If you want to see how Dickens anticipated the cinema, consider how little had to be done to bring the graveyard meeting between Pip and Magwitch to the screen.
Great Expectations (1946)
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Reviews Counted:22
Fresh:22
Rotten:0
Average Rating:8.5/10
Theatrical Release:02-02-2007
Synopsis: This 1946 film is the definitive version of the classic Charles Dickens story of Pip, an orphaned British boy who is befriended by a mysterious benefactor who enables him to become a gentleman of... This 1946 film is the definitive version of the classic Charles Dickens story of Pip, an orphaned British boy who is befriended by a mysterious benefactor who enables him to become a gentleman of means. Director Lean deftly represents Dickens' disdain for the iniquities of Victorian society. This sentiment rang particularly true when the film was released the year after the war in Britain, when Britain had just elected a labor government. In a style resembling horror films, starting with a straight narration of Dickens's first two pages, through the scenes of Miss Havisham's decaying petrified and cobwebbed house, we are caught in a narrative that is both heart wrenching and socially relevant. Lean's achievement is in setting once-in-a-lifetime performances in a vibrant narrative that maintains rich detail but never bogs down. Considered by many to be among the greatest films ever made. [More]
Starring: John Mills, Alec Guinness, Valerie Hobson, Jean Simmons
Starring: John Mills, Alec Guinness, Valerie Hobson, Jean Simmons, Bernard Miles, Francis L. Sullivan, Martita Hunt, Finlay Currie, Anthony Wager, Ivor Barnard, Freda Jackson, Torin Thatcher, Hay Petrie, George "Gabby" Hayes, O. B. Clarence
Director: David Lean
Director: David Lean
Screenwriter: David Lean, Ronald Neame, Anthony Havelock-Allan, Kay Walsh
Composer: Walter Goehr
Reviews for Great Expectations
This is still the definitive version of Charles Dickens' amospheric and occasionally creepy classic.
David Lean’s black-and-white masterpiece may be a whirlwind tour of Dickens’ novel, but what a well-performed, economic and atmospheric tour it is.
When David Lean adapted one of the all-time great novels to the screen, he never forgot he was making a movie.
Lean fills Great Expectations with a wealth of visual detail and vivid characters and personalities... and he directs with a warmth and humor...
One of Lean's gems, this superb adapation of Dickens is still the vest version (for film or TV), boasting great acting from John Mills and Alec Guinness (who were regulars in helmer's work) and accomplished production values acknowledged with Oscars.
The graveyard scene is still a shocker, the details are still astonishingly well assembled, and the performances are wonderful.
The definitive adaptation of the Charles Dickens classic is this one from David Lean.
[A] glowing illumination of the warm and deliciously surprising tale.
Latest News for Great Expectations
February 04, 2009:
Exclusive: Inside Pinewood/Shepperton - A Photo Tour
Every year, the BAFTA film awards present a trophy for Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema. Introduced in 1978, the award recognises an organisation or a person's career... More...
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