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A Good Woman
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Directed by Mike Barker.
One of Oscar Wilde's most popular plays is given a new screen interpretation in this period comedy. In New York in the early '30s, Mrs. Erlynne (Helen Hunt) is a widow who lives comfortably through the largesse of several married men, and when she runs out of wealthy suitors in Manhattan, she decides to find greener pastures among the wealthy elite of Italy's Amalfi coast. Mrs. Erlynne sets her sights on Robert Windermere (Mark Umbers), a wealthy Englishman who is married to the young, innocent and very beautiful Meg (Scarlett Johansson). Mrs. Erlynne gingerly tries to separate Robert from his wife and his money, fueling suspicions within Amalfi society as well as the audience that they are involved. Humiliated and ready to beat him at his own game, Meg begins to consider the advances of the handsome Lord Darlington (Stephen Campbell Moore), one of her husband's close friends. In the midst of all the attempted infidelity, the genially eccentric Tuppy (Tom Wilkinson) struggles to win Mrs. Erlynne's hand, while only one of the interconnected parties know that she carries a shocking secret. A Good Woman was based on Wilde's Lady Windermere's Fan, with its title drawn from that show's subtitle, "A Play About a Good Woman." ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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JimBellJimBell A Good Woman
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
is neutral about it.
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"A Good Woman (2006) is an adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s first big hit, Lady Windermere’s Fan (1892). Oscar wrote a wonderful plot twist which I must not give away, so I will make the movie summary brief. A rich, newly married, young couple, Mr. and Mrs. Windermere (Mark Umbers and Scarlett Johannson) spend “the season” on the gorgeous Amalfi Coast of southern Italy. The incredibly gossipy bunch of Brits and Americans there soon spy Mr. Windermere sneaking around with an older woman of ill repute, Mrs. Erlynne (Helen Hunt). When the prim and proper Mrs. Windermere discovers cheque stubs in her husband’s cheque book written to Mrs. Erlynne, she suspects the worst, and the local gossips supply sympathy. A Good Woman is a good movie marred by bad acting. As you would expect in a Wilde play, the dialogue is tremendously witty. The caddish Lord D says to Mrs. Windermere, whom he is trying to seduce, “I find the best way to keep my word is nev ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
It's possible that a movie doesn't have to be good if it has Scarlett Johansson prancing coquettishly in beautiful and revealing dresses. For the sake of A Good Woman, let's hope it doesn't. Mike Barker's 2004 adaptation of the Oscar Wilde play Lady Windmere's Fan is beautiful to look at, but it falls short where any actual content is concerned. The breathtaking setting in Italy's Amalfi coast, the lush 1930s art direction and costumes, the aforementioned Johansson and the Greek-statue-like Mark Umbers are all great eye candy -- the only trouble arises when the actors open their mouths. It seems like any screenwriter adapting Wilde would thank their lucky stars for the deliciously wicked hilarity already present in the playwright's biting dialogue, but for reasons unknown, A Good Woman finds itself the victim of a crippling rewrite. The awkwardly penned screenplay undermines the trademark wit that communicates Wilde's criticisms so delightfully, and as a result the film's message comes across as moralizing and preachy: the complete opposite of Wilde's style. Helen Hunt is provided with the most unbutchered dialogue in the script as aging professional-mistress Stella Erlynne, but she takes the words all but completely for granted with a totally flat delivery. Johansson's performance as doe-eyed newlywed Meg Windmere proves she's still able to play a beautiful and naïve moppet, despite her title as Hollywood's reigning sexpot, but without any semblance of Wilde's original viciousness in the surrounding characters, she's a foil for nothing. And while it's bad enough that the film expects us to believe that Hunt and Johansson could be related, it's downright impossible to accept the idea that the husband of the latter would be cheating on her with the former. The only actor who really shines in the film is the ever dependable Tom Wilkinson, who brings incredible sincerity to his role as Tuppy, the rich widower with both the care-worn wisdom and enduring optimism to accept Stella's past and offer her a future. The transplantation of the story from the gossipy parlors of London to the bourgeois Mediterranean coast may have been an attempt to point the story's ire at a different area of societal hypocrisy -- it may also have been, as it appears, completely pointless -- but regardless, it provided nothing but obstacles for an already disadvantaged film to trip over. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide
 



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