| Robert Newton, Alec Guinness David
Lean's 1948 version of Charles Dickens' classic novel begins with
a bang: the young hero's pregnant mother fighting her way through
a storm, a perfect metaphor for Oliver's difficult road ahead. Set
in a world of slums in the shadow of Victorian England, the story
traces the boy's life in a workhouse and then with a gang of little
pickpockets. A stark but good-looking film shot around some impressive
sets, Lean's immortal adaptation is perhaps best known for Alec
Guinness's remarkable (and slightly controversial) performance as
Fagin, the old mentor to the gang of boy thieves.
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 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 |