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Oliver! (film)

Oliver! is a 1968 British period musical drama film based on Lionel Bart's 1960 stage musical of the same name, itself an adaptation of Charles Dickens's 1838 novel Oliver Twist.

Oliver!
British theatrical release poster
Directed byCarol Reed
Screenplay byVernon Harris
Based onOliver!
1960 musical
by Lionel Bart
Oliver Twist
1837 novel
by Charles Dickens
Produced byJohn Woolf
StarringRon Moody
Oliver Reed
Harry Secombe
Shani Wallis
Mark Lester
Jack Wild
CinematographyOswald Morris
Edited byRalph Kemplen
Music byLionel Bart (music and lyrics)
John Green (music score)
Production
company
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • 26 September 1968 (1968-09-26)
Running time
153 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom[1]
LanguageEnglish
Budget$10 million
Box office$77.4 million

Directed by Carol Reed from a screenplay by Vernon Harris, the picture includes such musical numbers as "Food, Glorious Food", "Consider Yourself", "As Long as He Needs Me", "I'd Do Anything", "You've Got to Pick a Pocket or Two", and "Where Is Love?".

It stars Ron Moody, Oliver Reed, Harry Secombe, Shani Wallis, Jack Wild, and Mark Lester in the title role. Filmed at Shepperton Film Studio in Surrey, it was a Romulus production by John Woolf and was distributed internationally by Columbia Pictures.

At the 41st Academy Awards for 1968, Oliver! was nominated for eleven Academy Awards and won six, including Best Picture, Best Director for Reed, and an Honorary Award for choreographer Onna White. At the 26th Golden Globe Awards, the film won two Golden Globes: Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy and Best Actor – Musical or Comedy for Ron Moody.

The British Film Institute ranked Oliver! the 77th greatest British film of the 20th century. In 2017, a poll of 150 actors, directors, writers, producers and critics for Time Out magazine ranked it the 69th best British film ever.[2]

Plot

Act 1

At a workhouse in Dunstable, orphans are served their daily gruel ("Food, Glorious Food"). A group of boys draw lots, with Oliver drawing the tangled one, forcing him to approach Mr. Bumble and the Widow Corney, and ask, "Please, sir, I want some more." Enraged, Bumble takes Oliver to the governors for punishment ("Oliver!") and then parades Oliver in the street to sell him off as an apprentice ("Boy for Sale"). Mr. Sowerberry, an undertaker, buys Oliver, but Sowerberry's other apprentice Noah Claypole bullies Oliver; when Oliver retaliates, Oliver is thrown first into a coffin and then into the cellar, where he laments his lack of a family ("Where Is Love?"). Suddenly, he discovers the window grate is unlocked; Oliver escapes.

A week later, Oliver reaches London. He meets the Artful Dodger, who instantly takes him under his wing ("Consider Yourself"). Dodger brings Oliver to a hideout for young pickpockets led by Fagin, who instructs the gang in the art of stealing ("You've Got to Pick a Pocket or Two"). Fagin later meets with Bill Sikes, a burglar, while Sikes's girlfriend Nancy joyfully remarks on low-class life ("It's a Fine Life"). When Fagin returns to his den, he goes through a secret cache of treasures. Oliver wakes up, notices Fagin's secret, and startles the man, who explains that the trove is to help him in his old age ("You've Got to Pick a Pocket or Two (Reprise)").

In the morning, Nancy and her friend Bet arrive at the hideout to collect Sikes's money. The boys mock Oliver for his good manners, which Nancy finds charming ("I'd Do Anything"). Fagin sends the boys out for the day, teaming Oliver with Dodger ("Be Back Soon"). At a bookstall, Dodger steals a wallet from Mr. Brownlow, who quickly mistakes Oliver for being the thief and has police arrest him. Fearing Oliver will rat out the gang, Fagin and Sikes send Nancy to court, where Oliver is too terrified to speak; fortunately, the bookseller Mr. Jessop, testifies that Oliver is innocent. Brownlow takes Oliver in, while Sikes and Fagin send Dodger to follow them, to Nancy's displeasure.

Act 2

Oliver wakes up in Mr. Brownlow's luxurious house and happily watches from his balcony the merchants and inhabitants of Bloomsbury Square ("Who Will Buy"). Fagin and Sikes decide to abduct Oliver and bring him back to the den with Nancy's help. Nancy, who has come to care for Oliver, at first refuses to help, but Sikes physically abuses her, forcing her into obedience. In spite of this, Nancy still loves Sikes, and believes he reciprocates ("As Long as He Needs Me").

