Great Expectations (1974 film)

This article is about the 1974 film. For other uses, see Great Expectations (disambiguation).
Great Expectations
Directed by Joseph Hardy
Written by Charles Dickens
(novel)
Sherman Yellen
(screenplay)
Starring Michael York
Sarah Miles
Music by Maurice Jarre
Release dates
  • November 22, 1974 (1974-11-22)
Running time
124 minutes
Country United States
United Kingdom
Language English

Great Expectations is a 1974 film made for television based on the Charles Dickens novel of the same name. It was directed by Joseph Hardy, with screenwriter Sherman Yellen and music by Maurice Jarre, starring Michael York as Pip, Simon Gipps-Kent as Young Pip and Sarah Miles as Estella. The production, for Transcontinental Films and Lew Grade's ITC, was made for US television and released to cinemas in the UK. It broke with tradition by having the same actress (the thirty-three-year-old Sarah Miles) play both the younger and older Estella. The film was shot in Panavision by Freddie Young. It was filmed in Eastmancolor and it was entered into the 9th Moscow International Film Festival in 1975.[1]

Cast

Notes and criticism

The film was originally intended to be a musical, perhaps inspired by the commercial and critical success of Carol Reed's Oscar-winning Oliver! CinemaTV Today reported in 1974 however that 'in an unprecedented move, the bulk of the score for Sir Lew Grade and NBC's musical version of Great Expectations has been scrapped seven weeks into shooting'.[2] Films Illustrated reported that the film would contain 'only a traditional score by Maurice Jarre' after the idea of a film musical version had been dropped. In 1995 Michael York said 'we found when we started putting it together [that] the songs interrupted the narrative flow of the piece'.[3]

Criticism was generally negative. The Listener - 'Everything is wrong about it with a sort of dedicated, inspired wrongness that, in itself, is breath-taking'. The Monthly Film Bulletin thought director Hardy and screenwriter Yellen had reduced 'one of Dickens' most subtle and complex novels to an insipid seasonal confection'.[4] Gordon Gow, writing in Films and Filming thought it odd to have 'Pip divided between two players, [while] his beloved Estella should be played by one actress the whole way through'.[5]

Brian McFarlane, writing in a 2008 study of screen adaptations of Great Expectations, criticised the film for its tendency to give way to 'clichés of sentimentality' and assured the director, who had expressed a hope that people wouldn't feel the necessity of comparing it with David Lean's version that, 'he need not have worried: no one would have spoken of them in the same breath. It's not just Lean's film with which it would not stand comparison but with several superior TV mini-series too'. McFarlane expressed some admiration however for Margaret Leighton's interpretation of the jilted Miss Havisham : ' there is a potent sense of the perverse pleasure she takes in watching Estella humiliate Pip, and , during a later visit, of real cruelty in her telling him, 'You've lost her'. Leighton injected 'a necessary bitterness into these scenes'.[6] The critic David Parker praised Joss Ackland's interpretation of Joe Gargery : 'Ackland manages to create a subtle blend of individual simplicity and moral fortitude that seems to capture the essential role the village blacksmith fills in the narrative.' [7]

See also

References

  1. "9th Moscow International Film Festival (1975)". MIFF. Retrieved 2013-01-05.
  2. CinemaTV Today, 17 August 1974, p.1
  3. Brian McFarlane (ed), An Autobiography of British Cinema, 1997, p.619
  4. December 1975, Monthly Film Bulletin
  5. Gow, p.36, Films and Filming, March 1976
  6. Brian McFarlane, Screen Adaptations, Great Expectations, p. 102
  7. www.screenonline.org.uk/film/id/473459

External links


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