An Ideal Husband Movie Review
An Ideal Husband Review

"An Ideal Husband" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Oliver ParkerProducer : Bruce Davey,Uri Fruchtmann,Barnaby Thompson
Screenwiter : Oliver Parker
Starring : Rupert Everett,Julianne Moore,Jeremy Northam,Cate Blanchett,Minnie Driver,John Wood,Lindsay Duncan,Peter Vaughan
Get ready from Romance… British style.
The Victorians were well known for keeping a stiff upper lip about everything,
and their romance was absolutely no exception. Their entire world was
constructed around subtlety, and, in tune with that, the one word that can be
used to describe An Ideal Husband is subtle.
The humor is subtle. The romance is subtle. The very evil Laura Cheveley
(Julianne Moore) is less subtle, but still subtle. The plot is subtle. The
movie is so subtle that anyone who hasn't already acclimated themselves to
British-style filmmaking (that is, incredibly subtle) or adapted themselves to
Oscar Wilde (witty, but still subtle), will probably turn the movie off about
fifteen minutes in after it fails to capture their interest.
If, like me, you have the misfortune of being part British, then subtlety will
be ingrained into your blood and picking up the humor in An Ideal Husband will
not be hard at all. Then again, if you're like me, you can actually enjoy
reading Shakespeare instead of watching Kenneth Branaugh.
An Ideal Husband is the story of a seemingly squeaky-clean politician in the
House of Commons, Robert Chiltern (Jeremy Northam). Chiltern, by Victorian
era-British standards, has it all. He has a wife (Cate Blanchett) who adores
him, a very large amount of money, and a seemingly unstoppable political career.
At a party to celebrate being British, being Chiltern, and having it all, he
runs into widow Laura Cheveley. Cheveley is an entrepreneur: she has invested
heavily in an Argentinean canal and will stop at nothing to ensure that
Parliament supports it. Due to a mutual and deceased acquaintance, she has
come into possession of a letter that will blackmail Chiltern into vociferously
expressing his false support of the scheme.
Chiltern must go back and forth on whether or not to meet her demands, and in
the process enlist the help of the quick-witted eligible bachelor Arthur Goring
(Rupert Everett).
Goring is a bachelor to the bone, who makes British women swoon as much as
their corsets will allow. Among those swooning is Chiltern's sister, Mabel
(Minnie Driver). His main trouble is deciding which party to go to and dealing
with his father's (John Wood) constant pressure to marry.
If you are paying any attention to this film, can understand it past British
dialogue and subtlety, and know Oscar Wilde, you will know right off that this
was one of Wilde's many attempts to show his distaste for heterosexual
relationships and the Victorian nobility. Wilde shines (as much as Wilde ever
can shine) through in writer-director Oliver Parker's adaptation of Oscar
Wilde's play.
Oscar Wilde was inherently witty, a homosexual who reveled in passing
British-style insults to heterosexual hypocrisy, and eternally poking fun at
the British upper crust (albeit often from the inside). An Ideal Husband
should take pride in being one of the few of the 45 Wilde adaptations to date
to actually capture the essence of Oscar Wilde's work.
Goring is an obvious foil for Wilde himself, and a chance for Wilde to pass off
enormous insult to the Victorian system. Seeing as Goring is Wilde is a very
good degree, and Everett is not only openly gay but also a noted Wilde fan,
Everett's portrayal is smack on-target. Also on target is Julianne Moore, who
plays Cheveley with such a delightful evil that her malicious playfulness
always ends up right in the forefront. The two of them steal the show.
The sad thing about An Ideal Husband is not these performances, however, but
how Wilde's own work falters towards the end. As we get towards the end of the
movie, Wilde's characters double in on themselves. The ultra-honest wife
lies. The malicious villain turns out only to be looking for love. The
bachelor is eventually married. Although these are trademarks of Wilde's
approach to showing how hypocritical the Victorian era was, they weaken the
film. When Cheveley is revealed to be searching for affection, we do not pity
her, we lament that she was not the pure evil that she was originally painted
to be. When Goring walks down the aisle, he has ceased to become a fun
character and ended up being reigned in.
These faults might have just weakened a regular film, but when the film depends
on having taste for British humor as is, these faults represent a final blow.
The film was average, and these mistakes made it sub par. Better luck next
time, Oscar… I'm waiting for a new version of The Picture of Dorian Gray.
Everett compresses Driver's stomach.
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Review by James Brundage
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