The Portraits


The artist who paints Anne, Jon, and Fleur saw all of them perfectly.

I've just watched this series for the first time in years and while I understand that Anne is a far more appropriate wife for Jon I find her pathetic and bleak compared to Fleur whom -- BTW -- I don't like any better for her selfishness.

Harold saw them all perfectly:

-- Fleur is the party girl, wanting to be the center of attention
-- Jon is morose, solitary, and devoid of much creativity
-- Anne is bleak, mostly submissive, and colourless.

Hal painted Anne as though she were a statue in a cemetery. The white robe with angel-wing sleeves and the lily in her hands made her look as though she were standing over a grave. The grave of Jon's strong emotions. It's as though he went to her as a refuge from them rather than suffer the passions of his parents and what that meant in their lives.




The Fabio Principle: Puffy shirts look best on men who look even better without them.

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I agree, for me Jon and Anne were the weakest and plain characters in the novel; and sadly more so in the film. As if no energy, no time, and no colour left for them on the writer/director's palette.

In comparison, I quite enjoyed reading about the character of the Soams's second wife in the Galsworthy's novel; he wrote about her well. But in this film this Annette's just not an interesting person to watch. Not the wife such a wealthy and successful man as Soams would be proud to show off.

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I just purchased the original BBC adaptation and have not reached this part yet...in fact I'd forgotten it!

I like your analysis, on the whole, and it seems that they had the painter reflect more of their personalities than he does in the novel, which just hints at them. I don't see Fleur as quite the selfish being that others often do, but more an empty, tragic shell (kind of like Soames!), searching for her true love eternally and never reaching him.

This part was spot on:

as if she were standing over a grave. The grave of Jon's strong emotions. It's as though he went to her as a refuge from them rather than suffer the passions of his parents and what that meant in their lives.
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I agree--he's very weak!


Nothing is what it seems. Everything is a test. Rule #1: Don't...get...caught.

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