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Though we expect picnics full of jolly conviviality, film picnics concentrate on romance. If you care to review and count the posts, you’ll notice that I’ve found 84 that concentrate on couples engaging in relationships that are friendly, loving, innocent, sensuous, lustful, or combative and on the verge of dissolution.
Almost all film picnics share what we expect at a picnic—a cloth, a wicker basket, place settings, plates, a variety of food, and drinks (often wine) However, you cannot talk or kiss with your mouth full of food, so eating is reduced to nibbling (with exceptions). The foods we see are decorations, what I call picnic fodder, not meant for hearty eating.
Film picnics are infrequently original. Most are derived from literature, especially novels and stories that have picnics, or, as directors and screenwriters tell us, ought to have picnics. If you are familiar with the original texts, you may notice whether or not the film picnic is faithful or an outright fabrication. Directors and screenwriters feel justified improving an original text, arguing that changes are necessitated by their medium, or what they think viewers like you and me “want” to see.
Browse by Date
Charlie Stratton’s In Secret (2014)
Picnic Scene: 43:00Among Stratton's changes to Zola's Therese Raquin is that he's changed the title to In Secret. He's eliminated the plan to have a picnic lunch at a restaurant along the Seine. Instead of Zola's rendition of a sadistic murder and what should be a...
Joanna Hogg’s Archipelago (2010)
Hogg says that Archipelago is about a family, like islands, “linked together beneath the surface.” At their picnic, each sits separately like a little tombstone bracing against the offshore wind. They are just not given to communicate about pressing issues, shoving...
Tom Harper’s War and Peace (2016)
For six hours and 17 minutes, Tom Harper’s War and Peace is a parade of armies marching or in battle, explosions, mutilations, death, love and seduction, incest, and constant social intrigue. The final 2:8 minutes is a picnic, a happy situation, if not a fairy tale...