The next morning, Mr. Brownlow sends Oliver on an errand. Before he departs, Oliver notices a portrait painting of a beautiful young girl. Mr. Brownlow notes Oliver's resemblance to the girl (his niece, Emily, who disappeared years ago), and begins to suspect he may be Oliver's great-uncle. During the errand, Nancy and Sikes grab Oliver and bring him back to Fagin's den. A quarrel ensues over Oliver's future and who keeps the items that Mr. Brownlow entrusted to Oliver; Oliver's resistance goads Sikes into beating him, but Nancy stays Sikes's hand. Nancy remorsefully reviews their life, but Sikes maintains that any living is better than none. Fagin tries to soothe Sikes's temper, prompting Sikes to declare that if anyone ratted them out, Sikes will kill Fagin. Once Sikes and Nancy leave, Fagin considers abandoning his criminal life, but each imagined alternative proves just as untenable ("Reviewing the Situation").

Bumble and Corney pay a visit to Brownlow after he begins searching for Oliver's origin. They present a locket belonging to Oliver's mother, who arrived at the workhouse penniless and died during childbirth. Brownlow recognizes the locket as his niece's and throws the two out, enraged that they selfishly chose to keep the trinket and information to themselves until they could collect a reward for it. Meanwhile, in an attempt to introduce Oliver to a life of crime, Sikes forces Oliver to take part in a house robbery. The robbery fails when Oliver accidentally awakens the occupants, but he and Sikes get away. While Sikes and Oliver are gone, Nancy, fearful for Oliver's life, goes to Brownlow, confessing her part in Oliver's kidnapping, but doesn't state the name of Fagin or Bill Sikes for her own protection. Promising to return him to Brownlow at midnight at London Bridge, Nancy heads for the tavern. When Sikes and Oliver appear, Sikes orders his dog Bullseye to guard the boy. Nancy starts up a lively drinking song, hoping that the noise will distract Sikes. Bullseye, however, alerts Sikes, who gives chase.

As Oliver and Nancy share a farewell embrace at London Bridge, Sikes catches up and grabs both of them and throws Oliver aside. Nancy then tries to pull Sikes away, angering him into dragging her behind the staircase of London Bridge and violently bludgeoning her, injuring her fatally. Sikes then takes off with Oliver, but Bullseye returns to the scene where Nancy has succumbed to her injuries and alerts the police. The dog leads Brownlow and an angry mob to the thieves' hideout. Sikes arrives at Fagin's den and demands money, revealing that he killed Nancy as well. Upon seeing the approaching mob, the thieves disband and flee. Sikes runs off with Oliver, using him as a hostage. During the evacuation, Fagin loses his prized possessions, which sink into mud. Sikes attempts to flee to an adjacent roof, but is shot dead in the process by the police. Fagin makes up his mind to change his ways for good, but just as he is about to walk away a reformed character, Dodger appears from nowhere with a wallet he stole earlier. They dance off into the sunrise together, happily determined to live out the rest of their days as thieves, while Oliver returns to Brownlow's home for good.

Cast

Production

Casting

The film used mostly young unknowns, among them Mark Lester (Oliver), Shani Wallis (Nancy) and Jack Wild as The Artful Dodger, but also featured Hugh Griffith, an Oscar winner for Ben-Hur, in the role of the Magistrate. Harry Secombe, who played Mr. Bumble, was well known in Britain but not in the United States, and Oliver Reed, who played Bill Sikes, had just begun to make a name for himself. Producer John Woolf suggested Oliver Reed for the role to the director Carol Reed, without knowing that the two were, in fact, related as nephew and uncle respectively. Many felt that the role of Nancy should have gone to Georgia Brown, who had played the role in the West End production.[3] Classical actor Joseph O'Conor, not well known in the U.S., played Mr. Brownlow.

