Hello everyone,
The Jane Eyre official website has been updated with new content including videos, articles and photos. Among the photos were new stills of Mia as Jane Eyre, and I have uploaded them to the gallery for your convenience.
Thank you for visiting!
Hello visitors,
With thanks to Kerr for linking me to a recently released still of Mia in Jane Eyre.

Move along, Jane Austen. Hollywood is hot for the Brontës again.
Filmmakers’ long affair with the divine Miss Austen is finally waning, after two decades of movies made from her elegant novels with their well-mannered characters, placid plots and witty repartee.
But enough with the endless circling of the Pump Room at Bath — time to get hearts racing! Time to bring back those wildly Romantic Brontë characters — plain Jane Eyre and moody Mr. Rochester, doomed Cathy Earnshaw and vengeful Heathcliff — to rend their garments, wail disconsolately and stagger across windswept moors.
Now that’s Hollywood. Or Hollywood-on-the-Thames. British filmmakers are at work on new versions of Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë and Wuthering Heightsby Emily Brontë, to be released next year.
“Austen’s characters achieve their greatness through a kind of sideways movement toward happiness, (while) the Brontës hurtle themselves headlong into the maelstrom of emotions and situations,” says James Schamus, head of Focus Features, the artsy studio that made Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and now is making Jane Eyre (with BBC Films) with hot young director Cary Fukunaga (Sin Nombre).
The new Jane will star Australian actress Mia Wasikowska (Alice in Wonderland), who is not plain, and Irish actor Michael Fassbender (Inglourious Basterds) as Rochester.
Source: USA Today
Hello visitors,
I have added the a still from the new upcoming film Jane Eyre to the gallery! The still was accompanied by an article by Times Online:

In 1847 a pair of extraordinary novels appeared two months apart, apparently written by brothers.
Jane Eyre proved an immediate success while “Wuthering Heights” was sneered at as “wild, confused, disjointed and improbable”. Today both are among the classics of English literature.
Next year the stories are to go head to head once more, in cinemas, more than 160 years after Charlotte and Emily Brontë published them under the pseudonyms Currer and Ellis Bell.
The books have already inspired a number of film and television adaptations, starring the likes of Orson Welles, Sir Laurence Olivier and Juliette Binoche. Despite this, BBC Films and Film4 believe that there is room for a fresh cinematic take on the Brontës. Their rival productions promise to bring the sisters to a new generation and to revitalise the “bonnet drama”.
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