Saturday, December 06, 2025

Top 100 Favorite Movies

             It's taken years, but I finally managed to complete posts for each title on my unofficial list of 100 favorite movies. These are my favorites, not what I'd consider the best films of all time. The list leans heavily towards Hollywood classics from the 1930s-1960s, but there are a few foreign and post-1970 outliers. There is definitely a repetitive feel to many of the posts as, in order to get through these and due to my less-than-spectacular writing skills, I used an essay-type format for most of the titles, consisting of an overview of the film, usually followed by focus on the director's work, then a breakdown of the performers, ending with a wrap-up paragraph discussing the initial public and critical reaction to the movie, along with its awards and legacy. Here is the rundown in order of preference (although if I had to stop at, say, 50 titles and couldn't take all 100 to that desert island, I might have to move some movies around), with links to the actual posts (a few films are mentioned in more than one post):

1) The Wizard of Oz (1939)

2) Psycho (1960)

3) All About Eve (1950)

4) The Shop Around the Corner (1940)

5) The Heiress (1949) and here

6) Singin' in the Rain (1952)

7) The Manchurian Candidate (1962)

8) The Lady Eve (1941)

9) A Streetcar Named Desire (1951)

10) Gone with the Wind (1939)

11) Nights of Cabiria (1957)

12) Laura (1944)

13) Written on the Wind (1956)

14) The Night of the Hunter (1955)

15) The Ox-Bow Incident (1943)

16) Love Me Tonight (1932)

17) Dumbo (1941)

18) Double Indemnity (1944)

19) A Letter to Three Wives (1949)

20) The Tarnished Angels (1957)

21) Leave Her to Heaven (1945) 

22) From Here to Eternity (1953)

23) Lolita (1962)

24) Tootsie (1982)

25) The Rocking Horse Winner (1949)

26) Nashville (1975)

27) You Can Count on Me (2000)

28) Sweet Smell of Success (1957)

29) Vertigo (1958)

30) Midnight (1939)

31) Duck Soup (1933)

32) Tiger Bay (1959)

33) Sunset Boulevard (1950)

34) Strangers on a Train (1951)

35) The Miracle of Morgan's Creek (1944)

36) The Member of the Wedding (1952)

37) Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)

38) Casablanca (1942)

39) National Velvet (1944)

40)  8 1/2 (1963)

41) Duel in the Sun (1946)

42) Peter Pan (1953)

43) Imitation of Life (1959)

44) The Long, Hot Summer (1958)

45) Rebecca (1940)

46) The Awful Truth (1937)

47) The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951)

48) The Apartment (1960)

49) North By Northwest (1959)

50) The Navigator (1924)

51) Rear Window (1954)

52) It Happened One Night (1934)

53) Meet Me in St. Louis (1944)

54) Friendly Persuasion (1956)

55) L'Avventura (1960)

56) Oliver! (1968) and here

57) Hud (1963)

58) Roman Holiday (1953)

59) Young Frankenstein (1974)

60) The African Queen (1951)

61) The Innocents (1961)

62) The Yearling (1946)

63) Bye Bye Birdie (1963)

64) Nightmare Alley (1947)

65) Black Narcissus (1947)

66) The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948)

67) Stalag 17 (1953)

68) The Band Wagon (1953)

69) A Summer Place (1959)

70) Charade (1963)

71) The Maltese Falcon (1941)

72) Splendor in the Grass (1961)

73) Dead of Night (1945) and here

74) Lord Love a Duck (1966)

75) Airplane! (1980)

76) The Hustler (1961)

77) Ace in the Hole (1951)

78) The Ten Commandments (1956)

79) Central Station (1998)

80) These Three (1936)

81) Shadow of a Doubt (1943)

82) Dodsworth (1936)

83) Peyton Place (1957)

84) The Rainmaker (1956)

85) Funny Girl (1968)

86) City Lights (1931)

87) The Poseidon Adventure (1972)

88) Mulholland Drive (2001)

89) Children of Paradise (1945)

90) Intruder in the Dust (1949)

91) Some Like It Hot (1959)

92) Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953)

93) House of Wax (1953) and here

94) Forbidden Planet (1956)

95) Pillow Talk (1959)

96) The Time Machine (1960)

97) The Nutty Professor (1963)

98) Tom Jones (1963)

99) A Hard Day's Night (1964)

100) 12 Angry Men (1957)

Other (mainly classic) movies I've written about on the blog (by year):

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931 & 1941)

I'm No Angel (1933)

Of Human Bondage (1934)

The Thin Man (1934)

Camille (1936)

Jesse James (1939)

The Old Maid (1939)

The Women (1939)

The Letter (1940)

Remember the Night (1940)

Kings Row (1942)

Mrs. Miniver (1942)

Stormy Weather (1943)

