Young man's fortune contingent on marrying stranger. Many scheme to claim it, reducing him to fight for her as a secretary.Young man's fortune contingent on marrying stranger. Many scheme to claim it, reducing him to fight for her as a secretary.Young man's fortune contingent on marrying stranger. Many scheme to claim it, reducing him to fight for her as a secretary.
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I thought this version was much superior to the 1998 version. Enough time was taken so that minor characters like Fascination Fledgby, Jenny Wren, Charlie Hexam, Mrs. R.W., and Mr. Twemlow could be fully realized. In the shorter, later version even the main characters get short shrift sometimes. In this one Mr. Boffin's descent into miserliness is given plenty of screen time, as is his relationship with Silas Wegg (Alfie Bass having a very good time in the role). The acting is wonderful by all the cast, but I must give top marks to the incomparable Leo McKern as Mr. Boffin. A young Jane Seymour is perfectly cast as Bella Wilfer, and has good chemistry with John McEnerny as a compelling John Rokesmith. Lesley Dunlop brings both strength and sensitivity to the role of Lizzie Hexam. Warren Clarke is chilling as the obsessed Bradley Headstone, and Nicholas Jones catches all of Eugene's conflicted soul. Like another reviewer, I am lobbying the BBC to bring this out on DVD.
I remember watching this series in 1976, transfixed. From the start, the brooding, stirring theme music (by Carl Davis)draws you into the Dickensian world. The acting is faultless and excellent. Many of the actors were some of the finest British actors going at the time and they were only playing the bit parts; e.g. Alfie Bass, Ronald Lacey. Some of the actors would go on to make big names for themselves. Warren Clarke (one of the then established actors) who played the infatuated schoolmaster, is not only well known for the current Dalziel & Pascoe, but has a highly distinguished film career including being one of the Droogs in A Clockwork Orange. So fine is the acting and production that you simply believe in the characters and become part of their world.
Oh, and the story is cracking as well!!
The later version was OK, but I do not understand why the BBC chose to redo the novel when the apex had so clearly been reached. That it is not available on DVD or even VHS is, in my view, a travesty. I will be lobbying the BBC but I wouldn't hold one's breath.
If you get a chance to see this version, grab it with all your might
Oh, and the story is cracking as well!!
The later version was OK, but I do not understand why the BBC chose to redo the novel when the apex had so clearly been reached. That it is not available on DVD or even VHS is, in my view, a travesty. I will be lobbying the BBC but I wouldn't hold one's breath.
If you get a chance to see this version, grab it with all your might
A fine adaption of the book, soon to be available on DVD again. While I found the later 1998 BBC version well played, I think that this version was more powerful in that the characters were really brought to life by the actors in this version.
Many of the key parts were played by actors who were destined later to become household names. Jane Seymour's portrayal of Bella Wilfer was particularly inspired as she made the selfish, shallow, spoiled yet beautiful young woman really live, repelling and attracting at the same time. Lesley Dunlop as Lizzie Hexham made me really wish for her eventual happiness.
Another great role was that of Bradley Headstone who was played by Warren Clarke, familiar to British viewers as the policeman Dalziel in "Dalziel and Pascoe". He put real menace into the part of the disturbed headmaster.
Even the minor roles were played by some of the finest actors of the time, Alfie Bass et al.
This version will be available again from April 2008.
Many of the key parts were played by actors who were destined later to become household names. Jane Seymour's portrayal of Bella Wilfer was particularly inspired as she made the selfish, shallow, spoiled yet beautiful young woman really live, repelling and attracting at the same time. Lesley Dunlop as Lizzie Hexham made me really wish for her eventual happiness.
Another great role was that of Bradley Headstone who was played by Warren Clarke, familiar to British viewers as the policeman Dalziel in "Dalziel and Pascoe". He put real menace into the part of the disturbed headmaster.
Even the minor roles were played by some of the finest actors of the time, Alfie Bass et al.
This version will be available again from April 2008.
