only downfall is that she knows she is perfect. Therefore, she spends the entire novel trying to arrange other peoples' lives since she ...

A Formal Introduction

It is a truth universally acknowledged that a girl in possession of a project, blog and twitter, must be in want of an audience. A little introduction about me: I'm an English and Education double major at a small college in Missouri. I watched the 2005 version of  Pride and Prejudice  when I was 12, read the classic book immediately after, and never looked back. Now you could say I'm simply obsessed with Jane Austen. My hope for this blog is to share the genius of Jane Austen and to have fun while doing it. So, to begin this blog correctly, let's talk about Jane Austen movie adaptations. Since Valentine's Day is this next weekend, what better way to celebrate than to watch a Jane Austen adaptation? Whether it's with your significant other, or with your girlfriends, you just can't beat the wit and heart of Jane Austen and her characters. Here are three suggestions for this weekend, in no particular order: 1.  Pride and Prejudice  (2005): This mov...