Oliver!

 
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Oliver!

DVD Release: Oliver!

  • Release Date: 1998
  • Subtitles: English, French
  • English 5.1 [Dolby Digital], French
  • Scene selections
  • Widescreen format
  • Photo gallery; featurette

DVD Release: Oliver! [DVD/CD]

  • Release Date: 2005
  • cc
  • Origingal widescreen format
  • Photo gallery
  • Behind-the-scenes featurette

  • Rating: StarStarStarStarStar
  • Genre: Musical
  • Movie Type: Musical Drama, Childhood Drama
  • Themes: Orphans, Down on Their Luck, Rags To Riches
  • Director: Carol Reed
  • Main Cast: Ron Moody, Shani Wallis, Oliver Reed, Harry Secombe, Hugh Griffith, Mark Lester, Jack Wild
  • Release Year: 1968
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 145 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: G

Plot

Inspired by Charles Dickens' novel Oliver Twist, Lionel Bart's 1961 London and Broadway musical hit glossed over some of Dickens' more graphic passages but managed to retain a strong subtext to what was essentially light entertainment. For its first half-hour or so, Carol Reed's Oscar-winning 1968 film version does a masterful job of telling its story almost exclusively through song and dance. Once 9-year-old orphan Oliver Twist (Mark Lester) falls in with such underworld types as pickpocket Fagin (Ron Moody) and murderous thief Bill Sykes (Oliver Reed), it becomes necessary to inject more and more dialogue, and the film loses some of its momentum. But not to worry: despite such brutal moments as Sikes' murder of Nancy (Shani Wallis), the film gets back on the right musical track, thanks in great part to Onna White's exuberant choreography and the faultless performances by Moody and by Jack Wild as the Artful Dodger. The supporting cast includes Harry Secombe as the self-righteous Mr. Bumble and Joseph O'Conor as Mr. Brownlow, the man who (through a series of typically Dickensian coincidences) rescues Oliver from the streets. Oliver! won six Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Director, and a special award to choreographer Onna White. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

Oliver! proved that the British film industry could produce high-quality musicals at least as good as the best musicals from Hollywood. The bad news was that they had proven their ability to make a type of film that was quickly fading from style. It was the first musical for veteran director Carol Reed, who pushed the edge of what was considered acceptable family fare and gave the film a dark, Dickensian undertone that provided a rich contrast to its surface-level cheeriness. Oliver! was the last film distributed on a "road show" basis -- that is, with advance ticket sales and assigned seating at each theater. Where a roadshow engagement had once been a way of attaching prestige to a film, 1960s audiences had tired of the practice, heading to suburban malls for their moviegoing rather than to the older, larger downtown theaters where roadshow films typically played. On Oscar night, Oliver! took home five awards, including Best Picture and Best Director. With the era of the musical coming to an end, the film had little lasting influence, though in the mid-1980s its production numbers were savagely, but not entirely without affection, lampooned in Monty Python's The Meaning of Life. ~ Richard Gilliam, All Movie Guide

Cast


Clive Moss - Charlie Bates; Peggy Mount - Widow Corney; Leonard Rossiter - Mr. Sowerberry; Joseph O'Conor - Mr. Brownlow; Hylda Baker - Mrs. Sowerberry; Sheila White - Bet; Megs Jenkins - Mrs. Bedwin; Wensley Pithey - Dr. Grimwig; Fred Emney - Chairman; John Baskcomb - Workhouse Governor; Norman Pitt - Workhouse Governor; Arnold Locke - Workhouse Governor; Frank Crawshaw - Workhouse Governor; Elizabeth Knight - Charlotte; Veronica Page - Oliver's Mother; Henry Kay - Doctor; Kenneth Cranham - Noah Claypole; James Hayter - Mr. Jessop; William Smith; Peter Locke - Fagin's Boy; Robert Bartlett - Fagin's Boy; Kim Smith - Fagin's Boy; Norman Mitchell - Arresting Policeman; Edwin Finn; Ian Ramsey; Jeffrey Chandler

