The Importance of Being Earnest - Criterion Collection

by Criterion

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Director:Anthony Asquith
Release Date:2002-06-25
Label:Criterion
UPC:037429165621
Binding:DVD
Published By:Criterion
ASIN:B00006673M
Category:DVD

Actors and Actresses

Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions

Description

Oscar Wilde's comic jewel sparkles in Anthony Asquith's film adaptation of The Importance of Being Earnest. Featuring brilliantly polished performances by Michael Redgrave, Joan Greenwood, and Dame Edith Evans, the enduringly hilarious story of two young women who think themselves engaged to the same nonexistent man is given the grand Technicolor treatment. Seldom has a classic stage comedy been so engagingly transferred to the screen. The Criterion Collection is proud to present The Importance of Being Earnest on DVD for the first time.
Amazon.com

If you're looking for the definitive example of dry British wit, look no further than The Importance of Being Earnest. Of course, it helps to have Oscar Wilde's beloved play as source material, but this exquisite adaptation has a charmed life of its own, with a perfectly matched director (Anthony Asquith was raised in the rarified, upper-class atmosphere of Wilde's play) and a once-in-a-lifetime cast. Mix these ingredients with Wilde's inimitable repartee, and you've got a comedic soufflé that's been cooked to perfection. Opening with a proscenium nod to its theatrical origins, the film turns Wilde's comedy of clever deception and mixed identities into a cinematic treat, and while the 10-member cast is uniformly superb, special credit must be given to Dame Edith Evans, reprising her stage role as the imperiously stuffy Lady Bracknell. To hear her Wilde-ly hilarious inflections and elongated syllables is to witness British comedy in its purest form, fully deserving of the royal Criterion treatment. --Jeff Shannon

Customer Reviews

A classic version of a classic - Reviewed on 2008-10-24
* * * * *

This is without doubt THE classic film version of the classic Oscar Wilde social comedy, The Importance of Being Earnest. Featuring the best British stage and screen actors of the time beautifully realised by the famous Anthony Asquith it is one of those few films that can be enjoyed over and over both as a supreme example of the Wilde wit and for the gusto with which the actors revel in their performance of this satire on the British upper class. Cannot be bettered.
Missed the Play, Enjoyed the DVD of It. - Reviewed on 2008-08-12
* * * *
1 customer found this review not to be helpful.
Written by Oscar Wilde, as a comedy of manners and more's of his time, it's about deception and using aliases, creating a non existent brother (or so it seems) as an excuse for a gentleman named Jack to take numerous trips to London. In actuality, the visitations are to young Cecily as Ernest. A British cast lend respectability to a controversial subject along the lines of 'Dangerous Liasions.'

Filmed in 1952, the costumes were beautiful in my beloved technicolor. Michael Redgrave played the role of Jack and Edith Evans (very hard to understand) was Lady Bracknell who had been the same character on stage. Margaret Rutherfolrd and lovely Joan Greenwood were also prominent in this odd story.

When Jacks gets upset at complications due to his double live, he decides to let Earnest die a natural death. A local school presented a reputable version and I must say hearing the British dialogue with a Southern accent enhanced the comedy of a serious matter. Since Wilde never married, it is hilarious having two women contemplating marrying the same rogue. Both are lovely, despite the age difference of Cecily at only 18 when the legal age is 35 and Jack at 28 years of age. Twenty-eight years ago, a baby had disappeared in Miss Prism's handbag. "I will wait for you all my life." The vital importance of being earnest is that Jack really did have a younger brother, in the play called Algernon, whose Christian name was Ernest Moncrieff. See this version to learn who is who. It's quite a game.
Fun romp with tradition script - Reviewed on 2008-05-27
* * * *

With very few exceptions, this is a screen production of the traditional stage show. As such, it is very faithful to the Wilde script, which is very helpful for those who want to see the traditional staging. The pair of Prism and Chasuble were perhaps [SPOILER NOTICE] a little old for the sudden romance that springs up between them [SPOILER ENDED], and the humor perhaps a little subtle for many American audiences, especially younger audiences, but it is a fun, faithful performance.
The Essential Earnest - Reviewed on 2008-05-25
* * * * *

Thank God for the DVD! For, without the invention of this miracle of communication, how on earth would the future generations ever know the real joy of watching and witnessing some of the most wonderful moments in the history of the world!

Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of being Earnest" is the absolute epitomy of the writer's art and the Anthony Asquith production of the film with the wonderful Michael Redgrave, the superb Dame Edith Evans and the equally marvellous talents of Dame Margaret Rutherford, Michael Denison and Joan Greenwood is now and (hopefully) forever available for many generations to come.

One can only thank the Lord and those extraordinarily clever I.T. people who, through His grace, came up with the concept of preserving these masterpieces forever on a tiny, thin and miraculous piece of metal we call the Digital Versatile Disc!

January Williams-Brindle - a true believer!
The best of Oscar Wilde. - Reviewed on 2008-05-15
* * * * *

This 1952 version of Wilde's most popular play benefits greatly from its great cast. Dame Edith Evans had been performing Lady Bracknell for years on stage before finally bringing her characterization to the screen, thank goodness. The technicolor is breathtaking.
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