Sunday, July 6, 2014

Classic Movie Review: OLIVER TWIST (2005) A


I never read Oliver Twist in my early years and did not see earlier versions of the movie, but I felt after seeing it that this movie is still for today's audience. Especially people who are interested in Dickens work, and the times he lived in.   The characters are somewhat stereotypical compared to the recent movie "Belle", which also was a period piece about early England.  Worthwhile if you want to catch up on English Literature that you may have missed.

From Rotten Tomatoes:
Director Roman Polanski gives one of Charles Dickens' best-loved stories a new and dynamic interpretation in this period drama. Oliver Twist (Barney Clark) is a young orphan in Victorian England who has been sent to a dank workhouse run by the miserly Mr. Bumble (Jeremy Swift) when it is learned there is no one to care for him. When Oliver dares to ask for more gruel, he is sent away to live with an undertaker, who treats him poorly. Preferring life on the streets to the treatment he's been receiving, Oliver runs away to London, where he falls in with the Artful Dodger (Harry Eden), a youthful pickpocket. The Artful Dodger is one of a gang of young thieves overseen by Fagin (Ben Kingsley), a paternal but sinister criminal mastermind. While Oliver finds a home of sorts with Fagin and his young cohorts, he also falls into a dangerous life made all the more threatening by the presence of Fagin's menacing overlord, Bill Sykes (Jamie Foreman). Oliver Twist was Polanski's first feature film after enjoying a major career resurgence following the international success of his Oscar-winning World War II drama The Pianist. 

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