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Oscar Wilde's Lady Windermere's Fan (1892) was
his first theatrical success and with good reason. The classic "well constructed
play," it is solidly plotted, with a beginning, a middle and a nice twist leading to
a thoroughly satisfying end--virtues perhaps sneered at by modernists, but still
appreciated widely by audiences.
Wilde, as was his wont, made fun of the mores and hypocrisy of the
privileged classes, using his rapier wit and seemingly endless supply of mots to
amuse and keep things light, even as he pierced the pretensions of his characters. Some
lines may have suffered due to the changing tastes of the century that has passed
("Sausages and women - if you want to enjoy the experience, never observe the
preparation."), but most seem to be timeless.
It is that timelessness that undoubtedly tempted the producers of A
Good Woman to make this film adaptation of the play, as well as to move its period
and location from Victorian London to 1930's Amalfi, the Italian seaside resort.
The story involves Meg Windermere (Scarlett Johansson), whose husband,
Robert (Mark Umbers), she has reason to believe is involved with an older, but most
attractive (and predatory) woman, Mrs. Erlynne (Helen Hunt). Mrs. Erlynne depends on the
checks written by Windemere to remain financially afloat, but she also rejects the serious
courtship of Lord Augustus "Tuppy" Lorton (Tom Wilkinson), a wealthy, but far
less attractive catch. Meg is herself wooed by the gadabout Lord Darlington (Stephen
Campbell Moore). Amidst gossip ("Gossip's all right; it's the moralizing that's in
poor taste."), misunderstandings and intrigue, the relationships must be resolved.
A Good Woman looks terrific, with lush settings and costuming
appropriate to the period. But depriving the Windermeres of their aristocratic Lordship
and making them (along with Mrs. Erlynne) Americans, rather than British, dilutes the
verisimilitude of the original. For all their underacknowledged classism, Americans cannot
begin to compete with the British in that department.
But the problem with the film runs deeper than that. Wilde was all
about style and the London stage for which he wrote was accustomed to highly stylized
acting and production. The rich observation and humor of Wilde's quips was emphasized in
delivery within that style. But in A Good Woman, director Mike Barker takes a
more naturalistic approach and the great lines just glide by with little emphasis or the
implied wink that Wilde intended. Without an incisive satirical tone and with the shift of
both period and location, A Good Woman loses its bite and slips nearly to the
level of soap opera.
Hunt (The
Curse of the Jade Scorpion, Pay
it Forward) strives valiantly with her important role, but somehow never quite
fits in the ensemble nor catches the right tone of the lines. Johansson does little better
in what threatens to become typecasting--beautiful, pouty young women with a grievance (Girl with a Pearl Earring,
Match Point). Wilkinson (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,
In the Bedroom) steals the
show with charm, style, and delivery.
Wilde will have to wait for a film that does his play justice.
- Arthur Lazere