Cobra Woman (1944)

Mr. Skeffington (1944)

The Uninvited (1944)

Fallen Angel (1945)

Mildred Pierce (1945)

The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945)

Mother Wore Tights (1947)

Act of Violence (1948)

Beyond the Forest (1949)

Holiday Affair (1949)

White Heat (1949)

Annie Get Your Gun (1950)

Caged (1950)

Storm Warning (1950)

The Bullfighter and the Lady (1951)

Detective Story (1951)

Outcast of the Islands (1951)

A Place in the Sun (1951)

Kansas City Confidential (1952)

Son of Paleface (1952)

Stars and Stripes Forever (1952)

Kiss Me Kate (1953)

Lili (1953)

Robot Monster (1953)

The Long, Long Trailer (1954)

Woman's World (1954)

Guys and Dolls (1955)

Picnic (1955)

The Tender Trap (1955) and here

To Catch a Thief (1955)

The Bad Seed (1956)

Bigger Than Life (1956)

The Man on the Gray Flannel Suit (1956)

That Certain Feeling (1956)

Trapeze (1956)

War and Peace (1956)

Edge of the City (1957)

Island in the Sun (1957)

Witness for the Prosecution (1957)

The Buccaneer (1958)

Gigi (1958)

King Creole (1958)

Some Came Running (1958)

Compulsion (1959)

Gidget (1959)

The Nun's Story (1959)

BUtterfield 8 (1960)

Elmer Gantry (1960)

West Side Story (1961)

Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962)

Lilies of the Field (1963)

The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (1964)

Valley of the Dolls (1967)

Pretty Poison (1968)

Skidoo (1968)

Paper Moon (1973)

Jaws (1975)

Dressed to Kill (1980)

Mommie Dearest (1981)

For Your Consideration (2006)

Into the Wild (2007)

A Christmas Tale (2008)

The Wrestler (2008)

An Education (2009)

Friday, December 05, 2025

Jacques Demy Brightens the Screen with Umbrellas

 

                A lyrical, deeply moving and seminal work from 1960’s cinema, writer/director Jacques Demy’s The Umbrellas of Cherbourg from 1964 details the forlorn tale of two young lovers in three acts set from 1957-1963 with heartbreaking clarity. Taking on the musical genre in revolutionary fashion, Demy opts to unfold the story solely through the use of music and lyrics, forgoing spoken dialogue. Although this choice could render the movie as too artificial and/or gimmicky in nature, the simple but moving plot concocted by Demy, blended with a truly beautiful, inventive score by Michel Legrand set against lush on-location color cinematography by Jean Rabier proves completely captivating to willing viewers eager to become enmeshed in the film’s ultra-romantic, heartfelt and penetrating world. An impeccable cast, including the ethereally lovely Catherine Deneuve in her star-making role as Geneviève Émery, an equally alluring and touching Nino Castelnuovo as Guy Foucher, her true love and Anne Vernon as Geneviève’s worldly-wise mother, Madame Émery, bring rich characters to life with color and truth, helping the talented Demy to bring his challenging, creative endeavor to fruition with taste and conviction that leaves a lasting impression on audiences.

                Starting his film career at 29 during the onslaught of the French New Wave, Demy gained notice immediately as writer/director with his first feature, the romantic drama Lola, followed by the equally compelling Bay of Angels in 1963. Both showed Demy’s talent for vividly capturing the proper mise-en-scène for each carefully composed shot, as well as his skill in allowing the actors to work at their creative best, specifically Lola and Angels stars Anouk Aimée and Jeanne Moreau, respectively. Demy would utilize the skills he’d developed in these initial movies to reach an artistic triumph with his imaginative and focused helming of Umbrellas. Showcasing Deneuve and Castelnuovo as the ideal ultra-romantic couple, Demy powerfully illustrates Geneviève and Guy’s affair through the use of vibrant color visual designs and Legrand’s penetrating score, specifically using the haunting theme (“I Will Wait For You”) repeatedly to more impactful effect as fate plays a hand in the relationship, such as in a wrenching train station farewell and the movie’s unforgettable finale, which assures Umbrella will linger in memory for a viewer, with Demy making penetrating use of those lush musical strains and a melancholic atmosphere. After this peak, Demy would continue to turn out fanciful-yet-ambitious original works, following Umbrellas for the lighter-in-tone musical The Young Girls of Rochefort with Deneuve starring alongside her sister Françoise Dorléac, finishing the decade with the L.A. based Model Shop then returning to more fantastical fare and witnessing his biggest hit via Donkey Skin, with Deneuve in Cinderella mode. Demy proffered another notable achievement with 1982’s Une chambre en ville, before ending his filmography on yet another musical note with 1988’s Trois places pour le 26, shortly before his death in 1990 at 59.

