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IMDbPro

The Happy Prince

  • 2018
  • R
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
6.1K
YOUR RATING
Rupert Everett and Colin Morgan in The Happy Prince (2018)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:12
9 Videos
99+ Photos
BiographyDrama

The untold story of the last days in the tragic times of Oscar Wilde, a person who observes his own failure with ironic distance and regards the difficulties that beset his life with detachm... Read allThe untold story of the last days in the tragic times of Oscar Wilde, a person who observes his own failure with ironic distance and regards the difficulties that beset his life with detachment and humor.The untold story of the last days in the tragic times of Oscar Wilde, a person who observes his own failure with ironic distance and regards the difficulties that beset his life with detachment and humor.

  • Director
    • Rupert Everett
  • Writer
    • Rupert Everett
  • Stars
    • Rupert Everett
    • Colin Firth
    • Emily Watson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    6.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Rupert Everett
    • Writer
      • Rupert Everett
    • Stars
      • Rupert Everett
      • Colin Firth
      • Emily Watson
    • 72User reviews
    • 119Critic reviews
    • 64Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 15 nominations total

    Videos9

    The Happy Prince
    Trailer 2:12
    The Happy Prince
    The Happy Prince
    Trailer 2:13
    The Happy Prince
    The Happy Prince
    Trailer 2:13
    The Happy Prince
    Prince
    Clip 0:58
    Prince
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    Clip 1:24
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    Clip 1:41
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    Clip 1:18
    Prince

    Photos173

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    + 167
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    Top cast73

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    Rupert Everett
    Rupert Everett
    • Oscar Wilde
    Colin Firth
    Colin Firth
    • Reggie Turner
    Emily Watson
    Emily Watson
    • Constance Wilde
    Colin Morgan
    Colin Morgan
    • Alfred Bosie Douglas
    Edwin Thomas
    Edwin Thomas
    • Robert Robbie Ross
    Franca Abategiovanni
    • Felice's Mother
    Alister Cameron
    • Mr. Howard
    Anna Chancellor
    Anna Chancellor
    • Lydia Arbuthnott
    Béatrice Dalle
    Béatrice Dalle
    • Café-Concert Manager
    Tom Colley
    Tom Colley
    • Maurice Gilbert
    Johanna Kirby
    • Nurse
    André Penvern
    André Penvern
    • Mr. Dupoirier
    Ronald Pickup
    Ronald Pickup
    • Judge
    Matteo Salamone
    • Léon
    Antonio Spagnuolo
    • Felice
    John Standing
    John Standing
    • Dr. Tucker
    Benjamin Voisin
    Benjamin Voisin
    • Jean
    Tom Wilkinson
    Tom Wilkinson
    • Father Cuthbert Dunne
    • Director
      • Rupert Everett
    • Writer
      • Rupert Everett
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews72

    6.36.1K
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    Featured reviews

    5frank-665-161620

    Fails o Ignite

    Sorry to dampen your spirits. I wanted to like this film a lot but it fails to excite. Fails to ignite and in the end feels like a muddled wet blanket excuse for a movie making experience. Hey, the scenery, the camera work and attention to detail is great. Very evocative. The actual story and editing is less so. It strikes me as the type of film a real enthusiast for Oscar Wilde would make as a homage to the man and then struggle through heaps of revisions and funding cuts and criticism from various studios to get it made and then at the end - prove that the critics were right. It's not very good because the writer's vision splendid didn't really cut through or know what it sought to portray except to say - "I love Oscar Wilde!" Because in the end, we as passive viewers don't really care about Oscar at all. Towards the end of the film, I turned to my wife and whispered to her that this film despite its best impulses, actually damns Oscar Wilde as a self indulgent narcissist. A prat by sheer accident. I don't think that was the intention of the film-makers! She agreed. No real insight to the creative spirit of the man and she lost interest and went to bed. The trailer looked terrific but the movie despite it's best endeavours to immortalise the man - actually makes you lose all sympathy for him and strangely you feel unmoved by his predicament at the end.
    Kirpianuscus

