In Victorian London, Dorian Gray is given a portrait of himself by an artist. Dorian treats actress Sybil Vane cruelly and sees that his portrait looks meaner. As years pass, he grows dissol... Read allIn Victorian London, Dorian Gray is given a portrait of himself by an artist. Dorian treats actress Sybil Vane cruelly and sees that his portrait looks meaner. As years pass, he grows dissolute and never ages but his picture grows ugly.In Victorian London, Dorian Gray is given a portrait of himself by an artist. Dorian treats actress Sybil Vane cruelly and sees that his portrait looks meaner. As years pass, he grows dissolute and never ages but his picture grows ugly.
- Felicia
- (as Fionnuala Flanagan)
- James Vane
- (as Tom McCorry)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
A good point - the option for Shane Briant as Dorian Gray. Not impressive, not the memorable, only the credible one .
Another virtues - the atmosphere and the way to craft his Harry by Nigel Davenport, like the precision of the time period ( from the year 1891 - the apparition of novel- to 1911 ) . TV movie, it proposes not exactly revelations and the second part can not be the most tasted by the admirers of novel but it works in just reasonable manner.
An interesting part - the induced nostalgia , not only for the half of century from the birth of movie but for the theater solutions for solve some scenes.
In short, just a correct adaptation.
The film stars a relatively unknown actor of the time, Shane Briant. I am sure Briant was chosen because he was amazingly pretty--the sort of guy Gray was supposed to have been. It's the story about a vain young man who makes a passing wish--that as time passes, he remain young and handsome and his portrait would instead age for him. This way, he could live as debauched life as possible and suffer no obvious ill-effects. While Dorian starts off slowly on this road to perdition, as time passes, he becomes a completely hedonistic sociopath where no sin is beyond him. He uses women, does opium, kills and there is a STRONGLY suggested scene of him having sex with a child (though this was handled in a very vague and suggestive manner and you never actually see the kid). All in all, a chilling story made better by excellent acting, nice direction and terrific production values. A horrible picture of human nature run amok.
Although Briant narrates this story of his life which dates from 1891 to 1911 which was after Wilde himself was gone, the story is seen from two pairs of eyes. One is that of Nigel Davenport the freewheeling hedonist who takes Gray under his wing. He's the witty Wilde and full of aphorisms which he tosses off to express his attitudes about life and love. The other is the artist Charles Aidman who paints that infamous portrait showing Gray in the full bloom of youth and attractiveness. This was Wilde the closeted gay man so hopelessly in love with the pretty Mr. Gray.
Of course Briant is taken with the portrait and wishes a strange wish that the opposite of life comes true, that he remain young and attractive and the portrait age like we humans do. But not all of us lead a life of total debauchery. It's that which the portrait shows as his pleasures age him rapidly on canvas. And his sins which includes the deaths of several people either by accident or very much design.
This is a nice television production of the Oscar Wilde classic, Briant is the quintessential Dorian Gray. If they do it again I could see Robert Pattinson playing the part.
This "The Picture of Dorian Gray" (1973) was produced for late night TV, and the "videotape" quality shows, sadly. Still, it plays. Few actors could play the part as deliciously as Helmut Berger (who fitted the part like a glove); but, Shane Briant takes a fine turn in the lead role. Mr. Briant's Dorian is sweeter-looking, but much more evil. Nigel Davenport, John Karlen, and Fionnula Flanagan head a great group of supporting players.
The 1973 TV film, oddly enough, portrays Dorian as more wicked than other versions. For example, Briant's character has sex with a child; and, it's not ambiguous! In addition to upping the wickedness, the film is played more for horror than drama. Briant's blackmailing of pal John Karlen (as Alan) by reciting his lovers' names tops other versions; the 1970 movie had Dorian and Alan's wife in some naked photographs.
****** The Picture of Dorian Gray (4/23/73) Glenn Jordan ~ Shane Briant, Nigel Davenport, John Karlen
Did you know
- TriviaThroughout this film in various arrangements, composer Bob Cobert recycled his 1969 Top 40 and Grammy-nominated hit "Quentin's Theme" from his music for TV's "Dark Shadows".
- GoofsShane Briant's hairstyles are strictly 1973 and not the least bit appropriate to Victorian England.
- Quotes
Dorian Gray: [as he observes his portrait] How sad...
Lord Harry Wotton: What? What do you mean?
Dorian Gray: How sad it is... That I shall grow old, but this picture will remain always young. My hair will turn gray, my skin will wrinkle, and my teeth will rot. While my picture remains exactly as it is now. If only it were the other way...
Lord Harry Wotton: Dorian...
Dorian Gray: If it were I who would remain always young and the picture would grow old. For that, I would give everything...
Lord Harry Wotton: Dorian...
Dorian Gray: Yes, everything! For that... I would even give my soul.
Basil Hallward: [smirks and raises his glass] To long life.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Deadly Earnest's Nightmare Theatre: The Picture of Dorian Gray (1978)
- SoundtracksQuentin's Theme
by Robert Cobert
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Oscar Wilde's 'The Picture of Dorian Gray'
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 51 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1