                For Catherine Deneuve, Umbrellas would elevate her to major stardom as one of the leading players in French cinema, a position she upholds to this day. Debuting in films as a teen in 1957, Deneuve bided her time until Demy matched her up with one of her most iconic characters and, with her porcelain features and fragile, sensitive demeanor, Deneuve fills the roll of Geneviève with a subtleness and gentleness that makes a viewer emphasize with her and want to protect her from any cruel fate life throws her way. With Castelnuovo, she encapsulates an idealized version of young lovers that perfectly suits Demy’s ultra-romantic vision, making them one of the enduring couples found in 1960’s movies. After Umbrellas, Deneuve’s reputation as a gifted, instinctive screen performance would quickly grow with her stark work in 1965’s thriller Repulsion and daring, bewitching turn in Luis Buñuel’s erotically charged Belle de Jour, the same year she shown bright in a lighter vein reteaming with Demy for Rochefort. Occasionally Deneuve would work on an international scale in films such as Mayerling, The April Fools, Hustle and as a beautiful vampire in 1983’s intriguing The Hunger but primarily continue as the leading female star of French movies, with 1980’s The Last Metro and finally gaining an Oscar nomination for 1992’s epic-scale Indochine among her significant endeavors. Deneuve entered the 2000s with devastatingly effective, emotionally shattering work as Kathy in Lars von Trier’s profoundly dramatic musical Dancer in the Dark, then led an imposing cast of top female stars in 2002’s 8 Women. Further onscreen success showcasing Deneuve’s undiminished mastery of her craft include 2008’s satisfying A Christmas Tale and highly praised turns in 2013’s On My Way and 2023’s Bernadette.

Umbrellas would grant Italian-born Nino Castelnuovo the role to ensure his legacy in the annuals of film history. Starting his movie career in 1956, Castelnuovo garnered pre-Umbrellas attention primarily from an appearance in another major work of the period, Luchino Visconti’s Rocco and His Brothers from 1960, then out of left field appeared opposite Annette Funicello on the Disneyland television series. With his amiable, wide-eyed innocence, mixed with a more subdued quality as things become more dire, and one of the most exquisite visages ever seen on the screen, Castelnuovo is fortuitously cast as Guy, bringing exactly the right qualities of joy and sadness to the role, while interacting with Deneuve with sincerity and focus, allowing Guy to become a highly sympathetic figure a viewer wants to see content and happy with Geneviève. Castelnuovo seemed destined for a great career as a top leading man after his breakthrough in Umbrellas; however, despite his affinity for the camera as an actor and movie star looks to rival any of his contemporaries, Castelnuovo’s filmography would witness hit-and-miss results as he toiled in movies and television, with a small part in 1996’s Oscar-winning The English Patient among his most high profile appearances in the medium before his death in 2021 at age 84.

As Madame Émery, Geneviève’s knowing, practical mother who runs the umbrella shop responsible for the film’s title, Anne Verdon brings understanding and sophistication to the role that allows the audience to grasp her motivations as, even when the character is working against her daughter’s bond with Guy, Vernon clearly conveys the concern and compassion Madame Émery holds towards Geneviève as she strives to secure a rewarding future for her offspring. As Roland, the suitor who can give Geneviève a better life, Marc Michel is earnest and benevolent recreating his role from Demy’s Lola, the title character of whom Roland refers as his lost love in Umbrellas, in a prime example of how Demy would allow aspects from his different films to merge together in a storyline. Finally, in the other chief role of Madeliene, who quietly and loyally pines for Guy until fate steps in, Ellen Farner brings a touching vulnerability and pensiveness to her movie debut, the key entry in her brief filmography. 

Released in February of 1964 in France, Umbrellas of Cherbourg would find great favor with both cinemagoers and the critics, with a win of the elite Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival that year helping Demy’s masterwork reach a global audience. This wide exposure allowed Umbrellas to score a rare accomplishment at the Academy Awards, as the movie managed to rate nominations in two years, with placement among the Best Foreign Language Films nominees for 1964, then for the 1965 Oscars gaining four nominations, including ones for Demy for Best Original Screenplay and (with Legrand) for Best Song (“I Will Wait for You”) and Best Music Score- Substantially Original and Legrand solely mentioned as a nominee for Scoring of Music- Adaptation or Treatment. The appeal of Umbrellas has only blossomed with time, with no less than Martin Scorsese a strong advocate of the film’s merits, helping ensure this lovely classic has continued to reach a wealth of new fans through re-releases and restorations, leading up to current excellent physical media releases on Blu-ray and 4K from Criterion and placement at #122 on the most recent esteemed Sight and Sound poll from 2022 of Cinema’s greatest movies; also, although not a Christmas-themed film overall, the finale, indelible scene is set during the yuletide season, helping make this classic an apt choice for a holiday screening.. Umbrellas’ alternately serene and distressing tale of young love at a crossroads, with one of the screen’s most memorable and melodious scores playing out amid the ornately colorful, beautiful backdrop of Cherbourg setting an exemplary romantic tonal for the graceful work of a grand cast, provides beneficial viewing for anyone interested in exploring Demy’s work via one of his most moving and creative offerings.

