The Picture of Dorian Gray
- NOT RATED
- Year:
- 1945
- 110 min
- 2,734 Views
Lord Henry Wotton had set himself early
in life to the serious study
of the great aristocratic art
of doing absolutely nothing.
He lived only for pleasure,
but his greatest pleasure was to observe
the emotions of his friends
while experiencing none of his own.
He diverted himself by exercising
a subtle influence on the lives of others.
Eighteen, I think you said, sir.
-Shall I wait, sir?
-Yes.
Among Lord Henry's friends
was the painter Basil Hallward.
He had been strangely secretive
about his latest painting,
and Lord Henry, sensing a mystery,
determined to discover what it was
that his friend wished to conceal.
I'm sorry, my lord,
Mr. Hallward is not at home.
Mr. Hallward doesn't wish to be disturbed.
It's your best work, Basil.
The best thing you've ever done.
Of course, I can't believe that anyone
is really as handsome as that portrait.
Who is he? What's his name?
Why are you being so secretive about it?
It's a great painting.
You ought to send it to the Grosvenor
-I shall not send it anywhere.
-But why?
I've put too much of myself into it.
I knew you'd laugh,
but it's true all the same.
Well, there certainly isn't any resemblance
between you and this young Adonis.
You have an intellectual expression,
and intellect destroys
the beauty of any face.
Don't flatter yourself, Basil.
You're not in the least like him.
Of course I'm not like him.
And I'm glad of it.
"The Wisdom of Buddha."
You always did have a
passion for virtue, Basil.
Why are you glad you're not like him?
We suffer for what the gods give us,
and I'm afraid Dorian Gray
will pay for his good looks.
-Dorian Gray. Is that his name?
-Yes. I didn't intend to tell it to you.
lf I'm going to keep on visiting you,
I'll have to send you some good sherry.
Why didn't you intend to tell me his name?
I can't explain. As I've grown older,
I've come to love secrecy.
I suppose that sounds foolish to you.
Come into the garden.
It doesn't sound foolish to me at all.
You forget that I am married
and that the one charm of marriage
is that it makes a life of deception
absolutely necessary to both parties.
I believe you are really
a very good husband, Harry,
but that you are thoroughly ashamed
of your own virtues.
-Your cynicism is simply a pose.
-Being natural is simply a pose
and the most irritating pose I know.
But you haven't answered my question.
I want to know the real reason why
you won't exhibit Dorian Gray's picture.
There is really very little to tell, Harry.
Besides, I'm afraid
you will hardly believe it.
I can believe anything
provided that it is quite incredible.
I'm afraid this will seem so.
There is something
I can't quite understand.
-Mystic?
I don't know how to explain it,
but whenever Dorian poses for me,
it seems as if a power outside myself
were guiding my hand.
It's as if the painting had a life of its own,
independent of me.
That's why I'm not going to exhibit it.
It belongs rightfully to Dorian Gray,
and I shall give it to him.
I want to meet
this extraordinary young man.
for their good looks
and my enemies for their good intellects.
A man cannot be too careful
in his choice of enemies.
Harry, I despise your principles,
but I do enjoy the way you express them.
I like persons better than principles,
and persons with no principles
better than anything else in the world.
-Now I remember.
-Remember what, Harry?
-Where I heard the name of Dorian Gray.
-Where was it?
Well, don't look so startled.
It was at my Aunt Agatha's.
My aunt told me that she had discovered
who was going to help her
with her charities
and that his name was Dorian Gray.
I pictured somebody with spectacles
and lank hair tramping about on huge feet,
and so I avoided meeting him.
That's a very common type
of butterfly, Basil.
Limenitis sibylla.
It hardly belongs in a gentleman's garden.
-I'm glad you didn't meet Dorian Gray.
-Why?
I don't want you to meet him.
Who's that at your piano, Basil?
-You've come early today, Dorian.
-Have I?
You must lend me these pieces, Basil.
I want to learn them.
That depends on
how you sit this afternoon.
But I thought the picture
was going to be finished today.
It will be.
Please go on, Mr. Gray.
You play brilliantly.
This is Lord Henry Wotton, Dorian.
An old Oxford friend of mine.
My aunt has spoken
to me about you, Mr. Gray.
You are one of her favorites
and one of her victims, too.
You shouldn't go in
for philanthropy.
Harry, I want to finish
this picture today.
Would you think it rude of me
if I asked you to go away?
Am I to go, Mr. Gray?
Stay and tell me why
I should not go in for philanthropy.
You don't really mind,
do you, Basil?
You've often told me that you liked
your sitters to have someone to chat to.
Sit down then, Harry.
Now, Dorian,
get up on the platform,
and don't pay any attention
to what Lord Henry says.
He has a bad influence over his friends,
with the single exception of myself.
Have you really
a bad influence, Lord Henry?
There's no such thing
as a good influence, Mr. Gray.
-All influence is immoral.
-Why?
Because the aim of life
is self-development.
To realize one's nature perfectly.
That's what we're here for.
A man should live out his life
fully and completely,
give form to every feeling,
expression to every thought,
reality to every dream.
Every impulse that we suppress
broods in the mind and poisons us.
There's only one way to get rid
of a temptation and that's to yield to it.
Resist it and the soul grows sick
with longing for the things
it has forbidden to itself.
There is nothing that can cure the soul
but the senses.
Just as there is nothing that can cure
the senses but the soul.
Turn your head a little more
to the left, Dorian.
The gods have been
good to you, Mr. Gray.
Why do you say that?
Because you have
the most marvelous youth,
and youth is the one thing
worth having.
I don't feel that,
Lord Henry.
No, you don't feel it now.
But some day you'll feel it terribly.
What the gods give,
they quickly take away.
Time is jealous of you, Mr. Gray.
Don't squander the gold of your days.
Live. Let nothing be lost upon you.
Be afraid of nothing.
There is such a little time
that your youth will last,
and you can never get it back.
As we grow older,
our memories are haunted
by the exquisite temptations
we hadn't the courage to yield to.
The world is yours for a season.
It would be tragic if you realized too late,
as so many others do,
that there is only one thing in the world
worth having, and that is youth.
Dorian Gray had never heard
the praise of folly so eloquently expressed.
The creed of pleasure
soared into a philosophy of life,
he were under a spell.
He felt afraid of Lord Henry's ideas
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"The Picture of Dorian Gray" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 25 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_picture_of_dorian_gray_15871>.
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