If it weren’t for books, movie theaters would be a whole lot less interesting. The most talked-about movies are usually based on books—and every year, adaptations promise more of the same delights for readers and filmgoers. Make sure you’re part of the conversation: a brief read before the book hit the screen.
FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD, Directed by Thomas Vinterberg–
Based on the literary classic by Thomas Hardy, FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD is the story of independent, beautiful and headstrong Bathsheba Everdene (Carey Mulligan), who attracts three very different suitors: Gabriel Oak (Matthias Schoenaerts), a sheep farmer, captivated by her fetching willfulness; Frank Troy (Tom Sturridge), a handsome and reckless Sergeant; and William Boldwood (Michael Sheen), a prosperous and mature bachelor. This timeless story of Bathsheba’s choices and passions explores the nature of relationships and love – as well as the human ability to overcome hardships through resilience and perseverance. Meet visionary director Thomas Vinterberg in this featurette from the set of his new romantic period drama, FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD!
The first of Thomas Hardy’s great novels, Far From the Madding Crowd
established the author as one of Britain’s foremost writers. It also
introduced readers to Wessex, an imaginary county in southwestern
England that served as the pastoral setting for many of the author’s
later works. Hardy described his new novel to Leslie Stephen as “a pastoral tale,”
and the very title of the novel announced its rural pedigree. The author
derived his title from the nineteenth stanza of Thomas Gray’s
well-known “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard” (1751), a pastoral
meditation on the undistinguished but not undignified lives of rural
dwellers:
Far from the madding [that is, frenzied] crowd’s ignoble strife,
Their sober wishes never learn’d to stray;
Along the cool sequester’d vale of life
They kept the noiseless tenor of their way.
Hardy’s novel hardly presents characters whose “sober wishes never learned to stray”;
indeed, misdirected and thwarted desires are the very stuff of the
novel’s drama. But he nevertheless gives his rural characters the kind
of dignity and humanity that Gray commemorates in his pastoral elegy and
that Hardy was bestowing on a new fictional domain based on his native
Dorset.
The borrowed lines from Gray’s poem may be said to act as a
generic marker for Far from the Madding Crowd in that many of the
basic elements of plot, characterization, setting, and imagery in
Hardy’s novel can be directly linked to the traditions of the literary
pastoral. In Far from the Madding Crowd, as in the pastoral
tradition generally, humanity lives largely in harmony with nature, and
the year is marked by the natural rhythms of the seasons and the labors
of agricultural life. In order fully to appreciate the novel as a
manifestation of pastoral, it is necessary briefly to review the long
literary tradition to which it belonged.
The pastoral tradition in European literature began with the Idylls
of the third-century B.C. Greek writer Theocritus, whose poems often
focused on the simple lives and loves of shepherds and goatherds,
nostalgically recalled from the writer’s native Sicily. The rural
subjects of Theocritus’ verse included musical and poetic contests,
mythological narratives, seasonal celebrations, and elegiac laments. The
tradition of classical pastoral poetry was further elaborated by the
first-century B.C. Roman writer Virgil in his ten Eclogues, based on Theocritan models, as well as the Georgics,
a four-part didactic poem on the required labors of the agricultural
year regarding crops, trees, vines, livestock, and bees. Following
Virgil, an implicit assumption of pastoral poetry was that rural life
was morally superior to urban civilization. Pastoral literature was
revived in the English Renaissance in the work of three of the era’s
leading writers:
Edmund Spenser’s Shepheardes Calendar (1579), a medley of twelve poems based on Virgil’s Eclogues
and featuring song contests, elegies, laments of scorned lovers and
frustrated poets, and criticisms of corruption in the
late-sixteenth-century English church and state; Sir Philip Sidney’s Arcadia
(1590), a long prose narrative, set in an imaginary Greek provincial
realm, combining chivalric romance with traditional pastoral interludes,
and structured around the principle of rustic retreat from the outside
world; and William Shakespeare’s As You Like It (c.1600), a
romantic comedy representing the sentimental benefits— and ironic
deficiencies— of withdrawal to a sylvan retreat, the imaginary Forest of
Arden, from the perilous environs of the court. Pastoral poetry
continued to be written through the eighteenth century by Alexander Pope
and others, but at the risk of becoming artificially restricted to the
classically defined rules of the era. Although anticipated in some of
the poetry of Gray, Oliver Goldsmith, and George Crabbe, it was only
with William Wordsworth’s re-creation of the pastoral using realistic
rural characters and simplified diction that the tradition was renewed
and made available to Hardy’s influential precursor George Eliot in her
novels Adam Bede (1859) and Silas Marner (1861), and then to Hardy himself, beginning with his second novel, Under the Greenwood Tree (1872), the title of which was based on a line from a song in As You Like It.
In essence, literary pastoral
presents an idealized portrait of rural life, in the process offering a
systematic preference for country over city life, simplicity over
complexity, nature over artifice, and tradition over innovation.
Explicitly named after the shepherds who formed its first subject
matter, pastoral poetry often traced the romantic aspirations and
disappointments of simple herders of sheep and goats, whose outdoor work
allowed time for music, especially on the panpipes or flute, song
contests, and debate on various sentimental, agricultural, political,
and folkloric topics. The English pastoral novel of the nineteenth
century blended some of the idealized themes and motifs of classical and
Renaissance pastoral tradition with the more realistic contemporary
conditions of the English rural community and natural landscape.
In writing Far from the Madding Crowd,
Hardy combined many of the basic themes and motifs of classical
pastoral tradition, but synthesized them with a realistic portrayal of
contemporary rural English life. The novel’s grounding in pastoral
tradition appears in the various farm laborers who perform a choral role
in the narrative and exemplify the symbiotic existence of nature and
humanity in the novel. It is also evident in the novel’s major
characters: the faithful shepherd Gabriel Oak; his “mistress,” the
beautiful but capricious farm owner Bathsheba Everdene; her love-sick
older admirer, the gentleman farmer William Boldwood; and her selfish,
predatory husband, Sergeant Troy, a disruptive antipastoral figure in
the novel. In keeping with the seasonal structure underlying some
examples of the literary pastoral, the action of the novel mirrors the
seasons, as seen, for example, in Oak’s loss of his sheep in the winter,
Boldwood’s preliminary courtship in the spring, Bathsheba’s involvement
with Troy in the summer, and Fanny Robin’s death in the fall. Also
indicative of the pastoral tradition in the novel are the descriptions
of the phases of the agricultural year, including lambing,
sheepshearing, hay-cutting, beekeeping, and harvesting, as well as of
the rural institutions of market and fair.― Jonathan A. Cook’s Introduction to Far From the Madding Crowd.
This timeless story of Bathsheba’s choices and passions explores the nature of relationships and love – as well as the human ability to overcome hardships through resilience and perseverance. FoxSearchlight Presents: ―
“It is difficult for a woman to define her feelings in language which is chiefly made by men to express theirs.”
―
Thomas Hardy,
Far from the Madding Crowd Quotes
Founded in 2010 by filmmaker Ava DuVernay, ARRAY is a grassroots distribution, arts and advocacy collective focused on films by people of color and women.
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