

Now it's in post-production after location shooting in England and France, with Gwyneth Paltrow (sporting another English accent) and LaBute regular Aaron Eckhart as the present-day writers, and Jeremy Northam and Jennifer Ehle as the Victorians. The film has been on the stocks for some years, and there have been rumours of unsuccessful scripts, of Jane Campion being a possible director, and Sean Connery playing the Browningesque Ash. It's a fiendishly difficult book to adapt, mainly because it's very literary (letters and poems, some 10 pages long, are part of its texture), but partly because for the past decade it's been taught in universities around the world, and a very discerning audience will be awaiting it.

This marvellous novel, deceptively subtitled 'A Romance' but the kind of thing that gives postmodernism a good name, has parallel plots and is about two late twentieth-century academics who live through and fight over the lives of a pair of Victorian poets, Christabel LaMotte and Randolph Henry Ash. Meanwhile, the Australian filmmaker George Miller, who was pleased and astonished to hear that Byatt was a great admirer of his Mad Max movies, is working on an adaptation of her adult fairy story, The Djinn in the Nightingale's Eye.īut the movie I'm really looking forward to is Neil LaBute's Possession, based on Byatt's 1990 Booker Prize-winning novel.
