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Importance of Being Earnest (2002)
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Reviews Counted:30
Fresh:18
Rotten:12
Average Rating:5.9/10
Consensus: Despite the great potential of the cast and Oscar Wilde’s script, director Oliver Parker put aside too many Wilde's witticisms and failed in an attempt to develop the visual appearance of the film. Nevertheless, the lines remaining from the original script still allow the work to be passable.
Rated: PG [See Full Rating] for mild sensuality
Genre: Comedies
Theatrical Release:May 22, 2002 Limited
Box Office: $8,281,437
Synopsis: In his second adaptation of an Oscar Wilde play, writer-director Oliver Parker (AN IDEAL HUSBAND) assembles a peerless cast to engage in this witty comedy of manners and mistaken identity. In 1890s... In his second adaptation of an Oscar Wilde play, writer-director Oliver Parker (AN IDEAL HUSBAND) assembles a peerless cast to engage in this witty comedy of manners and mistaken identity. In 1890s London, rakish Algernon Montcrieff (Rupert Everett, who also starred in HUSBAND) runs into his friend, Jack Worthing (Colin Firth), who is in town to propose marriage to Algy's wildly romantic cousin, Gwendolen (Frances O'Connor). When returning a cigarette case to Jack, Algy reads the inscription, and discovers his friend has two secrets. Jack has created a devilish younger brother/alter ego called "Ernest" to hide his own misdeeds, and has a beautiful young ward named Cecily (Reese Witherspoon), whom he wants to keep clear of the roguish Algy. While Jack deals with the large obstacle standing between him and Gwendolen--namely, her mother, the imposing Lady Bracknell (a wonderfully imperious Judi Dench)--Algy devises a way to meet Cecily. The confusion and hilarity come to a peak when Algy arrives at Jack's country manor posing as Ernest in order to woo Cecily, and Gwendolen runs away to the country to be with Jack--whom she knows as Ernest. The stellar cast and Wilde's clever words make for genuine entertainment. [More]
Starring: Rupert Everett, Colin Firth, Judi Dench, Frances O'Connor
Starring: Rupert Everett, Colin Firth, Judi Dench, Frances O'Connor, Reese Witherspoon, Tom Wilkinson, Anna Massey, Edward Fox
Director: Oliver Parker
Director: Oliver Parker
Screenwriter: Oliver Parker
Producer: Barnaby Thompson
Studio: Miramax Films
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Release:
Nov 12, 2002
Reviews for Importance of Being Earnest
The Importance of Being Earnest resonates and inspires rapid-fire bouts of laughter, perhaps even a few giggles from the author himself, whom posterity has rewarded the last laugh.
Though Mr. Parker's The Importance of Being Earnest is pleasant enough in its casting and performances, it doesn't work as it should.
Rupert Everett gets Wilde in his bones, but this well-cast adaptation somehow feels obvious and overblown.
In trying to make Earnest more of a visual romp than it needs to be, [Parker] almost stomps the Wildeness out of its literary wit. But he doesn't. The good humor and lively acting survive.
The film is a fragile frolic, but the real theme enjoyed by countless audiences through the years -- the importance of being earnest instead of deceitful in matters of the heart -- still shines through the frosting.
While The Importance of Being Earnest offers opportunities for occasional smiles and chuckles, it doesn't give us a reason to be in the theater beyond Wilde's wit and the actors' performances.
To take a big fat wrecking ball to one of the surefire delights of world theater -- well, that requires energy and invention ... Oliver Parker does that here, and the result is a frustrating, boring mess.
Despite the sparkling source material ... this romp through Victorian parlors frequently falls flat on its rump.
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