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The Importance Of Being Earnest (2002) Certificate 15

The Importance Of Being Earnest

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Rated 3.5 stars
Average rating
(65%)
 
Starring: Colin Firth | Rupert Everett | Reese Witherspoon | Judi Dench | Tom Wilkinson | Anna Massey | Edward Fox
Director: Oliver Parker
Studio: WALT DISNEY STUDIOS HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 90 mins
Genres: Comedy | Drama
Languages: English
Released: March 10, 2003

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.

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Highest rated reviews

14 out of 14 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4 stars

mark from SUDBURY, 8th July, 2004

NOTE: THIS FILM IS CERTIFICATE PG AND NOT 15 AS STATED IN THE LISTING!

This is a fun and light-hearted production of Wilde's classic play. Some interesting twists and reading between Wilde's lines, but goodness... Lady Bracknell as a showgirl... well really!

Judi Dench is magnificent as always (although she does somewhat self-conciously understate the famous "A Handbag!" line) and the rest of the cast complement each other well.

Highly recommended!

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4 out of 4 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4 stars
Excellent comedy of manners!

A Customer from Gloucestershire, 29th May, 2004

Colin firth does it again....swoon! A funny yet sweetly romantic girly film for a Friday night in with the girls.
Oscar Wilde was a brilliant writer and this tale stands the test of time and is as delightful today as it must have been to it's original victorian audience.

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2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4 stars

Ben#58 from HOVE, 9th March, 2004

Oscar Wilde's wordplay is as witty and clever as it ever was. Every performance seems to show the actors enjoying themselves. A real pleasure. The only fly in the ointment is the music, which while good and full of life seems a litle at odds with the setting of the story, a little too Jeeves and Wooster maybe?

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2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 3 stars

Lilie#1 from OULTON, 27th February, 2004

Although Oliver Parker has already scripted and directed a successful Wilde adaptation, this second attempt is not up to the first. The additional dialogue screams out from the original, and is anachronistic and unsubtle. Judi Dench's Lady Bracknell is a brilliant tour-de-force and challenges the original glittering performance by Edith Evans in the 1952 film. This apart, everyone else disappoints. This is no mean feat when you have a cast that should have shone. I recommend going back to to the Anthony Asquith 1952 version to see Wilde at his trenchant, pithy best, performed by a superlative cast, including Margaret Rutherford as Miss Prism.

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Most recent reviews

Rated 3 stars
Reasonable

Randomfilmbuff from , 23rd October, 2009

I had forgotten I had already seen this which suggests this is not that memerable. It was pleasurable and well acted but obviously forgettable

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Rated 4 stars
Brilliant

A Customer from Camberley, 7th September, 2009

This film is lighthearted and fab to watch on a dreary Sunday afternoon. I love watching the partnership between Colin Firth and Rupert Everett; its all so mischievous! I highly recommend it as an introduction to the delights of Oscar Wilde

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Rated 0 stars
Very enjoyable film

A Customer from Leyburn, 18th July, 2009

Another wonderful farce, light and breezy with good acting and nice men to look at. Oscar Wilde is great and this was a very sweet adaptation. Everyone needs an 'Earnest'.

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Rated 0 stars
Absolutely AWFUL!

A Customer from Edinburgh, 25th June, 2009

I like costume dramas and cheesy/girly films, but this one was absolutely awful. It was SO painful that I didn't even make it past the first 30mins (which is saying something for me). It's almost like a spoof of the original play as it's that bad, and the Reese Witherspoon character keeps having crazy dreamlike scenes where she imagines she's being rescued by a knight. Utterly and completely painful and cringe making. If only they'd kept it simple the actors and the script would have done more than enough to make for an enjoyable viewing experience - but unfortunately they fiddled with it and added more 'modern' bits which simply do not work. Dire. One of the worst films that I have seen in some time.

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