Great Expectations
In this Dickens adaptation, orphan Pip discovers through lawyer Mr. Jaggers that a mysterious benefactor wishes to ensure that he becomes a gentleman. Reunited with his childhood patron, Miss Havisham, and his first love, the beautiful but emotionally cold Estella, he discovers that the elderly spinster has gone mad from having been left at the altar as a young woman, and has made her charge into a warped, unfeeling heartbreaker.
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- Cast:
- John Mills , Valerie Hobson , Tony Wager , Jean Simmons , Bernard Miles , Francis L. Sullivan , Finlay Currie
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Reviews
That was an excellent one.
Very interesting film. Was caught on the premise when seeing the trailer but unsure as to what the outcome would be for the showing. As it turns out, it was a very good film.
It’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.
There is, somehow, an interesting story here, as well as some good acting. There are also some good scenes
This is a very enjoyable film which follows the novel pretty well.I found the recreation of Victorian England very well done, especially the scenes in Pip's London apartments and Jaggers' offices. The outdoor scenes on the marshes are wonderful and show the strength of black and white in those cases.John Mills grated a little for me, but that's probably just a personal preference and I could never see the attraction in Bernard Miles.All-in-all well worth a viewing.
This is a very beautiful movie. Why? Very simple, actually.1) The script is a masterful adaptation of a powerful novel. The dialogue is beautifully written, and often very powerful.2) The acting is uniformly first rate. The actors, especially John Mills, know how to deliver great lines with powerful effect. They also know that great acting includes the ability to pause for necessary silences. Listen to how they deliver the lines.3) The direction is first rate as well, as is the Oscar-winning cinematography. It's a joy to look at, and the pacing, never rushed, is wonderful.These three qualities come together to make a masterpiece.
There are only a few directors who can take a Classic Book and create a equally Classic movie. Written by Charles Dickens, it was transferred to the Silver Screen in 1946, by David Lean. It relates the story of young 'Pip' ( Tony Wager) who was orphaned and sent to live with in laws. While there he is set as apprentice to learn the Blacksmith trade and one dark night has an encounter with two escape convicts. However it is as a youngster, he comes to visit a strange old woman with a secret agenda for pip. Rich, solitary and always morose the old woman called Miss Havisham (Martita Hunt) brings pip in contact with a pretty young girl named Estella (Jean Simmons) to be his companion. The two grow to adulthood, becoming fond of one another. During the following years Pip suddenly comes into enough money to become a Gentleman, yet never knowing just who has becomes his patron. The Black and White movie has become a worthwhile movie and a Classic. The list of Cast Members add resonance to the film and indeed notable in their own right. Actors such as John Mills, Valerie Hobson and Alec Guinness. This movie is easily recommended to all. Great Book and Great Movie. ****
Charles Dickens made things hard on his cinematic adaptors. "Great Expectations" is a classic example, a flood of vital characters, imposing social themes, and startling coincidences. David Lean took it on by offering a film that works more as a revue of setpieces than unified story, but in those lights, works quite well - most of the time.When we meet Phillip Pirrip, a. k. a. "Pip," he is a boy of 13 wandering the moors near his adopted home in the English country. An escaped convict, Magwitch, makes him promise under duress to bring him file and vittles. Pip does so, his first stand against an unfair social order.In time, he finds himself a victim of that order when he falls for a proud beauty who sneers he is "a common laboring boy." Her adopted mother Miss Havisham, a wealthy hater of men since her own failed attempt at marriage, enjoys the show. Then, suddenly, things take a turn. Pip is given money, lots of it, and the news he is a man of "great expectations" courtesy of an unknown benefactor. Pip thinks he knows who she is.Two things weigh strongly in this film's favor. One is the look and feel. Cinematographer Guy Green and production designed John Bryan give every scene the look of a vintage woodcut by Dickens' illustrator-collaborator George Cruikshank. You feel watching Pip wander the moors or walk the streets of London that you aren't in the real places but inside the book itself.The other major positive is the supporting cast. Even the extras have the right look about them. Reviewers here single out, rightly, the work of Francis L. Sullivan as the officious yet decent and fair lawyer Jaggers, "deep as Australia" and nearly as wide; and Jean Simmons as young Estella, the girl Pip loves. Yet even the smaller parts dazzle, like Pip's mean sister-guardian Mrs. Joe (Freda Jackson) and John Forrest as a most amiable and ineffectual bully named Pocket who grows into the likable Alec Guinness in his first major film role.The big weaknesses, also pointed out by many reviewers here, are the two leads. Valerie Hobson is all wrong as the adult Estella, a part that cried out for the services of her "Kind Hearts And Coronets" costar Joan Greenwood, throaty voice notwithstanding. John Mills shows more skill as the adult Pip, especially in his big revelation scene with his benefactor, but he's miscast, too, a stiff toff even when playing for sympathy. His love scenes with Hobson and the somewhat overplayed Miss Havisham (Martita Hunt) are the film's Achilles heel, sucking up precious oxygen whenever they come up, all the way through to the unsatisfying obtuse finale.Lean and his four assistant screenwriters work hard to keep things tight, a blessing as it allows us to focus on the setpieces, the visuals, and the supporting players as they roll by quickly. There are mistakes, like playing Miss Havisham as a horror-movie character and a silly business in the beginning of Pip hearing accusing voices from cows and dead rabbits after robbing his family larder to feed the convict.Lean did better work on his next Dickens adaptation, "Oliver Twist," but that is because I think it is a stronger story, or at least more easily tightened and less dependent on clanging coincidences than "Great Expectations." Perhaps the many who would disagree with me on the relative merits of the two novels will find this more a classic, and favor it more.What you get here is not a finely-woven yarn but a shimmering mosaic of brilliant jewel-like clusters, not fitting well together but dazzling in their collective display. Lean, despite his detractors, did craft solid stories and not just flashy images in his film work, and there are plenty of examples of that here. Yet the whole is not as great as the majesty of its individual parts.