The Borneo Post

Rupert Everett transforms into Oscar Wilde in sentimenta­l portrait of famed Irish wit

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WATCHING “The Happy Prince,” writer- director- star Rupert Everett’s account of the older Oscar Wilde, ungenerous viewers may think of someone who would have disdained the movie: the younger Oscar Wilde.

Victorian London’s brattiest wit, Wilde once remarked, of Dickens’ “The Old Curiosity Shop,” that “one must have a heart of stone to read the death of little Nell without laughing.” It would be stone-hearted to laugh at “The Happy Prince,” but its level of sentimenta­lity is nearly Dickensian. Fortunatel­y, the maudlin moments are offset by fine performanc­es, flashes of humour and a visual sense that’s more astute than the script.

Everett’s drama charts the period from 1897, when Wilde was released from the British prison where he served time for “gross indecency,” to his death in 1900 in Paris. With barely a franc or a lira in his pocket, the author travels through France and Italy, sometimes joined by such benefactor­s as Robbie Ross ( Edwin Thomas) and Reggie Turner (Colin Firth). More problemati­c are the visits from Alfred “Bosie” Douglas (Colin Morgan), the young lover who led Wilde down the road to ruin.

The movie leaps through time and across the channel, not very gracefully, to show us Wilde’s wife ( Emily Watson) and the two young sons for whom he wrote the story that provides the film’s title. There are also flashbacks to moments of literary triumph and to an incident where Wilde was attacked by a homophobic mob at a London railway station. With its panicky point- of-view shots, the latter sequence plays like something from “The Elephant Man.”

Everett isn’t as unrecognis­able as John Hurt was in that film, but he does wear a fake nose and jowls. Although these are distractin­g at fi rst, the actor inhabits Wilde so fully that the prosthetic­s are forgotten. Everett, who’s played Wilde - and Wildean roles - onstage, gives an assured and affecting performanc­e. If it’s also a bit theatrical, that’s apt for a biopic about an author who wrote his best work for the stage.

“The Happy Prince” conveys the declining Wilde’s pain, despair and self-pity, but also the writer’s defiant banter. The script includes such well-known quips as “I am dying beyond my means,” as well as comic scenes. In one, a bacchanal in Naples is interrupte­d by a local matron who’s indignant at the potential immorality but apologises when she finds out there are no women present.

Even Wilde’s fi nal moments are played partly for laughs, with the entrance of a grumpy Irish priest summoned to offer last rites. ( He’s played by Tom Wilkinson, one of several major actors in minor roles.)

Wilde’s religious ideas go unexplored, although they’re most conspicuou­s in such children’s parables as “The Selfi sh Giant” and “The Happy Prince.” Everett is more interested in emotion and mood, the latter exemplifie­d by cinematogr­apher John Conroy’s evocative use of red- gold light and deep shadows. Wilde is slipping into darkness, and the transition is as lovely as it is sad and unjust.

sstars masterpiec­e, three stars very good, two stars OK, one star poor, no stars waste of time. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Colin Morgan, left, and Rupert Everett in ‘The Happy Prince.’ — Photo by Wilhelm Moser, Sony Pictures Classics
Colin Morgan, left, and Rupert Everett in ‘The Happy Prince.’ — Photo by Wilhelm Moser, Sony Pictures Classics
 ??  ?? Rupert Everett stars in ‘The Happy Prince,’ about the last three years of Oscar Wilde’s life.
Rupert Everett stars in ‘The Happy Prince,’ about the last three years of Oscar Wilde’s life.

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