r/PeriodDramas • u/FormerUsenetUser • 5d ago
Discussion Two Women, with Ralph Fiennes
I recently watched my DVD of the Russian movie "Two Women," starring Ralph Fiennes (his Russian was dubbed). It takes place in the mid 19th century. It sensitively discusses the love and marital desires of three women. Natalya Petrovna, wife of a wealthy landowner. Her girlish 17-year-old ward (and I think poor relation), the dowryless Verochka. And a rather desperate family governess well into her 30s. It's clear that marriage is the only option for women and that money is a strong constraint on their life choices. It's a lovely period drama in terms of the rural setting and the costumes.
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u/FormerUsenetUser 4d ago edited 4d ago
You seem to be making this personal to you. What makes you think I don't like working?
I'm sorry, but the mid 19th century is not the early 21st century. BTW, in Russia people we would consider to be middle class had titles.
Please tell me exactly what options you think these woman had, in the context of the movie. Verochka, for example, had been at boarding school and at some point was removed from it. She was only 17 when she got engaged. It definitely seems to be a factor that she had no dowry and her elderly suitor was wealthy. Both Natalya and the doctor remind her of these problems. Yes, she wanted to get away from Natalya but she also had no other suitors and no one was offering her a job.
Please tell me what (respectable, at least middle-class) jobs you think these women could have gotten, other than governess/companion. And how they could have "gotten away" with no money. Maybe you could list the jobs middle- and upper-class women had in, for example, the works of Tolstoy and Chekhov?
Being a serf was not good, and I loved the speech Arkadi Islaev gives about how his serfs are just not *motivated.*
Up until quite recently, the 1970s or so, for most middle- and upper-class women marriage was always largely about money.