Directed by: Oliver Parker
Starring:

Shop for The Importance of Being Earnest related products on Amazon.com
US Release Date:
May 17th, 2002
Ok, according to the purists the writer/director of this movie (Oliver
Parker) has played fast and loose with the original play this is based
upon. Which is fine, let them bitch and complain. For those people,
like me, who have never seen or read the Oscar Wilde play, and therefore aren't
caught up in worrying which bit has been changed, this movie is a wonderful
comedy of manners done as only the British can do them. It's witty,
charming, entertaining and a whole slew of other platitudes.
The plot goes something like this... Jack Worthing (Colin Firth) is a proper country gentlemen who likes to slip up to London and enjoy a bit of decadence now and again. While staying in London he goes by the name of Earnest. He tells his young ward, an eighteen year old girl (played by Reese Witherspoon) and his servants and friends that he must travel to London frequently to take care of his miscreant brother; Earnest. Just to be clear, he doesn't have a brother, he is in fact, an orphan. Algernon Moncrieff (Rupert Everett) is everything Jack Worthing is not. He's a cad, a womanizer, he dodges his debtors, and just tries to get away with doing as little as possible.
It is through Algernon that Jack meets Gwendolen and he quickly falls in love. There are two things standing in the way of their true love. First there is Gwendolen's Mother (Judi Dench), an iron-handed old woman by whom all potential suitors must pass. And secondly, Gwendolen has got it into her head that she could only ever love a man named Earnest, which is the name by which she knows Jack.
While Jack is pursuing Gwendolen, Algernon, in an attempt to avoid his debtors and perhaps meet the beautiful young Ward, leaves for the country, arriving at Jack's home, proclaiming himself to be, who else?, Jack's younger brother Earnest.
He
quickly discovers that the young ward, Cecily, is already in love with him,
having fabricated an imaginary life for him based on his exploits as related to
her by her guardian, Jack. He also finds, somewhat to his horror, that he
has sincerely fallen in love with her.
Naturally, Jack arrives back home, Gwendolen arrives, and so does her mother, and everyone becomes rapidly confused over which Earnest is which.
The cast in this movie is all wonderful. Both Colin Firth and Rupert Everett are marvelously proper and funny at the same time, and even carry off a duet together over the end credits. They share a camaraderie that really holds this movie together and makes you think that they really could be brothers.
It is Judi Dench who steals this movie though. Her portrayal of the matriarch with the acid tongue is priceless. She gets to spout lines like, "To lose one parent, Mr. Worthing, may be regarded as a misfortune; to lose both looks like carelessness." and "Thirty-five is an attractive age. London is full of women of the highest birth who have, of their own free choice, remained thirty-five for years."
The Importance of Being Earnest is the perfect counter-programming in a Summer already overly-heavy with special effects extravaganzas. It's a movie where the script is the most important thing. It's sophisticated, witty, and charming. Let's hear someone describe Spider-man or Attack of the Clones like that!
The
Importance Of Being Earnest is a nice little movie. It plays like a cute
sitcom. A small group of players mistake each other for people they are not.
Colin Firth and Rupert Everett are great as members of the British upper class who each invent a person who takes them away from their real life. Rupert decides to pretend to be Colin's long absent pretend brother Earnest. When in London Jack pretends to be Earnest. As Earnest he has fallen in love and gotten engaged. All players gather at a nice country estate and some slightly amusing situations occur.
It can be charming watching the stuffy refined British upper class attempt to express feelings. They always seem awkward in these movies when it comes to love. Firth and Everett are two polar screen opposites. Firth is stiff and masculine where Everett is limp and feminine. Yet they make a good acting team. They have worked together since Another Country more than 10 years ago. They play off each other very well.
A nice, mostly British, cast and some good dialogue "Suspense is the essence of romance." can only do so much to raise this above the mediocre situation comedy film it is.
Photos © Copyright Miramax Films (2002)