Our take
2005 was a banner year for British period dramas, apparently: first, there was Joe Wright’s Pride & Prejudice (still arguably the genre’s crowning achievement), and then came Under the Greenwood Tree, a delightful made-for-Christmas-TV romance loosely based on the eponymous Thomas Hardy novel. Anyone familiar with the author’s typically tragedy-tinged stories — think Tess of the D'Urbervilles and Far From the Madding Crowd — will find themselves surprised by the light, pleasant tone of this one, in which the closest anyone gets to violent revenge is sabotaging a church organ by pouring a flagon of cider into it.
The romance here is threefold: when Keeley Hawes’ spinster schoolteacher Fancy Day (genuinely her name) arrives in an English village, she ignites a rivalry between wealthy farmer Shiner (Steve Pemberton), haughty clergyman Parson Maybold (Ben Miles), and James Murray’s die-hard romantic Dick Dewy (again: the names in this are a choice). The trio’s simultaneous attempted courting of Fancy doubles as both the entertaining will-she-won’t-she stuff of romantic dramas and a conduit through which the movie explores the class dynamics in England during the 19th century. It’s this deft intertwining of satisfying romantic period drama tropes with genuine reflection on the historical period itself — all while remaining lighthearted — that makes this underseen adaptation worth watching.
Synopsis
Set in a rustic English village in the mid 19th century, Under The Greenwood Tree tells the story of a poor young man who falls for a middle-class schoolteacher and attempts to win her over.
Storyline
When a 19th-century village schoolteacher catches the eye of three men from contrasting social classes — all of whom can offer her something different — she must make a difficult choice.
TLDR
Surely it's no coincidence that, like 2005’s Pride & Prejudice, this also features an ostensibly chaste yet insanely erotic “hand” scene.
What stands out
Fancy’s suitors represent three forks in the road: following her heart, her worldly ambitions, or fulfilling the social mobility dreams of her working-class father. The movie grounds itself in its historical period by seriously considering the momentousness of each of these options; when Fancy’s father counsels her against marrying below her station and paints a difficult picture of the life she might be forced to lead, for example, you can’t help but feel the wisdom in his advice. While it ultimately remains a comforting watch, Under the Greenwood Tree doesn’t feel entirely predictable thanks to sober moments like this — a rare feat in this often cliché-stuffed genre.