Ron Moody later told an interviewer that when it was first proposed that he play Fagin, he felt that character was “pretty vicious and unpleasant; I didn’t want to do that. I didn’t want to perpetuate what I considered to be an unfair, unpleasant image of Jewish people.” He came to realize that “that the only way to play Fagin was to forget Dickens and create a clown and I used every trick I could think of to take Fagin away from Dickens’ concept and to bring it into more of an entertainment situation.”[4]

Filming at Shepperton Studios commenced on 23 June 1967.[5]

Music

Reception

Box office

The film earned $10.5 million in theatrical rentals at the US and Canadian box office.[6] and took $77,402,877 worldwide.[7][8] In the United Kingdom, the film played for 90 weeks at the Leicester Square Theatre in London, grossing $1,992,000. It had been seen by 5 million people across the country at that time.[9]

Critical response

 
The performance of Jack Wild received critical acclaim and earned the 16-year-old actor his only nominations for a Golden Globe Award and a BAFTA Award for Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles, as well as nomination for an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, making him the fourth-youngest nominee in the category.

Oliver! received widespread acclaim from critics. It was hailed by Pauline Kael in her review published in The New Yorker as being one of the few film versions of a stage musical that was superior to the original show, which she suggested she had walked out on. "The musical numbers emerge from the story with a grace that has been rarely seen since the musicals of René Clair."[10]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times awarded the film four out of four stars. "Sir Carol Reed's Oliver! is a treasure of a movie," he wrote. "It is very nearly universal entertainment, one of those rare films like The Wizard of Oz that appeals in many ways to all sorts of people. It will be immediately exciting to the children, I think, because of the story and the unforgettable Dickens characters. Adults will like it for the sweep and zest of its production. And as a work of popular art, it will stand the test of time, I guess. It is as well-made as a film can be." He particularly admired Carol Reed's working relationship with the children in the film: "Not for a moment, I suspect, did Reed imagine he had to talk down to the children in his audience. Not for a moment are the children in the cast treated as children. They're equal participants in the great adventure, and they have to fend for themselves or bloody well get out of the way. This isn't a watered-down lollypop. It's got bite and malice along with...romance and humor." Although he stated that the film's roadshow presentation was a minor problem for children, who are not used to long films, he praised the production design, musical adaptation score, and casting and acting, particularly that of Ron Moody and Jack Wild. He concluded, "Oliver! succeeds finally because of its taste. It never stoops for cheap effects and never insults our intelligence. And because we can trust it, we can let ourselves go with it, and we do. It is a splendid experience."[11] He later named the film as the seventh best film of 1968.[12]

John Simon wrote 'Oliver is a nice, big movie musical which it is hard to say anything of special interest to the reader or even to oneself'.[13]

The Philadelphia Inquirer was enthusiastic: "There's atmosphere and airy grace to 'Oliver!.' It has catchy, sometimes beautiful songs and the voices to go with them. It rarely stops moving and it has the touch of melodramatic excitement....a prancing musical film which by reason of its stagecraft and performance is more exhilarating than it was on the stage, better rounded in its 'free' adaptation."[14]

Rotten Tomatoes awards the film a 90% "fresh" rating based on 77 reviews, with an average score of 8/10; the critics' consensus reads: "Oliver! transforms Charles Dickens’ muckraking novel into a jaunty musical Victorian fairytale, buoyed by Ron Moody’s charming star turn and Onna White’s rapturous choreography."[15]

At his death in 2015, The Forward said that Moody succeeded in transforming "a viciously anti-Semitic literary portrait into a joyous musical onscreen image."[4]

Accolades

Oliver!, along with Columbia Pictures' other Best Picture nominee Funny Girl, secured a combined total of 19 Academy Award nominations, the most nominations for musicals from one studio in a year.

Oliver! was the last G-rated film to win the Academy Award for Best Picture. It was the last movie musical to win the award, until Chicago in 2002 (there have been other musicals nominated such as Hello, Dolly!, Fiddler on the Roof, Cabaret, All That Jazz, Beauty and the Beast and Moulin Rouge!). Oliver! also had the distinction of being the last British film to win Best Picture until Chariots of Fire in 1981.