Monday, December 01, 2025

Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine Commingle with Elan in Wilder’s Apartment

 

1960 proved a banner year in cinema, with big productions following a traditional style of moviemaking (i.e. Spartacus, From the Terrace, Swiss Family Robinson) vying for patronage with films indicating a shift of audience interest towards more mature subject matter, such as Elmer Gantry and Hitchcock’s shocking Psycho. Ideally combining aspects of both old and new cinematic styles, director/writer/producer Billy Wilder’s The Apartment manages to infuse its cynical tale featuring adultery, attempted suicide and naked ambition with elements of romance and high comedy, resulting in a deeply satisfying, moving and funny experience for viewers interested in an assessable-yet-unorthodox storyline. Wilder and his ace writing partner I.A.L. Diamond, hot off their triumph the previous year with the riotous smash hit Some Like it Hot, concocted an incisive original screenplay of wit, dramatic force and merit. Striking B&W camerawork by Joseph LaShelle, powerful score by Adolph Deutsch and an incredible cast of talented pros led by Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine and an against-type Fred MacMurray allows Wilder to impressively maintain a sense of fluidity, humor and emotional depth while detailing a scenario unlike any other during the movie’s 125-minute run time.

As C.C. Baxter, the affable-yet-determined office worker looking to rise up the corporate ladder through hard work and a side hustle which entails colleagues with more status to use his title residence for their after-hours trysts, Jack Lemmon laid the blueprint for his soon-to-be superstar persona on screen as an extremely likeable everyman with whom viewers could identify with and believe, whether Lemmon was playing heroes in comedy or drama mode. Starting his film career as a leading man on a high note opposite Judy Holliday in 1954’s George Cukor-directed It Should Happen to You, Lemmon quickly rose in rank, winning his first Oscar for his impressive comedic skill in one of 1955’s biggest hits, Mister Roberts, then rising higher after his hilarious, inventive work in his initial Hot teaming with Wilder. Apartment would showcase how skillfully Lemmon could shift between pathos and comedy in a role, sometimes in the same scene. His leaning into more dramatic acting via his work as Baxter would allow Lemmon great success, with 1962’s Days of Wine and Roses finding the star pushing himself to heretofore untested dramatic depths, with several Oscar nominations and a second win for Save the Tiger bringing Lemmon recognition as one of the finest serious actors of his generation, in addition to his fame as a top comic on screen.  

Shirley MacLaine, whose screen career had been on a steady path upward since her impressive debut in Alfred Hitchcock’s The Trouble with Harry in 1955, found one of her signature roles as the forlorn elevator operator Fran Kubelik, who catches Baxter’s eye, then gets to know him better under very unusual circumstances. Discovered in ‘out of nowhere’ fashion on Broadway in The Pajama Game after going on for star Carol Haney, MacLaine’s quirky, impish screen persona allowed her to grab attention in a variety of roles, including 1956’s Oscar-winning smash Around the World in Eighty Days and her riveting Oscar-nominated work as goodtime gal Ginny in Some Came Running, wherein she managed to balance comic and dramatic aspects with skill, flair and great individuality, making her a perfect fit for the multidimensional, somewhat beatnik Fran. MacLaine handles her comic lines with deft precision, while also emoting Fran’s despondency with shattering force, specifically during a Christmas Eve sequence. She has a great, friendly chemistry with Lemmon, making one root for this touching, offbeat couple. MacLaine would reteam with Lemmon and Wilder for another big hit, Irma la Douce, and carry on with one of the most diverse and successful careers in show business as both actor and writer, gaining an Oscar in the process and a rich filmography unrivaled by most of her peers.

Fred MacMurray, just around the time he was becoming one of America’s favorite father figures via Disney hits such as The Shaggy Dog and the television debut of My Three Sons later in 1960, would offer one of his most laudable portrayals in the change-of-pace role of Jeff Sheldrake, Baxter’s seemingly easy-going but arrogant, egocentric boss. Starting his career as a saxophone player before making a strong impact in 1930’s and 1940’s romantic comedies alongside the likes of Carole Lombard, Claudette Colbert, Barbara Stanwyck and Katharine Hepburn among others, MacMurray would largely remain in light comedies for the next couple of decades, with Wilder allowing MacMurray his best chance to show a darker side in 1944’s Double Indemnity, one of the greatest noirs and 1954’s The Caine Mutiny also displaying MacMurray in less-than-noble mode. Wilder, wanting to utilize MacMurray again for an unsavory character, pulls no punches in illustrating all the unsympathetic aspects of the part, while his star does an ace job using his established genial film persona to underline what a dishonest, chauvinistic egoist Sheldrake is at heart. MacMurray would become increasingly iconic as an amiable figure in films and television during the rest of his career, with The Apartment remaining a great example of how dramatically stirring he could be when given the right opportunity.