    the expected Mr. Wilde

    If you are an admirer of Rupert Everett, you must see this film. if you are one of admirers of Oscar Wilde , you must see this film. I admit, I am both. Oscar Wilde was one of familiar names across my childhood for his tales. at first moment, I saw the title of film and the suggestion than it represents an adaptation of the tale with same title was the first temptation. Rupert Everett was a discover from the "90 's . and one who I admire role by role. so, ambiguous expectations , tensioned in part. from the actor. but, more, from the director. and "The Happy Prince" was the perfect answer to each of expectations. I saw it with not real comfortable feelings. because the adaptations of Oscar Wilde life are many and, for me,Stephen Fry was the ideal Oscar Wilde. I discovered the film after I was read the last lines of Peter Ackroyd "The last testament of Oscar Wilde". and I discovered seeng the film not only the images of book, but the subtle and precise and seductive force of Rupert Everett talent, not exactly a revelation but a clear win in a not comfortable battle. I discovered the traits of Constance Hollande in the fine and nuanced and wise performance of Emily Watson. and a Bossie who give to me confirmation about the art of Colin Morgan. after its end, an only thought - the director could be better. the lead actor did an admirable work. and the cinematography is real great. so, "The Happy Prince".
    6PeachesIR

    Sentimental, sad look at Wilde's later life

    "The Happy Prince" is an interesting, sad look at the great poet and playwright Oscar Wilde at the end of his life, when he lived in poverty, declined health and social exile in France. The film seems like a labor of love for Rupert Everett, its star and director, but the finished product looks a bit low-budget and claustrophobic. The shaky camera work was distracting at times. Anyone who loves Wilde will appreciate this film's sensitive exploration of his inner thoughts and emotions, and how he suffered after his trial, incarceration and social exclusion for his sexual relationship with Lord Alfred Douglas at a time when sex between two men was illegal in England. Although Wilde is shown here living freely in France, he is separated from his two children and his career has been destroyed, so Everett delves into these painful aspects of the writer's later life, partially through dreamily lit flashbacks. "The Happy Prince" is a touching, rather slow film for Wilde fans, but I prefer Stephen Fry's crackling portrayal in Brian Gilbert's "Wilde" (1997), and that earlier film is better overall, perhaps due to superior direction and production quality.
    JohnDeSando

    The brilliant, last tragic days of genius Oscar Wilde. Great biopic.

    "And all men kill the thing they love/ By all let this be heard/ Some do it with a bitter look/ Some with a flattering word/ The coward does it with a kiss/The brave man with a sword!" Oscar Wilde (Rupert Everett)

    Because I am a devoted fan of Oscar Wilde, I had to open this review of The Happy Prince with his famous final stanza from The Ballad of Reading Gaol. It's his wisdom for those foolishly thinking love is always benign, and it signals Wilde's own ironic awareness of his complicity in landing for two deadly years in Reading for gross indecency (homosexuality).

    The stanza also may allude to the disaster he brought the many he loved, male and female. As his first and final love, Robbie Ross (Edwin Thomas), declares, "He'll eat you."

    The Happy Prince tells of Wilde's last days after his tragic imprisonment; he is subject to taunts even from Parisians, so famous was he round the world. An "exiled fairy" he called himself. Because homosexuality was outlawed in England, it is especially ironic that the once most famous author of the 1890's should be vilified with universal shame.

    In 2017 he and other convicted sodomites were pardoned, small comfort to those of us who believe he could have had more greatness like The Importance of Being Earnest and The Ideal Husband to come.

    This film carefully chronicles Wilde's self-destructive self-indulgence, living high when he didn't have the funds and returning to the arms of Lord Alfred "Bosie" Douglas (Colin Morgan), the beautiful young man he loved, whose love cost Wilde the years in jail and everything else. Wilde himself says, "I am my own Judas."

    The recurring theme song, "The Boy I Love is Up in the Gallery," resonates with the joy and sorrow he brings to himself. Empathetic director-actor Everett also suffered professionally when he came out at the age of 25. This film, however, should bring him universal acclaim.

    That story of Wilde's life is available on film and in biography, but Everett has given us the final period not dramatically and universally enjoyed until now with a fine performance he sharpened from many years playing the doomed wit on stage, set here in Paris, Normandy, and Naples, and set production in Bavaria and Belgium.

    This Wilde is disconsolate, weary, and dissolute with not enough of his witticisms and epigrams to my liking. In fact, as seemingly realistic as it is, it is perhaps too gloomy for a general audience. But for literature and art house lovers, it's nectar.

