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    The Importance of Being Earnest [Criterion Collection]

    3.3 3

    Director: Anthony Asquith Cast: Michael Redgrave

    Michael Redgrave
    , Joan Greenwood
    Joan Greenwood
    , Michael Denison
    Michael Denison
    , Dorothy Tutin
    Dorothy Tutin
    , Edith Evans
    Edith Evans


    DVD

    $29.99
    $29.99

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    • Release Date: 03/21/2010
    • UPC: 0037429165621
    • Original Release: 1952
    • Source: CRITERION
    • Sound: [Dolby Digital Mono]
    • Language: English
    • Runtime: 5700
    • Sales rank: 14,005

    Special Features

    Digital transfer; Rare production stills with notes by film historian Bruce Eder; Original theatrical trailer; English subtitles for the deaf and hearing impaired

    Cast & Crew

    Performance Credits
    Michael Redgrave Jack Worthing
    Joan Greenwood Gwendolyn Fairfax
    Michael Denison Algernon Moncrieff
    Dorothy Tutin Cecily Cardew
    Edith Evans Lady Bracknell
    Margaret Rutherford Miss Prism
    Miles Malleson Canon Chasuble
    Richard Wattis Seton
    Aubrey Mather Merriman
    Walter Hudd Lane
    Ivor Barnard Actor
    Benjamin Frankel Composer

    Technical Credits
    Teddy Baird Producer
    Oscar Wilde Screenwriter
    Earl St. John Executive Producer
    Gordon K. McCallum Sound Effects
    Anthony Asquith Screenwriter

    Scene Index

    Side #1 --
    1. Opening Credits [1:36]
    2. The Question of Cecily [5:28]
    3. The Fine Art of Bunburying [2:57]
    4. Cucumber Sandwiches [5:36]
    5. An Earnest Proposal [4:44]
    6. An Ordinary Handbag [7:49]
    7. A Genuine Monster [2:48]
    8. Cecily's Wonderful Secrets [3:34]
    9. The Latin for Joy [2:47]
    10. Flowers for Algernon [5:04]
    11. Jack's Younger Brother [3:47]
    12. A Great Success [2:01]
    13. Cecily's Childish Dream [7:29]
    14. A Perfectly Canonical Practice [2:22]
    15. Dearest Gwendolyn, Dearest Cecily [8:53]
    16. "Just One Question" [3:44]
    17. An Insuperable Barrier [4:35]
    18. A Life Crowded With Incident [3:28]
    19. Jack Objects [6:26]
    20. "Prism, Where Is That Baby?" [5:57]
    21. The Vital Importance of Being Earnest [4:24]
    22. Color Bars [:00]

    "Comedy comes in full swing with the 1952 adaptation of Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest. Criterion's work on the film's original 1.33:1 full-frame version is nothing less than great. Sporting vibrant colors and dark black levels, this is a superior looking image that includes only a few slight imperfections (edge enhancement and grain). Overall fans should be very pleased with the effort put forth on this picture. The audio is presented in Dolby Digital 1.0 in English and often sounds confined and flat. However, considering the film's age, the soundtrack is top-notch shape without nary a hint of distortion or hiss in the mix. Also included on this disc are English subtitles. Unfortunately, the buck stops here when it comes to substantial extra features on this DVD. The only supplements included on The Importance of Being Earnest are some production notes and a theatrical trailer for the movie."

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    Wordplay and situation comedy rule in this 1952 Anthony Asquith adaptation of the Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) play satirizing the marriage and social customs of the English upper crust of the 1890s. All the cast members perform wonderfully, but it is Dame Edith Evans who most engages the audience as snooty Lady Bracknell. Dressed in gaudy Victorian laces and a hat growing a garden of flowers, she turns the queen's English into windy tirades in which every syllable becomes two and parallel sentence structure becomes a lethal weapon. Of her nephew, she says, "He has nothing and looks everything." Of a family that boasts three residences but still comes a-cropper, she says, "Three addresses always inspire confidence, even in tradesmen." Lady Bracknell unwittingly epitomizes a central motif in the film -- and, of course, in the Wilde play -- when she disingenuously criticizes the aristocracy's preoccupation with appearances, "We live in an age of surfaces." Michael Redgrave and Michael Denisor sprinkle zesty wit into their performances as suitors vying to be called Earnest in order to win the hands of their ladies fair, two featherbrains portrayed with charming stupidity by Joan Greenwood and Dorothy Tutin. Meanwhile, roly-poly Canon Chasuble (Miles Malleson), who is given to napping at his desk under a kerchief, woos Miss Letitia Prism (Margaret Rutherford), tutor to one of the featherbrains. Once upon a time, Miss Prism mistook a baby for a book manuscript and placed the poor little chap in a handbag in a railway station and the book in a baby carriage. The fates of all the central characters depend on Miss Prism's recollection of that unfortunate incident. All in all, this is a delightful film that succeeds magnificently with nary a hint of violence or untoward behavior.
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