Jack Kruschen scored a career breakthrough as Dr. Dreyfuss, Baxter’s neighbor who figures importantly in the plot mid-film. Kruschen brings a nice gravitas to the proceedings in these compelling scenes with the two stars, while also throwing out some sage, amusing observations with a calm resourcefulness that adds dimension to the role, illustrating the wisdom and morality the doctor possesses. The talented Edie Adams also figures importantly in the story as Miss Olsen, Sheldrake’s observant secretary and former lover, making a strong impact with scant screentime. Adams had established herself on stage (winning a Tony for Li’l Abner) and television, portraying a variety of characters and offering on-point impressions of Marilyn Monroe, among others, opposite husband and television pioneer Ernie Kovacs, before her impressive Apartment impact, wherein Adams first invests Miss Olsen with a comic sensibility (especially in a drunken encounter with Fran) then, in keeping with the dynamics of the film’s overall tone, shows the character’s switch to regret, bitterness and bravery as Miss Olsen is forced to re-assess her dealings with Sheldrake, both as employer and former flame.

Hope Holiday, after Broadway work and a film debut the previous year in Li’l Abner, gains perhaps her most notable role as Margie McDougall, the wry, lackadaisical Mrs. whom Baxter picks up at a bar, using her unique raspy voice and some off-kilter line readings to create a portrait of a zany original in only a couple of scenes. Ray Walston and David White (a few years before their greater fame on t.v. in My Favorite Martian and Bewitched), David Lewis and Willard Waterman all do distinct work as the four unscrupulous colleagues vying for individual time at Baxter’s busy pad. Joan Shawlee, a year after scoring as a brassy bandleader in Hot, stands out as a switchboard operator who trysts at the apartment to open the film, and Joyce Jameson impresses early in the film in a clear take-off on Marilyn Monroe (wearing a Monroe dress from Hot), with a breathy vocal delivery that does Marilyn proud.

Released in June 1960, The Apartment was received with abundant critical praise, although a few expecting a light comedy ala Hot were taken aback by the stark, dramatic adult themes involved in the film. Audiences fully embraced Wilder’s latest acerbic offering, leading to The Apartment ending up one of the top hits of the year, eventually gaining $9,300,000 in rentals (according to Variety). The memorable theme song also resonated, with an instrumental by Ferrante & Teicher hitting Billboard’s top ten. Come awards season, Apartment racked up plenty of hosannas, placing among the top ten films of the year on Time, The New York Times and the National Board of Review lists, with MacLaine winning Best Actress at the Venice Film Festival and the film, Lemmon and MacLaine taking top honors at the British Academy Awards, a feat mirrored at the Golden Globes. Wilder was cited as Best Director at the New York Film Critics (in a tie with Jack Cardiff for Sons and Lovers, the film which also tied with The Apartment for Best Motion Picture) and won outright at the Director’s Guild of America, while Wilder and Diamond won screenplays awards from New York and the Writers Guild of America.

 The Academy Awards granted the movie ten nominations (including nods to Lemmon, MacLaine and Kruschen) and five wins, three for Wilder (Best Picture, Director and Original Screenplay), cementing its status as one of the most praised and profitable films of its era. Subsequent generations of filmgoers have continued to find great merit in The Apartment. A musical reworking of the material led to a 1968 Broadway hit, Promises, Promises, and the film has placed high on “All-Time” lists, entering the National Film Registry in 1994, then coming in at #93 on the AFI’s first list of Greatest Films, then moving up to #80 on the 10th Anniversary list, and ranking as high as #14 on the esteemed Sight and Sound poll (during 2002). Over the six decades since its release, The Apartment, which also serves as an interesting choice for holiday viewing due to the story unfolding during the Christmastime to New Year’s Eve period, has lost none of its capacity to wow audiences with its adroit, persuasive blend of humor and conflict, well-earning its reputation as one of the prime entries in the screen endeavors of Wilder, his sterling cast and anyone else associated with this formidable classic.

