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Oliver Twist |
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Oliver Twist - 1948 | 116mins | Drama | B&WThe Production TeamDirector: David
Lean. Asst Director: George Pollock. Producer: Ronald Neame. Executive Producer: Anthony Havelock-Allan. Script: David Lean and Stanley Haynes. (from the novel Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens) Cinematography: Guy Green. Special Effects: Stanley Grant and Joan Suttie. Editing: Jack Harris. Production Designer: John Bryan. Make-Up Artist: Stuart Freeborn. Costume Design: Margaret Furse. Music Score: Sir Arnold Bax. Solo pianoforte: Harriet Cohen. Music Direction: Muir Mathieson. |
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The CastRobert Newton
- Bill Sikes Alec Guinness - Fagin Kay Walsh - Nancy Francis L. Sullivan - Mr. Bumble Henry Stephenson - Mr. Brownlow Mary Clare - Mrs. Corney John Howard Davies - Oliver Twist Josephine Stuart - Oliver's Mother Henry Edwards - Police Official Ralph Truman - Monk Anthony Newley - The Artful Dodger Hattie Jacques - Singer Kenneth Downey - Workhouse Master Kathleen Harrison - Mrs. Sowerberry Gibb McLaughlin - Mr. Sowerberry Maurice Denham - Chief of Police |
Plot SynopsisThe most important aim of a film is to depict character and episode. The plot is subsidiary,' says David Lean. So in this, his second film adaptation of Charles Dickens (Great Expectations was the first), he has deleted various scenes from the book. Through a violent storm, a girl is seen struggling to the workhouse. She dies in childbirth. At the age of eight, the child, Oliver, is pinched and cowed. Proving difficult to the wicked orphanage official, Oliver (John Howard Davies) is deemed old enough to work-picking oakum. He dares to ask for more gruel. The indignant Mr Bumble, is glad to get rid of him as drudge in an undertaker's shop. Thrashed for a magnificent revolt, he runs away to London and joins a gang of larcenous street urchins, led by master pickpocket Fagin (Alec Guinness), Oliver is given shelter by Fagin, who trains the young boys as thieves. When another boy, the Artful Dodger, picks the pocket of a kind old gentleman, it is Oliver who is caught and charged with the offence. He is taken and cared for at the old gentleman's fine house, the kindly Mr. Brownlow (Henry Stephenson), who unbeknown to everyone but himself is the boy's grandfather. But the Oliver is carried back to the thieves' kitchen by the burglar Bill Sikes (Robert Newton) and Nancy. When Sikes hears that Nancy, touched with compassion, has secretly met the kind old gentleman, he beats her to death. The mob surrounds Fagin's house ; Sikes is killed ; Fagin is thrown in jail, the boy is re-united with his benefactor. |
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