Credit

Lionel Bart - Composer (Music Score); Lionel Bart - Screenwriter; Lionel Bart - Play Author; Phyllis Dalton - Costume Designer; Vernon Dixon - Set Designer; George Frost - Makeup; Johnny Green - Musical Direction/Supervision; Vernon Gilbert Harris - Screenwriter; Ralph Kemplen - Editor; Terence Marsh - Art Director; Oswald Morris - Cinematographer; Carol Reed - Director; Eric Rogers - Composer (Music Score); Onna White - Choreography; Onna White - Composer (Music Score); John Box - Production Designer; John Woolf - Producer; Ken Mugglestone - Set Designer; Allan Bryce - Special Effects; John Cox - Sound/Sound Designer; Colin Brewer - First Assistant Director; Charles Dickens - Book Author

Similar Movies

Annie; Bugsy Malone; Mary Poppins; The Music Man; My Fair Lady; Newsies; The Secret of NIMH; The Sound of Music; Die Dreigroschenoper; Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory; A Simple Twist of Fate; Babe: Pig in the City; Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone; Little Lord Fauntleroy
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Wikipedia: Oliver! (film)
Oliver!

The film poster by Howard Terpning
Directed by Carol Reed
Produced by John Woolf
Written by Charles Dickens (novel)
Vernon Harris
Starring Mark Lester
Ron Moody
Shani Wallis
Oliver Reed,
Jack Wild
Music by Johnny Green
Eric Rogers
Onna White
Cinematography Oswald Morris
Editing by Ralph Kemplen
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) September 26, 1968
Running time 153 min.
Country U.K. Flag of the United Kingdom
Language English

Oliver! is a 1968 musical film directed by Carol Reed. The film is based on the stage musical Oliver!, with book, music and lyrics written by Lionel Bart. The screenplay was written by Vernon Harris.

Both the film and play are based on the famous Charles Dickens novel Oliver Twist. The musical includes several musical standards, including "Food Glorious Food", "Consider Yourself", "As Long as He Needs Me", "You've Got to Pick a Pocket or Two", "Oom-Pah-Pah" and "Where is Love?".

The film version was a Romulus Films production and was distributed internationally by Columbia Pictures. Filmed in Shepperton Film Studio in Surrey and various other locations in England.

In 1968 Oliver! won an Academy Award for Best Picture.[1]

Contents

Background

The film used a mixture of young unknowns and 'big names': Ron Moody (Fagin), Oliver Reed (Bill Sikes), Harry Secombe (Mr Bumble), Mark Lester (Oliver), Jack Wild (Dodger), Shani Wallis (Nancy) and Joseph O'Conor as Mr. Brownlow. Ron Moody recreated his London stage performance, after both Peter Sellers and Peter O'Toole reportedly turned down the role. Moody was the only member of the original cast to reprise his stage role in the film.

The screenplay was adapted from both Lionel Bart's play and Dickens's novel by Vernon Harris, and directed by Sir Carol Reed, who was also Oliver Reed's uncle. A few of the songs from the stage production were not used in the movie, although they often make appearances in the incidental music. For example, the music of Sikes' song "My Name" can be heard when the character first appears, and several other times whenever he is about to commit some nefarious deed.

The film also included extended choreography sequences not found in the original show, and some additional scenes which expanded the role of Bill Sikes closer to the Sikes of the original dickens novel. In the stage version, he did not even make his entrance until the second act. The songs that Sikes sang in the stage version were omitted.

Shooting at Shepperton Film Studios, England, began on June 23, 1967.[2]

Differences between stage and film version

The film changed some aspects of the musical's plotline.