Friday, November 28, 2025

Elizabeth Taylor Rides the Course to Stardom in National Velvet

 

                Blessed with peak MGM production values and direction by Clarence Brown that assures the central story unfolds with taste, skill and humor, National Velvet provides one of the most indelible and appealing family films to come out of Hollywood. Based on the 1935 novel by Enid Bagnold (beautifully adapted by Helen Deutsch) the movie focuses on the adventures of Velvet Brown, a young Sussex girl with a passion for horses that informs her purpose in life, to the extent she finds herself training her prized steed, “Pie,” for the Grand National. The fanciful-yet-heartwarming story unfolds with uncommon charm and potency, while a top cast inhabits each character with individuality and truth. Herbert Stothart’s lovely score, Robert J. Kern’s fine editing and Leonard Smith’s lush Technicolor cinematography are other contributing factors making Velvet a memorable, moving watch throughout its 123 minutes.

                For Clarence Brown, Velvet mark yet another banner MGM title in an imposing list of credits, after first starting his directorial career during the Silent Era. Although not as well known today as some of his esteemed contemporaries, Brown regularly created high-profile films featuring top stars (Garbo and Joan Crawford, both of whose films Brown frequently helmed, chief among them), such as Garbo’s sound debut in Anna Christie, A Free Soul, The Rains Came and, just before Velvet, 1943’s involving The Human Comedy, amassing six Best Director Academy Award nominations in the process. It’s clear watching Velvet the adept Brown is in full control of his craft, ensuring his fine players’ rich portrayals are properly showcased while moving the tale along from scene-to-scene with class and distinction. After his work on Velvet, Brown would score as solidly with his follow-up family (and animal) oriented film, The Yearling, then closing out the decade with one of his finest accomplishments, 1949’s Intruder in the Dust, a stark, thought-provoking adaptation of the William Faulkner novel exploring themes of racial tension in a small southern community, before retiring from helming MGM films after 1952’s Plymouth Adventure.

                At the tender age of 12, Elizabeth Taylor rose to the top ranks of Hollywood’s most gifted young stars with her enchanting work in Velvet. Starting in films at nine, Taylor had previously made a “Who is that!” impact in 1943’s Lassie Come Home and as the title character’s gentle, caring friend in Jane Eyre, during one of the best opening sequences found in a classic movie, wherein as orphan Helen Burns Taylor and the equally gifted child star Peggy Ann Garner (in the title role) create a convincing, touching relationship in scant screentime. The beautiful young star brings an ethereal conviction to Velvet, perhaps the role she desired more than any other in her career (when first told she was too short for the part, Taylor reportedly replied “I’ll grow, I’ll grow!!,” which she did). With sensitive, skillful playing, Taylor interacts beautifully with her costars, in the process fully involving the viewer with Velvet’s desires and exploits, climaxing in one of the most exciting racing sequences in film. Velvet would be the auspicious breakthrough of a legendary screen career, with Taylor reaching peak success as one of Filmdom’s most beautiful and accomplished players during the 1950s and 1960s, wherein she starred such major films as A Place in the Sun, Giant and Cleopatra, and won her two Best Actress Oscars (out of five nominations) for Butterfield 8 and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Taylor’s fortunes on the screen would become more hit-and-miss after her glory years, until she capped her career with an amusing cameo in The Flintstones, while she simultaneously dabbed in other ventures such as a highly successful perfume line, and heroically became one of the strongest voices and advocates in the fight against AIDS.

                Top-billed Mickey Rooney does some of his finest dramatic work as Michael Taylor, the wayward former jockey who enters the Brown household and helps Velvet with her of dreams of Pie running in the Grand National. One of the most imposing talents to ever hit a screen and already a veteran at 24 after debuting on the vaudeville stage before the age of two, Rooney does an admirable job in downplaying his theatricality that had served him so well in musicals and comedies, lending a depth and honesty to his playing, specifically in his best moment, wherein Mike recounts to Velvet why he doesn’t ride anymore. Rooney was nearing the end of his phenomenal run as one of MGM’s biggest stars, with three years atop the Quigley poll of the biggest box-office draws as his stint as Andy Hardy and ace teaming with Judy Garland in a series of hit musicals doing much to place Rooney at the apex of the Hollywood heap. Velvet represents possibly his last great MGM role, just after gaining his second Best Actor Oscar nod for earnest work in The Human Comedy. Post-Velvet, Rooney would witness abundant highs and lows onscreen and off, with two more Oscar nods (in the Supporting Actor category, as Rooney became a character actor with plenty of elan) and a 1979 triumph on Broadway opposite fellow MGM pro Ann Miller in Sugar Babies among his notable later-career accomplishments.

