It's
been 25 years since Polanski's gorgeous film of Thomas Hardy's
Tess. And now he turns his skills to Dickens with this definitive
adaptation, which can stand proudly with two endearing favourites--David
Lean's relentlessly grim 1948 version and the strangely
cheery 1968 musical.
Oliver (Clark)
is a 10-year-old orphan in a brutal Victorian workhouse,
about to embark on a life-changing odyssey. Sold to an undertaker
(Heath), he escapes and runs to London, where he's adopted
by Fagin (Kingsley) and his team of street urchins. While
learning the pickpocket trade from Fagin's sidekick, the
Artful Dodger (Eden), a mix-up lands him in the home of
a rich man (Hardwicke). Worried about being betrayed to
the cops, Fagin and his evil boss Bill (Foreman) plot to
get him back.
Polanski freshens
this well-worn story with wit and realism. He avoids cute
sentimentality (no mean feat) and doesn't shy away from
the gruesome realities of a period in which orphaned children,
poor people and women are treated with disdain. In this
sense, Polanski is making a remarkably astute comment about
the modern world, although he never makes the parallel too
obvious.
Production values
are sheer magic--impeccably detailed and completely believable.
And the story's jammed with strong characters, which the
cast obviously relish playing. Kingsley shamelessly scene-steals
as Fagin, the quirky rogue we can't help but like, as Oliver
does. We can see the compassion (and maybe a touch of madness)
beneath his villainous exterior. Clark is solid in the demanding
central role, never drifting into adorable-child mode or
relying on overwrought emotions, even when a scene might
call for them. Polanski keeps him, and the other children,
remarkably balanced. And if the supporting roles are a bit
one-sided (Foreman's relentless despicability, Hardwicke's
ceaseless optimism), at least they balance each other.
Polanski also
knows how to inject real-life touches throughout the film,
flashes of humour appear just when we need them, as does
wry irony (such as the contrast between the fat-cat workhouse
bosses and their bony young workers). Involving, captivating
and nearly note perfect--in other words, a proper classic.
Oliver Twist Cast:
Barney Clark, Ben Kingsley, Jamie Foreman, Harry Eden,
Leanne Rowe, Lewis Chase, Edward Hardwicke, Frances
Cuka,
Jeremy Swift, Mark Strong, Liz Smith, Alun Armstrong,
Michael Heath, Gillian Hanna, Chris Overton, Paul
Brooke