The Importance Of Being Earnest-With The Film Adaptation Of
Oscar Wilde’s The Importance Of Being
Ernest In Mind
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
The Importance Of Being Ernest, starring Colin Firth, Judi
Dench, Rupert Everett, Reese Witherspoon, from the famous play of the same name
by Oscar Wilde, 2002
No question Oscar Wilde was a witty, sardonic, provocative tweaker
of late Victorian English mores and morals. In the end his then over-the-top
private sex life did him in as the prudish side of English life that we have
all come to hate (except those few who dote on the “royal family” and their
fundamentally boring pursuits) beat down this talented man in hell-bent Reading
Gaol. The 2002 film adaptation, there have been early ones, of Wilde most
famous play, The Importance Of Being
Ernest, captures on screen part of the reason why he has endured as an
astute social critic of the late Victorian pall.
What’s in a name? Well quite a bit if you follow the story
line of the film. Rural bound land-owner and guardian Jack (played by Colin
Firth) who yearns to escape to London as much as possible and Algy (played by
Rupert Everett) who tags along with him in hothouse London are the best of
friends, best of male-bonding bachelor friends. But Jack in London is going
under the “war name game” of, well, Ernest as he pursues young Gwendolyn, the
charge of very upper-crust Lady Bracknell (played by Dame Judi Dench) who we
shall find out started out life not with a silver spoon but with a nice ass and
used that hard fact to entrench herself into high society via a very convenient
marriage to milord, some milord did it matter as long as the title was sound
and maybe the property taxes were paid.
Of course marriage and the property settlements associated
with marriage among the upper crust was a very serious proposition in those
days (still is if you look beneath the “democratic” veneer of the Mayfair
swells these days particularly in London) and so an easy target for Wilde’s
wit. Marriage, good marriages came at a price. Hence the spoof of marriage by
making such a thing as a first name, an earnest ernest first name as a
requirement of marriage assent by both the young women Gwendolyn and Cecily
(played by Reese Witherspoon) must have had a lively ripple effect on those
London audiences who saw how cheeky Wilde was being in putting them on. In the
end, naturally, romance, light-hearted romance will win out but the game here
is the repartee between and among the parties until we get there. All’s well
that end’s well. Nice.
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