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An Ideal Husband

  • 1947
  • Approved
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
892
YOUR RATING
An Ideal Husband (1947)
ComedyDrama

A politician plans to expose a financial scandal, but an investor threatens to reveal his past secret if he does. His unforgiving wife adds to his dilemma of navigating the scandal and poten... Read allA politician plans to expose a financial scandal, but an investor threatens to reveal his past secret if he does. His unforgiving wife adds to his dilemma of navigating the scandal and potential exposure.A politician plans to expose a financial scandal, but an investor threatens to reveal his past secret if he does. His unforgiving wife adds to his dilemma of navigating the scandal and potential exposure.

  • Director
    • Alexander Korda
  • Writers
    • Oscar Wilde
    • Lajos Biró
  • Stars
    • Paulette Goddard
    • Michael Wilding
    • Diana Wynyard
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    892
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alexander Korda
    • Writers
      • Oscar Wilde
      • Lajos Biró
    • Stars
      • Paulette Goddard
      • Michael Wilding
      • Diana Wynyard
    • 23User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos28

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    Top cast25

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    Paulette Goddard
    Paulette Goddard
    • Laura Cheveley
    Michael Wilding
    Michael Wilding
    • Viscount Arthur Goring
    Diana Wynyard
    Diana Wynyard
    • Lady Gertrude Chiltern
    Hugh Williams
    Hugh Williams
    • Sir Robert Chiltern
    C. Aubrey Smith
    C. Aubrey Smith
    • The Earl of Caversham
    • (as Sir C. Aubrey Smith)
    Glynis Johns
    Glynis Johns
    • Mabel Chiltern
    Constance Collier
    Constance Collier
    • Lady Markby
    Christine Norden
    Christine Norden
    • Margaret Marchmont
    Harriette Johns
    Harriette Johns
    • Lady Olivia Basildon
    Michael Medwin
    Michael Medwin
    • Duke of Nonsuch
    Michael Anthony
    • Viscomte de Nanjac
    Peter Hobbes
    • Eddie Montford
    John Clifford
    • Mason
    Fred Groves
    Fred Groves
    • Phipps
    Michael Ward
    • Tommy Trafford
    Ronald Adam
    Ronald Adam
    • Member of Parliament
    • (uncredited)
    Joy Adams
    • Guest at the Chiltern's Ball
    • (uncredited)
    Strelsa Brown
    Strelsa Brown
    • Guest at the Chiltern's Ball
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Alexander Korda
    • Writers
      • Oscar Wilde
      • Lajos Biró
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    6.5892
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    Featured reviews

    blanche-2

    stylish and witty

    "An Ideal Husband" from 1947 is not Oscar Wilde's most famous comedy, but it is funny nevertheless. This production is directed by Sir Alexander Korda with an English cast with the exception of Paulette Goddard. Goddard plays a "woman with a past," the overly-made up Lady Chevely, who attempts to blackmail Sir Robert Chiltern (Hugh Williams) so that he will encourage support for what is, in essence, a scam in which she has invested. Williams turns to a friend, Viscount Arthur Goring (Michael Wilding) for advice.

    This is the type of material that can be hilarious or just charmingly witty, and Korda opted for the latter. As good as it is, the film is nearly upstaged by some of the most gorgeous costumes ever seen, designed by Cecil Beaton. They are truly eye-popping, as is the beautiful color process used in the film.

    Everyone is good, including a young, pretty Glynis Johns as Chiltern's as yet unmarried sister, and Lady Diana Wynward as the very moral Lady Chiltern.

    This film compares well with the 1999 version starring Rupert Everett, Cate Blanchett, and Julianne Moore. Moore perhaps exhibited a little more class than Goddard, but Goddard still does a good job. Well, you could certainly believe she was a "woman with a past" at any rate.

    Very enjoyable.
    bensonj

    Enjoyable, not really great

    This film doesn't have a very good reputation, e.g., "slow moving" (Maltin) and "a slight, stiff play is swamped by the cast" (Halliwell). IMDb comments are mixed. Well, it does have the limitations one would expect from Korda filming a period play in lavish Technicolor. It is pictorially static, with overly bright colors. For the most part, the actors' voices are animated but their bodies are strangely inert. But in general I thought this wasn't that bad an adaptation, somewhat better than the trendy 1999 version, if only because Korda understood the period he was filming. It seems to me that Wilde's plot complications have been smoothed out a bit here (his name is not even on the credits!) so that the solution follows the problem too quickly and the whole thing can be over in 96 minutes and still have a spectacular recreation of crowds in period costume at the Ascot races. (Perhaps this is an unfair comment since IMDb notes that an original version was a half-hour longer.) With the casting and the spirited performance of Goddard, Mrs. Cheveley becomes the most animated and virile character in the film. Lady Chiltern's conception of morality should stem from a vigorous, naive idealistic vision. She should be a dynamic, slightly-otherworldly treasure with a fairytale view of the world and be the core of the film, for the plot hinges on her vision of purity. The casting and somewhat stodgy performance of Wynyard in the role weakens the story. The character becomes merely an upright, slightly stuffy moralist. Hmmm. Perhaps the criticisms directed at the film are justified. In spite of this, I quite enjoyed this, my third go-around with the play. The Importance of Being Earnest is perhaps more witty and amusing, but this story has a much more provocative drama at its core, with interesting things to say about ethics, morality and idealism. I find it odd that it is universally described as a comedy. Certainly there's a lot of pithy, epigrammatic dialogue, and some light moments, but the basic story is a clear-cut moral drama. The anguish of Sir Chiltern and his wife is real, the stakes are high and virtually life-threatening, and the moral decisions are agonizing.
    8bkoganbing

    The blackmail game

    Hungarian immigrant Alexander Korda did more than anyone else to make the cinematic image that the United Kingdom likes to show the world. In An Ideal Husband, Korda paints a very pretty picture of Victorian London. The games played by some of its upper crust inhabitants is not so pretty.

