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Oliver Twist
available on DVD (39.95) and laserdisc (49.95)
1948/116 minutes/Black and White/Monaural/1.33:1
Expressionistic noir photography suffuses David Lean's Oliver Twist with a nightmarish quality, fitting its bleak, industrial setting. In Dickens' classic tale, an orphan wends his way from cruel apprenticeship to a den of thieves in search of a true home. Here Alec Guinness is the quintessential Fagin, his controversial performance fully restored in Criterion's new digital transfer.

DVD also includes:

  • The original theatrical trailer
  • Subtitles for the deaf and hearing impaired
J.M. remarks:
Oliver Twist gives film lovers a preview of the particular genius of Alec Guinness. Prior to his work on David Lean's Great Expectations, the actor's sole film credit was an audience member in Victor's Saville's Evensong (starring Evelyn Laye as "Madame Irela"). In Great Expectations, Guinness plays Herbert Pocket, a young man his own age. Just two years later, he completely disguised himself to play what many consider the definitive Fagin. His next film project: Kind Hearts and Coronets, in which he would play eight roles, all brilliantly. Personal favorite: Lady Agatha, of course, a drag performance every bit as memorable as Dustin Hoffmann's Dorothy Michaels.


Liner Notes by Michael Sragow
Michael Sragow reviews new movies for SF Weekly and old ones for The New Yorker.

David Lean followed his prodigious adaptation of Charles Dickens' Great Expectations with this brilliant crystallization of Dickens' Oliver Twis; or, the Parish Boy's Progress. It deploys the cinema's special powers of dash and immediacy to convey all the venturesomeness and vulnerability of youth. It was Lean who suggested to Sir Arnold Bax, the composer of the turbulent, eloquent score, that Oliver's theme be rendered on solo piano, to represent "the lonely boy in a world of bullying adults."

Yet from the moment Oliver utters the words that have made him famous -- "Please sir, I want some more" -- Lean also celebrates his steel. With the surgical clarity of his born-moviemaker's vision, he recognized that Dickens used Oliver to describe the values adults should treasure in children and the power children have to protect themselves.

In the opening seconds, as Oliver's exhausted mother pushes on against a storm so she can give birth to Oliver in shelter, Lean elevates melodrama to poetry -- and never lets it drop for the 116-minute running time. He invests audio-visual details with metaphoric as well as graphic power, until two creaking, thorny briers embody the bending yet unbroken will of the spasm-racked girl. The first full lightning-lit flash of the workhouse is as eerily sharp as a lithographic plate. The wail of the baby beside the mother's bed caps the introduction like the drum-clap in an overture.

Dickens believed childhood should be a time of freedom, trust, and tenderness. He also knew that when those qualities are threatened, kids react with righteous fury. Lean builds the film on these and other dizzying polarities, flinging viewers between despair and hope. It's black-comic terror to see Oliver and his fellow orphans spy on their warders stuffing their faces; later, it's a thrill and a delight to see Oliver knocking down that sour undertaker's underling, Noah Claypole, when Claypole insults his dead mother.

These juxtapositions fuel even richer ones when Oliver escapes to London, where the Artful Dodger delivers him to the notorious fence, Fagin. After the desperation and pallor of the workhouse lads, Dodger and the rest of Fagin's gang are refreshingly blithe and hearty. Our affection for them swiftly dissipates when they let Oliver take the fall for a bungled pickpocketing. The film becomes a fight between the forces of darkness, led by Fagin and his murderous crony, Bill Sykes, and the forces of light, led by Oliver's benefactor, Mr. Brownlow, and Sykes' repentant girl, Nancy. No movie has better captured Dickens' blend of sensitivity and violence.

Lean primes the tear ducts and adrenal glands simultaneously; you feel his characters' poverty and want not just in your hearts, but in your muscles, tendons, and joints. But Lean's mastery of kinesthetic moviemaking is renowned. What's less often acknowledged is his genius for casting. Eight-year-old John Howard Davies imparts a remarkable lyric presence to Oliver. His curly blond hair and deep, wide eyes give him the look of a slim cherub -- with a streak of insubordination. His fluid emotionality provides counterpoint to the film's dazzling tintypes. Young Anthony Newley approaches perfection as the Dodger (a "common-faced boy" with "all the airs and manners of a man"); Robert Newton oozes paranoia and sadism as Sykes; Kay Walsh brings off Nancy's passionate lamentations with fiery eyes and a pugnacious chin. And Alec Guinness is audaciously funny and sinister as Fagin. His makeup, including an enormous proboscis straight out of Cruikshank's illustrations, raised questions of anti-Semitism and enveloped the film in controversy. (In 1951, three years after the London premiere, it opened in the U.S. with 12 minutes deleted, here restored.) Actually Lean, unlike Dickens, neither labels Fagin "the Jew" nor depicts him as part of a shady Jewish peddling network.

The director and actor emphasize the gutter connoisseur and misguided mentor within Fagin. When Lean instructed Bax to treat Fagin's lessons in pickpocketing as "a comic ballet", he planted the seeds for Oliver! Indeed, if youšve read the novel or seen the musical, this movie will make you experience what a New York Herald critic did in 1867 at one of Dickens' public readings: "surprises and new thoughts that come like revelations of suddenly discovered facts in the lives of old acquaintances."
-- Michael Sragow

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