  • Oliver's trial and exoneration after being arrested for stealing Brownlow's wallet were shown, with Nancy secretly attending it. (In the play, Nancy does not attend Oliver's trial, which takes place offstage - presumably between Acts I and II.) Nearly all of the dialogue in this sequence was taken directly from Dickens's novel. The magistrate Mr. Fang, who does not appear in the stage musical, was added to the film, identified simply as "The Magistrate" , and portrayed by Hugh Griffith in a cameo appearance. The magistrate, rather than being depicted viciously, as in Dickens's novel, was played with a humorous touch as a harsh but incompetent drunkard who is so hungover that he is scarcely aware of the goings-on inside the courtroom.
  • Sikes was introduced into the story much earlier, and Oliver, rather than being unconscious while Sikes kills Nancy, is a helpless and terrified witness to her murder (which, in the film, was made unusually dramatic for what was supposed to be a family musical).
  • The film contains a scene in which Sikes forces Oliver to help him burgle a house. The scene, not found in the original stage version, is basically taken from a similar episode in the Dickens novel; however, the outcome is slightly different.
  • The song "Oom Pah Pah" was moved to a late spot in the second half of the film, rather than being placed at the beginning of the second half. It is sung by Nancy at the tavern in order to divert Bill Sikes's attention and get the tavern crowd dancing, so that she can use it as camouflage to sneak Oliver to London Bridge and back to Mr. Brownlow. The ruse, of course, fails - Bill's bull terrier, who had been guarding Oliver, begins to bark and alerts him. Bill secretly follows them and surprises them at the bridge.
  • Sikes's final attempt to escape does not take place at London Bridge as in the stage version, but on the rooftops of London, as the crowd below watches while Sikes forces Oliver to balance himself on a dangerously thin wooden hoist and loop a rope around it so that he (Sikes) can swing from one rooftop to another. The idea of Sikes taking Oliver as a hostage over the rooftop was taken, not from Dickens's novel, but from David Lean's 1948 film version of Oliver Twist, although in the Lean film, Oliver tied the rope to a chimney, instead of looping it over a hoist. Lean was, according to one of his biographers, deeply hurt that a fellow director whom he regarded highly (Carol Reed) would borrow a significant plot development from him without acknowledging it in the film's credits (the credits for Oliver! merely say Screenplay by Vernon Harris freely adapted from Charles Dickens's "Oliver Twist"). In the Lean film, Sikes is wounded, and the pain causes him to lose his grip and accidentally hang himself; in Oliver!, when Sikes is shot, the rope is around his waist rather than his neck; the shot itself kills him, so he does not hang himself.
  • The so-called "fourth wall" finale, in which all the characters sang a medley of three of the songs, was completely eliminated so as to not destroy the impact of the final scenes, although Fagin and the Artful Dodger are last seen humorously reprising "Reviewing the Situation" (with additional lyrics written for the film), and dancing off happily to continue their life of crime. The closing credits are seen against a replay of part of the "Consider Yourself" sequence, in which we see the chorus singing and dancing.
  • Although Sikes clubs Nancy to death, as in the original London and Broadway productions of the show, he kills her offscreen. In the stage production, because of the set design, the actors are always in full view of the audience, so the beating had to be staged in a highly artificial way (with no blood). Later productions have changed it so that she is strangled, making the scene more realistic.
  • The film adds a poignant moment at London Bridge, in which Oliver and Nancy share a farewell embrace just before Bill Sikes jumps out from hiding and tries to forcibly grab him. This is now retained in some stage productions of the musical. [3]

Reception

Oliver! received extremely favourable reviews. It was hailed by Pauline Kael in her The New Yorker review as being one of the few film versions of a stage musical that was superior to the original show, which she, according to her own review of the film, had walked out on.

Songs

The words and music were written by Lionel Bart, and were supervised, arranged and conducted by John Green.

The pre-credits Overture as heard on the actual soundtrack of the film is not included on the soundtrack album. Instead, an abbreviated version of the Main Title is labeled "Overture". For the convenience of the original LP, the order of some of the songs was shuffled, but this was not corrected on the CD issue; instead, the film soundtrack CD is an exact duplicate of the LP - nothing on the CD has been expanded to its full-length, as on other CD soundtrack albums. The movie's soundtrack was originally issued in the US on Colgems Records; it was later reissued on compact disc on the RCA Records label.

Awards

The film garnered 11 Academy Award nominations and won 6:

It was also nominated for Best Actor in a Leading Role (Ron Moody), Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Jack Wild), Best Cinematography, Best Costume Design, Best Film Editing and Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium.

Oliver! was the only G-rated film to be honoured with an Academy Award for Best Picture (the following year saw the only X-rated film to win a Best Picture Oscar: Midnight Cowboy, which was re-rated R two years later). Oliver! was also the last musical to win the Best Picture Oscar until Chicago 34 years later.

References

External links

Awards
Preceded by
In the Heat of the Night
Academy Award for Best Picture
1968
Succeeded by
Midnight Cowboy

 
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