    Somewhere in the middle of the film, Wilde says his most famous final words: "I am dying beyond my means. I can't even afford to die. This wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One of us has got to go." Wilde is arguably the most quoted author after Shakespeare, and these words show how even death by meningitis can't stop his wit.

    BTW: Research his countless epigrams-you'll spend an afternoon in bliss. These are three samples:

    "I think that God, in creating man, somewhat overestimated his ability."

    "Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much."

    "All women become like their mothers. That is their tragedy. No man does. That's his."

    Dorothy Parker gives the ultimate praise:

    "If, with the literate, I am Impelled to try an epigram, I never seek to take the credit; We all assume that Oscar said it."
    8gradyharp

    "I'm dying beyond my means"

    "I'm dying beyond my means" Rupert Everett wrote, directed and stars in this visit to the life and fame of Oscar Wilde. Though the film has strong moments the manner of relating this view of Wilde's latter days is somewhat jumbled by the preponderance of French dialogue, strange insertions of the story The Happy Prince as related by Wilde, and somewhat clumsy use of flash-forwards and flashbacks that take the focus of the film's message of how Wilde dealt with his sexuality.

    The film suggests the untold story of the last days of brilliant writer Oscar Wilde who in the last part of the 19th century succumbed to his sexual proclivities in homophobic England, where homosexuality was punishable by imprisonment, his prison time, and the striving to find his place upon release from prison. As the synopsis states, 'In a cheap Parisian hotel room Oscar Wilde (Rupert Everett) lies on his deathbed. The past floods back, taking him to other times and places. Was he once the most famous man in London? The artist crucified by a society that once worshipped him? Under the microscope of death he reviews the failed attempt to reconcile with his long suffering wife Constance (Emily Watson), the ensuing reprisal of his fatal love affair with Lord Alfred Douglas aka Bosie (Colin Morgan), the warmth and devotion of Robbie Ross (Edwin Thomas), who tried and failed to save him from himself, and constant friend Reggie Turner (Colin Firth). Travelling through Wilde's final act and journeys through England, France and Italy, the transience of lust is laid bare and the true riches of love are revealed. It is a portrait of the dark side of a genius who lived and died for love. A touching moment takes us off guard as Father Dunne (Tom Wilkinson) offers last rites at story's end.'

    Rupert Everett is impressive in his complete submersion in the character of Oscar Wilde. The supporting cast is also very strong. There seems to be a disconnect between the concept and aim of the film and its execution: it wanders a bit much but is still full of entertaining and touching moments.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Director Rupert Everett had written promises from his friends Colin Firth and Emily Watson that they would participate in this movie if he ever got it made, and he would often half-jokingly remind them when he saw them. Even when Firth became famous and his busy schedule made it unsure if he would be able to keep his promise, Everett got funders aboard and people to participate by stating that Firth had already signed on. Near the end of production, when the movie ran out of budget, Firth even agreed to waive his salary, so he basically did the movie for free.
    • Goofs
      Oscar is shown at Clapham Junction in prison garb with the number 33. He is on the way to Reading Gaol where he is assigned cell C33.
    • Quotes

      Reggie Turner: [Holding up a framed picture of Queen Victoria] No exiled fairy's trousseau is complete without a signed portrait of the great widow herself. You must dance naked before it at the Jubilee next month.

    • Crazy credits
      During the end credits Oscar Wilde is heard and seen singing a French song in a cafe. Then there are flashbacks of audiences applauding his works in a theatre.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Graham Norton Show: Cher/Christine Baranski/Rupert Everett/Natalie Dormer/Tom Odell (2018)
    • Soundtracks
      La Petite Tonkinoise
      Music by Vincent Scotto

      Lyrics by Henri Christiné and Georges Villard

      Courtesy of Universal Music Publishing

      (1906)

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 10, 2018 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Belgium
      • Italy
      • Germany
      • France
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Italian
      • Latin
    • Also known as
      • Mutlu Prens
    • Filming locations
      • Schloss Thurnau, Bavaria, Germany(Oscar Wilde's house in Naples, Interior Reading Gaol, Paris hotel bedroom)
    • Production companies
      • Maze Pictures
      • Entre Chien et Loup
      • Palomar
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $466,440
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $38,886
      • Oct 14, 2018
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,621,992
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 45 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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