Award[16] Category Nominee(s) Result
Academy Awards[17] Best Picture John Woolf Won
Best Director Carol Reed Won
Best Actor Ron Moody Nominated
Best Supporting Actor Jack Wild Nominated
Best Screenplay – Based on Material from Another Medium Vernon Harris Nominated
Best Art Direction John Box, Terence Marsh, Vernon Dixon and Ken Muggleston Won
Best Cinematography Oswald Morris Nominated
Best Costume Design Phyllis Dalton Nominated
Best Film Editing Ralph Kemplen Nominated
Best Score of a Musical Picture – Original or Adaptation Johnny Green Won
Best Sound Buster Ambler, John Cox, Jim Groom, Bob Jones and Tony Dawe Won
Honorary Academy Award Onna White Won
American Cinema Editors Awards Best Edited Feature Film Ralph Kemplen Nominated
British Academy Film Awards Best Film Carol Reed Nominated
Best Direction Nominated
Best Actor in a Leading Role Ron Moody Nominated
Best Costume Design Phyllis Dalton Nominated
Best Editing Ralph Kemplen Nominated
Best Production Design John Box Nominated
Best Sound John Cox and Bob Jones Nominated
Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles Jack Wild Nominated
Directors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Carol Reed Nominated
Golden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy Won
Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy Ron Moody Won
Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture Hugh Griffith Nominated
Best Director – Motion Picture Carol Reed Nominated
Most Promising Newcomer – Male Jack Wild Nominated
Laurel Awards Top Musical Won
Top Male New Face Mark Lester Nominated
Ron Moody Nominated
Top Female New Face Shani Wallis Nominated
Moscow International Film Festival[18] Special Prize Carol Reed Won
Best Actor Ron Moody Won
National Board of Review Awards Top Ten Films 9th Place
New York Film Critics Circle Awards Best Film Nominated
Best Director Carol Reed Nominated
Sant Jordi Awards Best Performance in a Foreign Film Ron Moody Won

Preservation

The Academy Film Archive preserved Oliver! in 1998.[19]

Home video

Commencing in the US in 1998, Oliver! has been released worldwide on DVD by Columbia Tristar Home Entertainment and its successor Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. The US DVD has the film, complete with its original overture and entr'acte music, spread across two sides of a double-sided disc, separated at the intermission. Everywhere else, it was issued on a single-sided disc.[20] Since 2013, it has been released on Blu-ray in several countries by Sony, with the US having an additional limited edition release by Twilight Time.[21]

References

  1. ^ "Oliver! (1968)". BFI. from the original on 6 August 2020. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
  2. ^ "The 100 best British films" Archived 3 April 2019 at archive.today. Time Out. Retrieved 26 October 2017
  3. ^ High Fidelity/Musical America. Billboard Pub. 1969. p. 134. from the original on 15 December 2019. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  4. ^ a b Ivry, Benjamin (15 June 2016). . The Forward. Archived from the original on 22 June 2015. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  5. ^ [1] 24 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "Big Rental Films of 1969". Variety. 7 January 1970. p. 15.
  7. ^ "Box Office Information for Oliver!". The Numbers. from the original on 9 February 2012. Retrieved 9 January 2012.
  8. ^ "Box Office and Business for Oliver!". IMDb. from the original on 29 July 2014. Retrieved 9 January 2012.
  9. ^ "'Oliver' Ends London Run; 'Julius Caesar' Replaces". Variety. 10 June 1970. p. 29.
  10. ^ Pauline Kael Going Steady, p.202
  11. ^ Ebert, Roger (22 December 1968). "Oliver! Movie Review & Film Summary". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 14 October 2013 – via RogerEbert.com.
  12. ^ Ebert, Roger (15 December 2004). . Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on 7 July 2013. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
  13. ^ Simon, John (1971). Movies into Film Film Criticism 1967-1970. The Dial Press. p. 329.
  14. ^ Murdock, Henry T. "'Oliver!' Offers Melodrama and Songs." Philadelphia Inquirer, 20 December 1968.
  15. ^ "Oliver!". Rotten Tomatoes. 1968. from the original on 11 February 2017. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
  16. ^ Oliver! at IMDb
  17. ^ "The 41st Academy Awards (1969) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2011.
  18. ^ . MIFF. Archived from the original on 16 January 2013. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
  19. ^ "Preserved Projects". Academy Film Archive. from the original on 13 August 2016. Retrieved 4 August 2016.
  20. ^ "Oliver! DVD comparison". DVDCompare. from the original on 24 October 2015. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  21. ^ "Oliver! Blu-ray comparison". DVDCompare. from the original on 24 August 2020. Retrieved 10 March 2021.

