Jane Austen Wrecked My Life Review

Rather than simply wrecking her life, Jane Austen shook Agathe awake and handed her a second chance at living true to herself in Jane Austen Wrecked My Life.
Agathe (Camille Rutherford) is a single, hopelessly romantic bookseller with a deep love for Jane Austen’s novels. She’s stuck, emotionally, creatively, and existentially, and blames her writer’s block on the dull routine of her life. So, her best friend (or possibly something more?) Felix (Pablo Pauly) signs her up for a writer’s retreat at Jane Austen’s former residence in England. Naturally, nothing goes according to plan. Enter Oliver (Charlie Anson), a brooding Mr. Darcy-type whose presence complicates and reignites everything Agathe thought she knew about herself.
Director Laura Piani infuses the film with a lot of herself. Before making her film debut with this one, she worked at Shakespeare and Company in Paris, the very bookstore where Agathe works in the film. She’s also a writer, so when it came to asking, “Who can Agathe blame for her writer’s block?” the answer was obvious: Jane Austen, the author who shaped our understanding of romance and whose ideals still haunt us, for better or worse, centuries later.
Jane Austen Wrecked My Life checks all the classic rom-com boxes: the ‘enemies to lovers’ trope, slow-burn yearning, quirky comedy. But it also gives us something rarer: a heroine who doesn’t need a makeover. There’s no physical glow-up; Agathe doesn’t need one. Her transformation is internal. She begins to accept herself fully, embracing her roots and ions in order to finally write and finish her first novel.
The film also offers an interesting take on modern love. Agathe is surrounded by people who bounce between partners, seemingly “winning” at relationships: her sister and best friends, for instance. But Piani subtly challenges this idea, showing that constant companionship isn’t necessarily a sign of emotional success. Sometimes love, real, slow, inconvenient love, requires more patience and self-knowledge than anyone expects.
Camille Rutherford is a perfect Agathe. She plays the character with warmth, wit, and an effortlessly grounded charm. Like in Felicità (directed by Bruno Merle, where she starred alongside Pio Marmaï), Rutherford embodies a kind of chaotic, free spirit that never feels forced. She’s smart, stubborn, and incredibly relatable.
While Jane Austen Wrecked My Life doesn’t reinvent the rom-com, it doesn’t need to. It’s a thoughtful, charming blend of modern romantic comedy and period-film nostalgia. You’ll smile, sigh, and want to reach for your copy of Pride and Prejudice by the end, because some feelings and some stories never go out of style.
★★★ 1/2
In UK cinemas on June 13th / Camille Rutherford, Pablo Pauly, Charlie Anson, Annabelle Lengronne / Dir: Laura Piani
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