PFS Film Review
The House of Mirth

 

The House of MirthFeminist politics at the turn of the twentieth century took many forms, including civil disobedience that was revisited in the 1960s by the civil rights movement. One of the most powerful forms of feminist protest came from the pen of Edith Wharton, whose novels dramatized the shallowness of money-driven American society in the Gilded Age, which she well knew as the spouse of a banker, whom she later divorced; rather than participating in the feminist movement, however, she spent much of the later years of her life in Europe. The House of Mirth, directed by Terence Davies, brings to the screen a semiautobiographical novel (published in 1905), whose title appears to convey a happy promise found in Jeremiah 33:10. The film, the third effort to put the story on the screen (following up the 1918 silent and 1981 television versions), focuses on attractive but orphaned scion Lily Bart (played by Gillian Anderson), who was much admired in New York high society in 1905, when the story begins. In 1907, when the film version ends, Lily is ruined and tragically takes her own life. How she went downhill so quickly was thus a paradigm for the future of American women if they failed to attain the basic rights of political and legal equality. As the plot unfolds, we see that Lily was duped into losing some $9,000 in gambling debts. The only reason she played cards was to make herself available as an attractive wife to someone, but to pay off her debts Gus Trenor (played by Dan Aykroyd), a married man, wanted her for a mistress, an offer contrary that Lily found disgraceful. When an offer of marriage without love came from rich Sim Rosedale (played by Anthony LaPaglia), Lily again declined, but of course she was doubtless rejecting him because he was Jewish. She was then used by adulterous Bertha Dorset (played by Laura Linney) to regain the attention of her husband George (played by Terry Kinney), but placed in a position where she was accused of extramarital sex with George because the rules of high society would permit no other inference. As the tagline of the film says, "When a woman has the beauty men admire and women envy . . . it is wise to tread carefully." Having held out to find a man who would love her for herself, and vice versa, the scandal precluded any possibility of marriage, and Rosedale could not accept Lily’s later effort to beg him to marry her. In addition, Grace (played by Johdi May), caregiver to Lily’s rich aunt, Mrs. Peniston (played by Eleanor Bron), plotted against her. When the aunt died, Lily received only enough to pay off the debts; Grace, who received the bulk of a large fortune, then kicked Lily out of her ancestral home. Hired as a personal assistant to a social climbing woman, Mrs. Hatch (Lorelei King), Lily was fired when Mrs. Hatch was accepted in high society and thus found an association with Lily to be an embarrassment. Finally, taken on as an apprentice in a millinery factory, Lily was discharged because her work was unsatisfactory. Destitute, she could have used purloined love letters to blackmail herself back to financial solvency, or so he was advised by Rosedale. Instead, Lily took poison, as there was no other honorable option for an unemployed women who was too proud to accept financial assistance at her most desperate moment from a longtime friend, bachelor playboy Lawrence Selden (played by Eric Stolz), whom she believed in 1905 was too middle class for her ambitions yet would have married in 1907 if he had the decency to ask her. But Selden is the only one in the film who expresses genuine emotion, confessing through tears his own hypocrisy alongside Lily’s dead body. In our own day, although women have achieved considerable freedom, the conservative effort to force victims of incest and rape to bear unwanted children by overturning Roe v Wade continues as a reminder that the movement for female emancipation so eloquently placed on the agenda by The House of Mirth is still unfinished. MH

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