"Our Mutual Friend" is the story of a drowned heir to a fortune. On his death the fortune goes to an illiterate servant named Boffin. Boffin (Leo McKern) brings two young people into his home: (1) Bella Wilfer (Jane Seymour), the intended (by will!) of the deceased; and, as his secretary, the mysterious John Rokesmith (John McEnery).
The cast is uniformly good, though I wish I could make two baseball-like transfers from the 1998 version, viz. Keeley Hawes as Lizzie Hexam and Kenneth Cranham as Silas Wegg--especially since Wegg is one of my favorite characters in all Dickens. But, alas, one can't have everything.
The post-"Live and Let Die" but still young Jane Seymour is exceptionally lovely here and very good, though with little sense she was an international superstar in waiting despite her Bond experience.
John McEnery, whether playing Mercutio or Kerensky or Rokesmith, is always worth watching. And Leo McKern was born to play a Dickens character.
The bad: well, it's 1970s British TV. That means it has long, stagey sections on videotape with occasion exteriors on grainy film. This encourages some overacting. Jenny Wren, for instance, a mere annoyance in the book, is here an outright aggravation. But then, some of Dickens' creatures simply don't travel well to another medium. I occasionally feel like drowning Mister Sloppy.
Fortunately, Seymour and McEnery dial back their performances for the small screen. Both are perfect. I hadn't seen this version before I read the book and I envisioned someone like McEnery for the role.
As for Alfie Bass in the pivotal role as Silas Wegg, he's Alfie Bass and his Wegg lacks the darker shading of the 1998 Wegg, who is also, strangely enough, funnier. But no adaptation of Dickens is perfect.
The cast is uniformly good, though I wish I could make two baseball-like transfers from the 1998 version, viz. Keeley Hawes as Lizzie Hexam and Kenneth Cranham as Silas Wegg--especially since Wegg is one of my favorite characters in all Dickens. But, alas, one can't have everything.
The post-"Live and Let Die" but still young Jane Seymour is exceptionally lovely here and very good, though with little sense she was an international superstar in waiting despite her Bond experience.
John McEnery, whether playing Mercutio or Kerensky or Rokesmith, is always worth watching. And Leo McKern was born to play a Dickens character.
The bad: well, it's 1970s British TV. That means it has long, stagey sections on videotape with occasion exteriors on grainy film. This encourages some overacting. Jenny Wren, for instance, a mere annoyance in the book, is here an outright aggravation. But then, some of Dickens' creatures simply don't travel well to another medium. I occasionally feel like drowning Mister Sloppy.
Fortunately, Seymour and McEnery dial back their performances for the small screen. Both are perfect. I hadn't seen this version before I read the book and I envisioned someone like McEnery for the role.
As for Alfie Bass in the pivotal role as Silas Wegg, he's Alfie Bass and his Wegg lacks the darker shading of the 1998 Wegg, who is also, strangely enough, funnier. But no adaptation of Dickens is perfect.
For its time this one was really good. The pacing was excellent and it presented a very full and interwoven story with clarity and precision. I watch a lot of adaptations, even the ones more difficult to get hold of now like this one. Many of the older ones have their merits compared to modern ones, they are often longer and more thorough and more respectful to the source material, however they can be slow and low budget and not as pretty or entertaining to watch. I think in this instance however, because the 1998 version of Our Mutual Friend is one of the very best Dickens adaptations as well as being even more thorough than this version, it is difficult to say why anyone should watch this one now. It has been almost entirely supplanted by the better more modern version. I presume that this this is the reason why this version is no longer that easy to come by and not available on streaming. I had to find a used DVD. Fans of this are probably going to be those who saw it first time round in the 70s. And at this time it would have been an excellent adaptation. But I'm not sure who I would recommend it to now except strange enthusiasts like me who seem to be on a mission to watch all of the Dickens adaptations that survive today.
Did you know
- TriviaThe director humiliated Jack Wild on the first day of filming. Wild later said it was clearly deliberate and that it spoiled the filming of the series.
- ConnectionsVersion of Comment Bella fut conquise (1911)
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