External links

oliver, film, oliver, 1968, british, period, musical, drama, film, based, lionel, bart, 1960, stage, musical, same, name, itself, adaptation, charles, dickens, 1838, novel, oliver, twist, oliver, british, theatrical, release, posterdirected, bycarol, reedscree. Oliver is a 1968 British period musical drama film based on Lionel Bart s 1960 stage musical of the same name itself an adaptation of Charles Dickens s 1838 novel Oliver Twist Oliver British theatrical release posterDirected byCarol ReedScreenplay byVernon HarrisBased onOliver 1960 musicalby Lionel BartOliver Twist1837 novelby Charles DickensProduced byJohn WoolfStarringRon MoodyOliver ReedHarry SecombeShani WallisMark LesterJack WildCinematographyOswald MorrisEdited byRalph KemplenMusic byLionel Bart music and lyrics John Green music score ProductioncompanyRomulus FilmsDistributed byColumbia PicturesRelease date26 September 1968 1968 09 26 Running time153 minutesCountryUnited Kingdom 1 LanguageEnglishBudget 10 millionBox office 77 4 millionDirected by Carol Reed from a screenplay by Vernon Harris the picture includes such musical numbers as Food Glorious Food Consider Yourself As Long as He Needs Me I d Do Anything You ve Got to Pick a Pocket or Two and Where Is Love It stars Ron Moody Oliver Reed Harry Secombe Shani Wallis Jack Wild and Mark Lester in the title role Filmed at Shepperton Film Studio in Surrey it was a Romulus production by John Woolf and was distributed internationally by Columbia Pictures At the 41st Academy Awards for 1968 Oliver was nominated for eleven Academy Awards and won six including Best Picture Best Director for Reed and an Honorary Award for choreographer Onna White At the 26th Golden Globe Awards the film won two Golden Globes Best Motion Picture Musical or Comedy and Best Actor Musical or Comedy for Ron Moody The British Film Institute ranked Oliver the 77th greatest British film of the 20th century In 2017 a poll of 150 actors directors writers producers and critics for Time Out magazine ranked it the 69th best British film ever 2 Contents 1 Plot 1 1 Act 1 1 2 Act 2 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Casting 3 2 Music 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical response 4 3 Accolades 5 Preservation 6 Home video 7 References 8 External linksPlot EditAct 1 Edit At a workhouse in Dunstable orphans are served their daily gruel Food Glorious Food A group of boys draw lots with Oliver drawing the tangled one forcing him to approach Mr Bumble and the Widow Corney and ask Please sir I want some more Enraged Bumble takes Oliver to the governors for punishment Oliver and then parades Oliver in the street to sell him off as an apprentice Boy for Sale Mr Sowerberry an undertaker buys Oliver but Sowerberry s other apprentice Noah Claypole bullies Oliver when Oliver retaliates Oliver is thrown first into a coffin and then into the cellar where he laments his lack of a family Where Is Love Suddenly he discovers the window grate is unlocked Oliver escapes A week later Oliver reaches London He meets the Artful Dodger who instantly takes him under his wing Consider Yourself Dodger brings Oliver to a hideout for young pickpockets led by Fagin who instructs the gang in the art of stealing You ve Got to Pick a Pocket or Two Fagin later meets with Bill Sikes a burglar while Sikes s girlfriend Nancy joyfully remarks on low class life It s a Fine Life When Fagin returns to his den he goes through a secret cache of treasures Oliver wakes up notices Fagin s secret and startles the man who explains that the trove is to help him in his old age You ve Got to Pick a Pocket or Two Reprise In the morning Nancy and her friend Bet arrive at the hideout to collect Sikes s money The boys mock Oliver for his good manners which Nancy finds charming I d Do Anything Fagin sends the boys out for the day teaming Oliver with Dodger Be Back Soon At a bookstall Dodger steals a wallet from Mr Brownlow who quickly mistakes Oliver for being the thief and has police arrest him Fearing Oliver will rat out the gang Fagin and Sikes send Nancy to court where Oliver is too terrified to speak fortunately the bookseller Mr Jessop testifies that Oliver is innocent Brownlow takes Oliver in while Sikes and Fagin send Dodger to follow them to Nancy s displeasure Act 2 Edit Oliver wakes up in Mr Brownlow s luxurious house and happily watches from his balcony the merchants and inhabitants of Bloomsbury Square Who Will Buy Fagin and Sikes decide to abduct Oliver and bring him back to the den with Nancy s help Nancy who has come to care for Oliver at first refuses to help but Sikes physically abuses her forcing her into obedience In spite of this Nancy still loves Sikes and believes he reciprocates As Long as