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Learn MoreThe 2004 Vanity Fair stars as Becky Sharp. And that is precisely the point of contention—and the film’s hidden genius.
James Purefoy’s Captain Rawdon Crawley is the heart of the film—a gloriously dumb, tender man-boy destroyed by the system he serves. And Gabriel Byrne’s Marquess of Steyne is not a cartoon villain but a lonely, powerful predator. Their scenes with Becky crackle with a dangerous truth: everyone is selling something. Becky sells sex and charm. Steyne sells access. Rawdon sells his honor. The only difference is the price tag. The film is not perfect. It is too long and too short simultaneously; the final act feels rushed, compressing years of novelistic decay into a montage. Witherspoon, for all her ferocity, cannot fully shed her rom-com tics—a plucky head-tilt here, a determined pout there—that soften Becky’s edges. And the studio’s insistence on a happy ending (an epilogue where Becky reunites with her son in India, a scene Nair fought to keep ambiguous) betrays Thackeray’s cold final line: “Come children, let us shut up the box and the puppets, for our play is played out.” vanity fair -2004 film-
And yet, that imposed sweetness is accidentally perfect. Because Vanity Fair 2004 is not Thackeray’s novel. It is Mira Nair’s Vanity Fair . And in Nair’s world, the peacock cannot be crushed by the mud. It preens, it schemes, it survives. The final shot is not a moral lesson. It is Witherspoon, as Becky, walking through a bazaar in Bombay, a tiny smile on her face, utterly broke and utterly unbroken. She has lost everything. And she is already plotting her next move. The 2004 Vanity Fair stars as Becky Sharp