MovieChat Forums > Testament of Youth (2015) Discussion > Has anyone else read the book?

Has anyone else read the book?


Do you think a film would satisfy all the details in that superb book? It is a true must read. To think that she seemed so normal, just like any young person who happened to be living during a time of the first world war (and be living in a time when there was so much control from family/society over a woman's life choices). This film is becoming one of my more anticipated films coming out next year, especially since Heyday Films does quality productions - they have worked on films like the Harry Potter series and Gravity. I loved the book/novel.

So what did anyone else think about the book? And what do you expect from the movie?

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I read the book years ago before the 1979 mini series with Cheryl Campbell brilliantly playing Vera. That series was wonderful and, whilst I look forward to the film, I think I have been spoilt by that wonderful series. I think the series was five parts so obviously, they won't be able to put as much material into the film, but. I live in hope. It is a good cast.

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I think not a lot of people have seen that series, unfortunately, especially outside the UK. I think the film would definitely bring the story to a broader audience (not to mention the younger generation who have never heard of the series), especially during the centennial anniversary of it.

The memoir is definitely powerful, with themes that would be resonant even today, especially since we still have "war generations" all around the world. If the film finds success, especially because of the quality of acting talent in it, I hope it gets recognised down the road too, giving more credence to the film/story.

Also, I heard that there may be special screenings of it planned this October.

"Although the picture will be released next year, there’s some talk of it having a special gala at the BFI London Film Festival in October."
-http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2688122/BAZ-BAMIGBOYE-A-y ears-Brittains-got-talent.html

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@emrysjamespendragon » Sun Jun 22 2014 09:00:23

Vera Brittain's autobiography [it is not a novel] is superb. I have taught it several times in "Documentary Film and Literature of Modern War," a course I designed for the Honors Program at a flagship state university. I doubt that any film can do justice to it. The book is heartbreaking beyond belief, just as Vera Brittain's experiences were. [She lost her fiance Roland Leighton, two good friends, and her brother in that unnecessary, hideous conflict styled "The Great War."]

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That is excellent that you have taught it so you must know it in a very in-depth way. I don't think a film could ever truly give it justice as well, but I am still looking forward to the adaptation and can't wait to watch it next year. I think for non-book readers or those who have not had the chance to read it, the film would be more far-reaching and accessible. I hope people will learn from it and hopefully be inspired to read the book.

I have been around the military as well, involved in two conflicts, and could see how this book would be extremely beneficial to my peers today. I wish governments around the world could learn from past mistakes.

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Do you think a film would satisfy all the details in that superb book? It is a true must read


Not sure it's possible. Even a 6-part miniseries didn't cover everything--remotely.

As you know the book is a door-stopper size and mine at home runs over 600 pages, large paperback, small print. ha

So surely a two-hour film cannot either.

They'll hit the highlights. It will have to be just the bare bones of the story for film-length.

And I suspect because they want to put bums in seats Hey Day productions will have focused on one main thing---her love affair with Roland through the war (if you can call it an affair, it was pretty tame in reality), which will be the focal point for the entire film--the love story.

Of course Roland will be hot and heavy and "into her." When in real life, I think his impassioned poems to her was about as far as it got--it was probably an affair of the mind between two like souls of letters who captured each other's attentions on that level, the more conservative times not being the only thing that kept it so chaste.

I seriously doubt Roland would have been up to scratch much in the lover department (if you know what I mean). So this will be a real work of fiction, ha, to make a movie than can sell to distributors. A kind of "pure love of the mind" doesn't sell, especially since Vera left her husband (and even hinted in Testament of Experience that they didn't even consummate their marriage for god knows how long) for novelist Winifred Holtby and lived with her as a couple until Holtby's untimely death.

But we will wipe those real life facts out of our gray matter to see what the film makers have brought us in their version.

Then we'll get a passing look in at the family resistance for an education against the odds, some war work as a nurse and then the outcome for all the men in her life.

On the home front, with Dominic West and Emilia Fox as her parents, they'll need some serious screen time--they're big stars. So that might take up more than in the book.

Even that is a tall order for a two-hour film (I'm saying two hours but I don't know how long it is yet.)

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I was unpleasantly surprised by the movie. My understanding is that Testament of Youth, the famous book series, is a factual memoir, yes? One of the most important pieces of post WWI British literature, and an internationally renowned proto-feminist author?

There were just so. vera. many. overt anachronistic errors that it kept pulling me back out of the movie. An unpaid college intern working as a PA with a smartphone and wikipedia could have caught a LOT of the errors in one afternoon. For one example, Roland is sick when leaving for France in the Fall of 1914. Aunt Belle pops up and helpfully yammers on, while making him a cuppa, about how all the troops have been coming down with what all the newspapers are all calling the Spanish Influenza.

The earliest known case of what would only months later be called the spanish flu was in March 1918--and in Kansas in the USA. While I'm uncertain as to when the first british soldier cases of the spanish flu were reported I am reasonably certain they did not involve time travelling Tommies, newspapers, and teleporting flu-bugs.

Maybe the producer hired the writers from Terminator: Genisys to punch up Vera Brittain's stuffy old book about some boring old war that didn't involve nearly enough dead Jon Snow in spite of the millions upon millions of dead?

Other commentators have latched on to any number of easily fixed problems or pointed out the omnipresent problems with appropriate uniforms & gear. One that bothered me is that the appalling casualties and near total destruction of the professional BEF during the Battle of the Frontiers and the First Battle of the Marne during August and September have seemingly been moved until conveniently the evening papers of the day Roland leaves for France. Once again, the screenwriter seems to think WWI needs some punching up to be properly dramatic. I suppose my views more closely match that of no less an authority than Winston Churchill, who, late in his life, described the opening months of WWI a drama never surpassed in human history.




I will likely seek out the 1979 miniseries because I was left so dissatisfied by this version.

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I read it, when I was 14. That was 34 years ago. I've reread it twice, in my 20s, and in my 30s. It's a new book each time. To say it made a deep impression on me is an understatement. It engraved itself on my consciousness-- I could recall pages verbatim, because sometimes I had to stop to read them a couple of times, they were just that good. It was the first time good writing made me cry just because it was that good, not because of the content.

I'm not sure how I missed the BBC mini-series the first time Masterpiece Theater ran it, but I picked up the book in the first place because I'd missed it. I then saw it a few years later. It was great, but you'd need more to capture the entire book, really. And you need a brilliant actress to play Vera, because so much of the book is internal, and has to be communicated subtextually in a dramatization.

I haven't seen the movie, but it's nagging me, like a carton of milk in the fridge I know has gone bad, and I have to sniff it before I throw it out.

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I read and loved her book years ago. I was looking forward to this movie. I thought the movie was wonderful. I never saw the mini series.

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Just read the book and held off watching movie. The book is qmazing. I found it hard to get into but especially the last third is truly awe inspiring.

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