Oscar Wild's play, "The Importance of Being Earnest", mainly revolves around the moral and social values of the Victorian society about marriage, gender, social status and morality. The play generally takes a comical tone in exploring the lifestyles of the people and the social values upheld at the time. Most reviewers argue that Parker's adaption of the play did not quite focus on the key concerns and comedic elements of the play. The most noticeable differences in Parker's adaption of Wild's play was lack of humor from the script to the movie, the cutting and adding of different scenes, the understanding of the Victorian era and the intended target audience. In the play, Wilde uses the characters to bring out the humorous aspect of the story. However, in the film Parker gives it a more serious tone. The scene where Lady Bracknell interrogates Jack: She asks him where he was found, and one would expect him to hide the truth but …show more content…
However, the expression and application of the concepts differs in Parker's adaption of the play. The literary elements used in the play such as satire and irony seemed to fall short in Parker's film and failed to achieve the humorous aspect of the play. Most of the additional scenes seen in the film also seem to take away from the main concept of the original play. Oscar uses the text to express his personal experience and opinion about the society he lived in. He uses irony and satiric elements to show how the society uses marriage as a tool for social status and class, the role of women in a society and the double life that people are forced to live by hiding their true identity. Parker's adaption of the play made it more adaptable to the modern cinema, which in a way took away from Wilde's original intentions of conveying the story by creating emotional connection to the