He Needs Me The next morning Mr Brownlow sends Oliver on an errand Before he departs Oliver notices a portrait painting of a beautiful young girl Mr Brownlow notes Oliver s resemblance to the girl his niece Emily who disappeared years ago and begins to suspect he may be Oliver s great uncle During the errand Nancy and Sikes grab Oliver and bring him back to Fagin s den A quarrel ensues over Oliver s future and who keeps the items that Mr Brownlow entrusted to Oliver Oliver s resistance goads Sikes into beating him but Nancy stays Sikes s hand Nancy remorsefully reviews their life but Sikes maintains that any living is better than none Fagin tries to soothe Sikes s temper prompting Sikes to declare that if anyone ratted them out Sikes will kill Fagin Once Sikes and Nancy leave Fagin considers abandoning his criminal life but each imagined alternative proves just as untenable Reviewing the Situation Bumble and Corney pay a visit to Brownlow after he begins searching for Oliver s origin They present a locket belonging to Oliver s mother who arrived at the workhouse penniless and died during childbirth Brownlow recognizes the locket as his niece s and throws the two out enraged that they selfishly chose to keep the trinket and information to themselves until they could collect a reward for it Meanwhile in an attempt to introduce Oliver to a life of crime Sikes forces Oliver to take part in a house robbery The robbery fails when Oliver accidentally awakens the occupants but he and Sikes get away While Sikes and Oliver are gone Nancy fearful for Oliver s life goes to Brownlow confessing her part in Oliver s kidnapping but doesn t state the name of Fagin or Bill Sikes for her own protection Promising to return him to Brownlow at midnight at London Bridge Nancy heads for the tavern When Sikes and Oliver appear Sikes orders his dog Bullseye to guard the boy Nancy starts up a lively drinking song hoping that the noise will distract Sikes Bullseye however alerts Sikes who gives chase As Oliver and Nancy share a farewell embrace at London Bridge Sikes catches up and grabs both of them and throws Oliver aside Nancy then tries to pull Sikes away angering him into dragging her behind the staircase of London Bridge and violently bludgeoning her injuring her fatally Sikes then takes off with Oliver but Bullseye returns to the scene where Nancy has succumbed to her injuries and alerts the police The dog leads Brownlow and an angry mob to the thieves hideout Sikes arrives at Fagin s den and demands money revealing that he killed Nancy as well Upon seeing the approaching mob the thieves disband and flee Sikes runs off with Oliver using him as a hostage During the evacuation Fagin loses his prized possessions which sink into mud Sikes attempts to flee to an adjacent roof but is shot dead in the process by the police Fagin makes up his mind to change his ways for good but just as he is about to walk away a reformed character Dodger appears from nowhere with a wallet he stole earlier They dance off into the sunrise together happily determined to live out the rest of their days as thieves while Oliver returns to Brownlow s home for good Cast EditMark Lester as Oliver Twist Ron Moody as Fagin Jack Wild as Artful Dodger Oliver Reed as Bill Sikes Shani Wallis as Nancy Harry Secombe as Mr Bumble Joseph O Conor as Mr Brownlow Hugh Griffith as the Magistrate Peggy Mount as Corney Darkness Leonard Rossiter as Mr Sowerberry Hylda Baker as Mrs Sowerberry Kenneth Cranham as Noah Claypole Megs Jenkins as Mrs Bedwin Sheila White as Bett Wensley Pithey as Dr Grimwig James Hayter as Mr Jessop Elizabeth Knight as Charlotte Fred Emney as Chairman of the WorkhouseProduction EditCasting Edit The film used mostly young unknowns among them Mark Lester Oliver Shani Wallis Nancy and Jack Wild as The Artful Dodger but also featured Hugh Griffith an Oscar winner for Ben Hur in the role of the Magistrate Harry Secombe who played Mr Bumble was well known in Britain but not in the United States and Oliver Reed who played Bill Sikes had just begun to make a name for himself Producer John Woolf suggested Oliver Reed for the role to the director Carol Reed without knowing that the two were in fact related as nephew and uncle respectively Many felt that the role of Nancy should have gone to Georgia Brown who had played the role in the West End production 3 Classical actor Joseph O Conor not well known in the U S played Mr Brownlow Ron Moody later told an interviewer that when it was first proposed that he play Fagin he felt that character was pretty vicious and unpleasant I didn t want to do that I didn t want to perpetuate what I considered to be an unfair unpleasant image of Jewish people He came to realize that that the only way to play