    Hugh Williams is a rising politician and a man known for strong probity supported by his equally virtuous wife Diana Wynyard. But back in the day in a move that would now be called insider trading Williams is being blackmailed by adventuress Paulette Goddard who has an indiscreet letter from back in the day.

    It's a story that never sees an end. A person in public life who makes such a show of personal virtue brought down or at least threatened with an indiscretion. It's similar to Broderick Crawford in All The King's Men when he blackmailed a former judge. The answer there was suicide.

    The answer here is Williams goes to his friend Michael Wilding who is a bit of an upper class rogue himself to help with Goddard. Unbeknownst to him, Wilding and Goddard have some history which does kick back against Goddard.

    I can truly see Vivien Leigh in the part who was the first choice. Still Goddard who makes no attempt at an English accent comes off well. She's one sly little minx and in the end she's most definitely got a plan B ready to roll.

    Of course the Oscar Wilde quotes are just rolling from the mouths of the characters. Listen close or you'll miss one. Wilde always was a sophisticated observer of the human race and sad how some of his statements came all too true in his own life.

    Add C. Aubrey Smith as Wilding's father who wants him to straighten out and be like that pillar of the Empire, Williams. Also add Glynis Johns as Williams's sister who much prefers a rogue to a model of probity.

    You've got a fine adaption of a great Oscar Wilde play which is a bit more serious than most of his work.
    7boblipton

    Fun, But Could Use More Bunberry

    Hugh Williams is a member of the Party in charge of reporting on "the Argentine Canal scheme." He is about to reject it on behalf of the government, but adventuress Paulette Goddard has an old letter of his that reveals he passed on Cabinet secrets to a stock broker years ago. Not only would this ruin him in politics, but would cause his wife, Diana Wynard, to lose her illusion of his Olympian probity - yes, I know how absurd that is - and cease to love him. Somehow, it is up to Michael Wilding, the wastrel son of Cabinet minister C. Aubrey Smith, to save the day.

    There is too much serious plotting and too little lunacy to make this play top notch Oscar Wilde. Everyone tries, and it's very good, but the best scene occurs early on, when Smith confronts Wilding, and brushes aside his nonsense, leaving the younger man flustered. Miss Goddard's musings, mostly to herself, sound like stage soliloquies, and sound quite flat. Nonetheless, there are enough witticisms and the pleasure of Glynis Johns as Williams' sister who inexplicably loves the usually self-absorbed Wilding, to make this fun.
    7marcslope

    What's not to like?

    Avoided this for years because of its underwhelming reputation, and was delighted by a recent TCM showing. It's a fine filming of a muckraking Wilde comedy, in which, typically of the author, observations about class and sex and money are often dropped in, not to further the plot, just to allow Wilde to epigrammatically vent as only he could. It's a ravishing production in eye-popping Technicolor, swamped by Cecil Beaton gowns and played by a most competent cast. If Diana Wynyard's moral righteousness becomes a little wearying, I suspect it's the character rather than her playing of it, and she's matched splendidly by Hugh Williams' tortured, blackmailed statesman. Michael Wilding was never better, Glynis Johns is young and comely, and Paulette Goddard not only maintains a convincing accent but absolutely catches the charm, opportunism, and wise verbal sparring the character needs. It's a fine companion piece to the matchless "Importance of Being Earnest" of five years later, and much more eye-catchingly cinematic.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Twelve British studio hairdressers and make-up men went on strike protesting Paulette Goddard's use of her own hairdresser during this film's production.
    • Goofs
      At several points, the matte paintings at the top of the screen are poorly matched with the live footage below. This is particularly visible in the opening Hyde Park Corner scene where some of those riding in carriages 'lose' their heads or hats behind the trees that are supposedly in the background. On the Chiltern's grand staircase, and in the House of Commons lobby, the join between both parts of the shot is also visible.
    • Quotes

      Laura Cheveley: Do you think it is quite charming of you to be so rude to a woman in your own house?

      Viscount Arthur Goring: In the case of a very fascinating woman, sex is a challenge, not a defense.

      Laura Cheveley: I suppose that is meant as a compliment. Oh my dear Arthur, women are never disarmed by compliments. Men always are. That's the difference between the two sexes.

    • Connections
      Remade as An Ideal Husband (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      After the Ball
      (uncredited)

      from the musical "A Trip to Chinatown"

      Written by Charles Harris

      Arranged by Howard Carr

      [Instrumental version played during opening credits, and again during the closing credits]

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 1948 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ein idealer Gatte
    • Filming locations
      • Hyde Park, London, England, UK(exterior horse riding and park scenes)
    • Production company
      • London Film Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • £500,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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