                Anne Revere makes a strong impact as Mrs. Brown, Velvet’s loving, calm, practical and supportive mother, who also assists Velvet in attaining her goals, while recalling her former glory as a swimmer in one of the film’s most moving passages. After a 1934 debut in films, the same year she gained a major Broadway success starring Lillian Hellman’s controversial hit The Children’s Hour, Revere would witness a stellar 1940s in movies, particularly at 20th Century Fox, wherein she stood out in such high profile movies as The Song of Bernadette, Fallen Angel, Forever Amber and 1947’s Best Picture  Oscar winner Gentlemen’s Agreement, with Revere gaining three Academy Award nominations and a win by the close of the decade, before her esteemed career was shattered by blacklisting via the ignoble HUAC, causing a two-decade gap in her film work after a brief but telling appearance in 1951’s A Place in the Sun. Donald Crisp, one of the most reliable character actors in film with an imposing list of credits dating from the early years of cinema, including Intolerance, Broken Blossoms, Red Dust, Mutiny on the Bounty and his Oscar for How Green Was My Valley, adds a welcome comic touch to his work as Velvet’s stern but caring father, while Angela Lansbury, in the second film of her illustrious career after debuting with style and a maturity beyond her years with Oscar nominated work in Gaslight, also scores in a lighter mode as Velvet’s romantic, slightly pretentious sister.

Jackie ‘Butch’ Jenkins, who had made a major impression opposite Rooney the previous year in Comedy film debut, is equally amazing as Velvet small brother, Donald. Jenkins has a completely natural, highly individual style for a child performer, and is beguiling every time the precocious tyke is onscreen. In one sequence, Donald has an outburst that is so riveting one wonders how much of the scene is real or acted, concerning the emotive aspects involved therein, as Jenkins depicts Donald’s tormented state with a spontaneity and emotional resolve that leaves a viewer gaping in admirable wonder at the tyke’s innate, highly developed thespian gifts. As with many child stars before him, Jenkins’ career would be aborted with the advent of adolescence, but not before gaining a few more choice MGM assignments, including following up his superior Velvet work with 1945’s moving Our Vines Have Tender Grapes opposite Margret O’Brien and Edward G. Robinson, working with director Fred Zinnemann in the offbeat My Brother Talks to Horses, then ending his filmography in 1948 after reteaming with Rooney for Summer Holiday  and working with O’Brien again in his final film, Big City. Others making their presences felt include Juanita Quigley as Velvet’s other sister, Malvolia, Reginald Owen, as Pie’s disgruntled initial owner, and Norma Varden as the warm teacher seen at the movie’s outset.

                With a December 1944 New York premiere and an early 1945 release in Los Angeles, National Velvet became a major hit, providing Taylor with her foray into top stardom, wherein she would remain for the rest of her fruitful MGM years, and far beyond. Critical praise matched audiences’ enthusiasm for the movie, with the New York Times placing Velvet on the 1944 Top Ten list, while at the Oscars for 1945, Velvet scored with nominations for Best Director, Best Color Cinematography, Best Art Direction and wins for Kern’s editing and Best Supporting Actress for Revere. Enduring in the public’s affections over the years through re-releases, frequent televisions showings and via physical media, the film gained inclusion on the National Film Registry’s 2003 list of films chosen for preservation. A recent Blu-ray presentation from Warner Archives allows those who want to experience one of the loveliest films concerning the hopes and dreams of childhood, featuring Elizabeth Taylor and the rest of an outstanding cast at their most sublime, to see this classic in a pristine print, whether viewing National Velvet for the first time or for an equally satisfying rewatch.

Friday, November 21, 2025

Julie Harris and Ethel Waters Skillfully Attend to Culler’s Eventful Member of the Wedding

 

The poetic, perceptive literature of author Carson McCullers has been the basis for several film adaptions of her prime works, featuring an array of unorthodox, complex characters and mature situations, found in such tales as Reflections in a Golden Eye and The Heart is a Lonely Hunter. However, the first film produced from a McCullers’ story rates as possibly the most satisfying rendering of one of the Georgia native’s masterful works involving a Southern setting. Producer Stanley Kramer, after finding great success pairing with director Fred Zinnemann early in 1952 via the classic Western High Noon, sought a quality reteaming via an adaptation of The Member of the Wedding, a moving coming-of-age story based on McCullers’ classic 1946 novel and its 1950 acclaimed Broadway adaptation.  Featuring extraordinary, sensitive work by Zinnemann and stars Julie Harris and Ethel Waters, who beautifully recreate their original stage roles and make McCullers’ insightful prose constantly ring true to life, this lovingly crafted cinematic Member offers a mesmerizing view into the world of some of McCullers’ most haunting characters.

