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WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
A watering down of Wilde
An Ideal Husband, directed by Oliver Parker; adapted
by Parker, from the play by Oscar Wilde
By Joanne Laurier
3 July 1999
Use
this version to print
Science is out of the reach of morals, for her eyes are
fixed upon eternal truths. Art is out of the reach of morals,
for her eyes are fixed upon things beautiful and immortal and
ever-changing. To morals belong the lower and less intellectual
spheres. ( The Critic as Artist)
Thematically, Oscar Wilde's An Ideal Husband, written
in 1893, involves an interplay between the high ground of universal
truths and the low ground of finite social morality. We are told
at the play's end that an ideal husband (or human
being) sounds like something in the next world. In
the meantime, we have to live in a world not of our own choosing,
with all the compromises that implies. In this imperfect place,
therefore, where does personal responsibility for transgression
begin and end? The play explores the contradiction between human
beings' striving for ideals and the virtual impossibility of attaining
the latter in the mire of existing society. The inner
heart of the work contains Wilde's incessant quest for a higher
reality, and his observations as an aesthete along the way.
The less intellectual or outer sphere of the play
suggests that ideal husbands may have to be criminal to achieve
success, and ideal wives may have to accept that criminality.
Obeying the dictates of absolute morality is out of the question
when it comes to amassing wealth and status. The main protagonist,
Sir Robert Chiltern, has won society's admiration and his wife's
high esteem on the basis of riches gained through an immoral act.
Does the ultimate establishment of an independent and honest political
career justify accumulating wealth through such chicanery? Sir
Robert feels no remorse for his deed, as he has employed society's
own methods and weapons. He fears only exposure and public disgrace.
Admonishing his wife for putting him on a pedestal, Chiltern says:
It is not the perfect, but the imperfect, who have need
of love.
His good friend and the chief Wildean persona in the play,
Lord Arthur Goring, who is socially idle (but perhaps
philosophically ideal), notes that in practical life there
is something about success, actual success, that is a little unscrupulous,
something about ambition that is unscrupulous always. The
transcendental Goring tries to solve the ever present ethical
dilemmas: All I do know is that life cannot be understood
without much charity, cannot be lived without much charity.
There is a genuine appeal for tolerance and tenderness in this
play.
Oliver Parker ( Othello, 1995 ) uses Wilde's
title, the names of his characters and some of the plot elements
for his new film. The resemblance to Wilde's creation ends there
and adaptation to other forces and pressures begins. Wilde is
nominally invoked but the soul of his work is revoked. Wilde describes
drama as the most objective form of art and the purpose of the
latter to be altering the minds of men and the colour of
things. This is an ambitious goal and the original play
is written with deep feeling about his characters' quandaries
and the inevitable difficulties that arise. Because the film's
script omits or fails to emphasize much of what was mind-altering,
the feel of Parker's work is sharply different from that of the
play. Lost is the undercurrent of critique and protest with which
Wilde imbued every scene, an undercurrent that reaches a crescendo
as the play's episodes unfold.
Parker's greatest failing is his inability to deal in any serious
manner with the play's pivotal sequences. When Chiltern (Jeremy
Northam in Parker's film) faces ruination at the hands of the
blackmailing Mrs. Laura Chevely (Julianne Moore), he explains
the reasons for his past indiscretions to Lord Goring (Rupert
Everett). He further tells his friend that if he does not put
aside his political principles, he will lose all, including his
beloved, albeit puritanical, wife (Cate Blanchett). In the film,
this scene is an incidental moment, which passes almost without
notice. In the 1893 play, on the other hand, it is crucial, encapsulating
Wilde's thoughts and feelings; thoughts and feelings that in 1999
would not be farcical, but dangerous.
At one point Lord Goring declares, Life is never fair,
Robert. And perhaps it is a good thing for most of us that it
is not. Sir Robert Chiltern responds, Every man of
ambition has to fight his century with its own weapons. What this
century worships is wealth. The God of this century is wealth.
To succeed one must have wealth. At all costs one must have wealth.
... I did not sell myself for money, I bought success at a great
price. That is all.
And further on in the same scene, Chiltern observes, [A]nd
then he [Baron Arnheim, to whom Chiltern sold the government secret]
told me that luxury was nothing but a background, a painted scene
in a play, and that power, power over other men, power over the
world, was the one thing worth having, the one supreme pleasure
worth knowing, the one joy one never tired of, and that in our
century only the rich possessed it. ... Wealth has given me enormous
power. It gave me at the outset of my life freedom, and freedom
is everything.
Can freedom be achieved any other way under present conditions?
According to Wilde, the biggest advantage of socialism would be
the eradication of that sordid necessity of living for others.
( The Soul of Man Under Socialism)
When Chiltern explains that he has tried to buy Mrs. Chevely
off and she has refused, Lord Goring remarks: Then the marvellous
gospel of gold breaks down sometimes. The rich can't do everything,
after all. The entire scene is remarkable.
Parker seems determined to transform Wilde's play into a parlor
farce. He has omitted a good deal of Wilde's language, but even
when the original dialogue is retained, it is rendered limp. Thus,
Mrs. Chevely's observation, Morality is simply the attitude
we adopt towards people whom we personally dislike, is turned
from a dig at the opportunism and hypocrisy of the rich into a
palatable party joke.
Parker's removing or rendering harmless the sting of Wilde's
social critique is not the result of some right-wing conspiracy.
It may not even be entirely conscious on the filmmaker's part.
Many genuine admirers of Wilde's work today simply find his radical
social views silly, tedious, anachronistic. An attack on
wealth and the wealthy? What possible meaning could such
a thing have in these circles? The adapter may actually think
he is doing Wilde a favor by excising passages or downplaying
themes that have so obviously become outdated.
None of this is an excuse, however, for the flatness and blandness
of so much of Parker's film, including its overall look. Few images
are enduring and the filmmaker's additionsintrigues at a
Wilde play complete with a fictional Wilde (which, if Lord Goring's
character is properly understood, seems redundant), a courtroom
scene and the conversion of Mrs. Chevely (an antagonist to the
end in the original work)amount to not much more than gimmickry.
All, it seems, to the effect of watering down the spirit and feeling
of the play.
This works its way into the acting as well, most of which lacks
subtlety and depth. Peter Vaughan's performance as Phipps, Lord
Goring's butler, is particularly contrived, and irritatingly dead-pan.
Parker seems to have directed Vaughan to play strictly for laughs.
Wilde sets forth quite a specific interpretation of the butler's
role in the stage directions for Act Three. The distinction
of Phipps is his impassivity. He has been termed by enthusiasts
the Ideal Butler. The Sphinx is so incommunicable. He is the mask
with a manner. Of his intellectual or emotional life, history
knows nothing. He represents the dominance of form. A social
truth is being made herethe best servant is a dehumanized
commodity. This obviously goes entirely over Parker's head, or
he chooses to ignore it. (This remarkable phrase, Of his
intellectual or emotional life, history knows nothing, brings
to mind the subservient, mute secretary played by Irm Hermann
in R.W. Fassbinder's The Bitter Tears of Petra Von Kant.)
Will or could the film at least spur the viewer on to further
investigate the artist? If one were to be introduced to Wilde
for the first time by Parker's film, there would be little reason
to seek out his other writings. Everything here is too neatly
packaged and made small, at a time when the world is in crying
need of Wilde's subversiveness and vision.
Let Wilde have the last word: He is the Philistine who
upholds and aids the heavy, cumbrous, blind mechanical forces
of Society, and who does not recognize the dynamic force when
he meets it either in a man or a movement. ( De Produndis)
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