Joe Wright on the ‘Pride & Prejudice’ 20th Anniversary and Capturing the ‘Psychologically True’ Jane Austen Story
“It’s funny. With hindsight, there were no challenges. It was all a dream. But that’s clearly not true,” Joe Wright said, reflecting on his feature film debut directing the 2005 adaptation of Jane Austen’s “Pride & Prejudice.” The movie and ensemble piece led by Oscar-nominated actress Keira Knightley was the first of several films for which Wright leaned into period drama. On Sunday, “Pride & Prejudice” returned to theaters for a limited run to commemorate the film’s 20th anniversary. Wright’s background prior to production of the 2005 film, however, was nearly antithetical to the marriage of romance and realism on which he’s built his career. “I’d been making, kind of, gritty British realist dramas. And, to my absolute amazement, Working Title, the producers, came to me and said, would I like to pitch on doing ‘Pride & Prejudice,'” Wright recalled of the process leading up to his appointment as director for the 2005 film iteration of Austen’s seminal novel. “I thought, what a funny choice.” Joe Wright on the set of “Pride & Prejudice” (2005). Austen wasn’t particularly front-of-mind for Wright. “I was reading Charles Bukowski and people like that at the time, William Burrows. I had never read ‘Pride & Prejudice,'” he admitted.

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