Fagin was to forget Dickens and create a clown and I used every trick I could think of to take Fagin away from Dickens concept and to bring it into more of an entertainment situation 4 Filming at Shepperton Studios commenced on 23 June 1967 5 Music Edit Main article Oliver soundtrack Reception EditBox office Edit The film earned 10 5 million in theatrical rentals at the US and Canadian box office 6 and took 77 402 877 worldwide 7 8 In the United Kingdom the film played for 90 weeks at the Leicester Square Theatre in London grossing 1 992 000 It had been seen by 5 million people across the country at that time 9 Critical response Edit The performance of Jack Wild received critical acclaim and earned the 16 year old actor his only nominations for a Golden Globe Award and a BAFTA Award for Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles as well as nomination for an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role making him the fourth youngest nominee in the category Oliver received widespread acclaim from critics It was hailed by Pauline Kael in her review published in The New Yorker as being one of the few film versions of a stage musical that was superior to the original show which she suggested she had walked out on The musical numbers emerge from the story with a grace that has been rarely seen since the musicals of Rene Clair 10 Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun Times awarded the film four out of four stars Sir Carol Reed s Oliver is a treasure of a movie he wrote It is very nearly universal entertainment one of those rare films like The Wizard of Oz that appeals in many ways to all sorts of people It will be immediately exciting to the children I think because of the story and the unforgettable Dickens characters Adults will like it for the sweep and zest of its production And as a work of popular art it will stand the test of time I guess It is as well made as a film can be He particularly admired Carol Reed s working relationship with the children in the film Not for a moment I suspect did Reed imagine he had to talk down to the children in his audience Not for a moment are the children in the cast treated as children They re equal participants in the great adventure and they have to fend for themselves or bloody well get out of the way This isn t a watered down lollypop It s got bite and malice along with romance and humor Although he stated that the film s roadshow presentation was a minor problem for children who are not used to long films he praised the production design musical adaptation score and casting and acting particularly that of Ron Moody and Jack Wild He concluded Oliver succeeds finally because of its taste It never stoops for cheap effects and never insults our intelligence And because we can trust it we can let ourselves go with it and we do It is a splendid experience 11 He later named the film as the seventh best film of 1968 12 John Simon wrote Oliver is a nice big movie musical which it is hard to say anything of special interest to the reader or even to oneself 13 The Philadelphia Inquirer was enthusiastic There s atmosphere and airy grace to Oliver It has catchy sometimes beautiful songs and the voices to go with them It rarely stops moving and it has the touch of melodramatic excitement a prancing musical film which by reason of its stagecraft and performance is more exhilarating than it was on the stage better rounded in its free adaptation 14 Rotten Tomatoes awards the film a 90 fresh rating based on 77 reviews with an average score of 8 10 the critics consensus reads Oliver transforms Charles Dickens muckraking novel into a jaunty musical Victorian fairytale buoyed by Ron Moody s charming star turn and Onna White s rapturous choreography 15 At his death in 2015 The Forward said that Moody succeeded in transforming a viciously anti Semitic literary portrait into a joyous musical onscreen image 4 Accolades Edit Oliver along with Columbia Pictures other Best Picture nominee Funny Girl secured a combined total of 19 Academy Award nominations the most nominations for musicals from one studio in a year Oliver was the last G rated film to win the Academy Award for Best Picture It was the last movie musical to win the award until Chicago in 2002 there have been other musicals nominated such as Hello Dolly Fiddler on the Roof Cabaret All That Jazz Beauty and the Beast and Moulin Rouge Oliver also had the distinction of being the last British film to win Best Picture until Chariots of Fire in 1981 Award 16 Category Nominee s ResultAcademy Awards 17 Best Picture John Woolf WonBest Director Carol Reed WonBest Actor Ron Moody NominatedBest Supporting Actor Jack Wild NominatedBest Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium Vernon Harris NominatedBest Art Direction John Box Terence Marsh Vernon Dixon and Ken Muggleston WonBest Cinematography Oswald Morris NominatedBest Costume Design Phyllis Dalton NominatedBest Film Editing Ralph Kemplen NominatedBest Score of a Musical Picture Original or Adaptation Johnny Green WonBest Sound Buster Ambler John Cox Jim Groom Bob Jones and Tony Dawe WonHonorary Academy Award Onna White WonAmerican Cinema Editors Awards Best Edited Feature Film Ralph Kemplen NominatedBritish Academy Film Awards Best Film Carol Reed NominatedBest Direction NominatedBest Actor in a Leading Role Ron Moody NominatedBest Costume Design Phyllis Dalton NominatedBest Editing Ralph Kemplen NominatedBest Production Design John Box NominatedBest Sound John Cox and Bob Jones NominatedMost Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles Jack Wild NominatedDirectors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Carol Reed NominatedGolden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture Musical or Comedy WonBest Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy Ron Moody WonBest Supporting Actor Motion Picture Hugh Griffith NominatedBest Director Motion Picture Carol Reed NominatedMost Promising Newcomer Male Jack Wild NominatedLaurel Awards Top Musical WonTop Male New Face Mark Lester NominatedRon Moody NominatedTop Female New Face Shani Wallis NominatedMoscow International Film Festival 18 Special Prize Carol Reed WonBest Actor Ron Moody WonNational Board of Review Awards Top Ten Films 9th PlaceNew York Film Critics Circle Awards Best Film NominatedBest Director Carol Reed NominatedSant Jordi Awards Best Performance in a Foreign Film Ron Moody WonPreservation EditThe Academy Film Archive preserved Oliver in 1998 19 Home video EditCommencing in the US in 1998 Oliver has been released worldwide on DVD by Columbia Tristar Home Entertainment and its successor Sony Pictures Home Entertainment The US DVD has the film complete with its original overture and entr acte music spread across two sides of a double sided disc separated at the intermission Everywhere else it was issued on a single sided disc 20 Since 2013 it has been released on Blu ray in several countries by Sony with the US having an additional limited edition release by Twilight Time 21 References Edit Oliver 1968 BFI Archived from the original on 6 August 2020 Retrieved 9 August 2020 The 100 best British films Archived 3 April 2019 at archive today Time Out Retrieved 26 October 2017 High Fidelity Musical America Billboard Pub 1969 p 134 Archived from the original on 15 December 2019 Retrieved 17 February 2020 a b Ivry Benjamin 15 June 2016 Remembering Fagin and Ron Moody the Man Who Played Him The Forward Archived from the original on 22 June 2015 Retrieved 26 November 2022 1 Archived 24 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Big Rental Films of 1969 Variety 7 January 1970 p 15 Box Office Information for Oliver The Numbers Archived from the original on 9 February 2012 Retrieved 9 January 2012 Box Office and Business for Oliver IMDb Archived from the original on 29 July 2014 Retrieved 9 January 2012 Oliver Ends London Run Julius Caesar Replaces Variety 10 June 1970 p 29 Pauline Kael Going Steady p 202 Ebert Roger 22 December 1968 Oliver Movie Review amp Film Summary Chicago Sun Times Retrieved 14 October 2013 via RogerEbert com Ebert Roger 15 December 2004 Ebert s 10 Best Lists 1967 present Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on 7 July 2013 Retrieved 13 October 2013 Simon John 1971 Movies into Film Film Criticism 1967 1970 The Dial Press p 329 Murdock Henry T Oliver Offers Melodrama and Songs Philadelphia Inquirer 20 December 1968 Oliver Rotten Tomatoes 1968 Archived from the original on 11 February 2017 Retrieved 8 February 2023 Oliver at IMDb The 41st Academy Awards 1969 Nominees and Winners oscars org Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 25 August 2011 6th Moscow International Film Festival 1969 MIFF Archived from the original on 16 January 2013 Retrieved 17 December 2012 Preserved Projects Academy Film Archive Archived from the original on 13 August 2016 Retrieved 4 August 2016 Oliver DVD comparison DVDCompare Archived from the original on 24 October 2015 Retrieved 10 March 2021 Oliver Blu ray comparison DVDCompare Archived from the original on 24 August 2020 Retrieved 10 March 2021 External links EditOliver at AllMovie Oliver at IMDb Oliver at the TCM Movie Database Oliver at Rotten Tomatoes Oliver at the American Film Institute Catalog Oliver at the BFI s Screenonline Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oliver film amp oldid 1147604013, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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