Zinnemann, after a 1936 directorial debut in film, was gaining respect as one of Hollywood’s most acclaimed filmmakers after finding success in the post-WWII era with realistically shot and expertly acted work such as The Search, Act of Violence, The Men, Noon and an Oscar-winning 1951 (pseudo) documentary short, Benjy. For Member, Zinnemann handles the Edna and Edward Anhalt screenplay adaptation with care and dexterity, wisely emphasizing the key work of Harris and Waters, allowing them to preserve their landmark, dedicated performances. With adeptly set up shots and close-ups artfully lensed by cinematographer Hal Mohr, Zinnemann is able to enhance his stars’ stellar work as they find a rhythm and spontaneity fit for the screen, while maintaining the theatrical vividness that made their singular depictions a Broadway talking point in 1950. With varying degrees of success, Zinnemann attempts to “open up” the play with some shots outside the Addam’s kitchen wherein most of the action takes place, including Frankie’s journey into town to see her father, then via her solo excursion later in the film, but fortunately keeps most of the action front and center around the Addam’s homestead and backyard, helping an audience to become fully enmeshed in Frankie’s isolated environment. After Member, Zinnemann would again show his knack for gaining top performances while depicting mature themes in compelling fashion with his follow-up, 1953’s From Here to Eternity, one of the biggest this and most lauded films of the era then, after a switch to musicals helming the large-scale production of Oklahoma!, returning to dramas of class and distinction via A Hatful of Rain, The Nun’s Story, The Sundowners, A Man for All Seasons and 1977’s Julia, a late-career success.

Julie Harris, recreating her star-making stage performance as Frankie Addams, the alternately sensitive and volatile 12-year-old tomboy eloquently yearning to find the “We of me” with her military brother and his bride-to-be (hence the title), gives a fearless, commanding performance that conveys every aspect of Frankie’s multifaceted persona, from the stubbornness that prevents the dreamy-but-difficult girl from listening to reason concerning the wedding, to a fragility that makes a viewer sympathetic to Frankie’s plight as a lonely outcast restless to find a connection. As Frankie, Harris switches from moments of calm to electrifying outbursts wherein she combines naked emotionalism and a more artful control of her craft with a flair belying her lack of experience in front of the camera. Harris understands the pain, imagination and intensity and that drive Frankie’s unpredictable actions and, although 26 at the time of filming, is so convincingly focused and involved in the part, she allows a viewer to suspend disbelief that she isn’t the preteen Frankie with her every look and gesture. With an adventurous spirit and complete absorption in her role, Harris gives a rare example of the magical affect a wholly realized performance can have on the screen. After this important start in movies, Harris would continue primarily on stage wherein she made her 1945 debut, becoming one of the most influential artists in her field with five Best Actress Tony awards, while also returning to film on occasion, with East of Eden, The Haunting and a return to McCullers’ territory in Reflections marking some of her finest screen efforts, and finding additional success on television, wherein her finely-pitched performances brought Harris three Emmy awards.

Ethel Waters is equally astonishing in transforming her role as Berenice, the worldly-wise, warm cook/housekeeper and mother figure for Frankie, to the screen. With a rich, rewarding career behind her on stage, screen and recordings, including an Oscar nomination for 1949’s Pinky, Waters utilizes her wealth of experience to give a faultless performance filled with wit, tenderness and intelligence. Clearly comfortable in a role she perfected and innately knew how to attune for the screen with subtle clarity, Waters embellishes Berenice’s every thought and mood with the force of her thespian talents in full evidence throughout. Whether Bernice is playfully teasing Frankie for her pretensions or, with profound depth, recalling her one true love in stunning close-up, Waters equals Harris in hypnotic watchability. In perhaps the film’s most unforgettable moment, Berenice sings “His Eye is On the Sparrow” to comfort Frankie and her little cousin, neighbor and best friend, John Henry, and Waters truly heartfelt rendition of the hymn rates as one of the most beautiful and moving moments found in film. Waters would act in a few more movies, ending with 1959’s The Sound and the Fury, but Member provided her with her most potent role, and serves as a reminder of Waters’ remarkable ability as a screen actor of the finest caliber.

Ten-year-old Brandon DeWilde, as the bespeckled, owlish-looking and precocious John Henry, also makes a fine film debut faithfully transferring his Broadway role to the screen. DeWilde lends a refreshingly straightforward and relaxed tone to his playing, meshing with his two dynamic costars to help bring a sense of effortlessness to their scenes, avoiding the overly cute and rehearsed type of acting sometimes found among child stars, or in stage-to-scene transitions, period. DeWilde appears completely at ease on camera, portraying John Henry, who in his way is as free-spirited and unique as Frankie, without a sign of awkwardness. Already making his mark via Member and a coveted appearance on the cover of Life magazine earlier in 1952, DeWilde would gain his biggest fame the following year as the hero-worshipping Jody in Shane, which led to him being (at the time) the youngest actor ever nominated for an Academy Award. Moving into his adolescent years, DeWilde would continue to flourish offering fine portraits of sensible young men coming of age, as opposed to the many peers striving in these type of roles for angst-filled acting in the wake of James Dean’s passing, with adroit work in such films as Blue Denim, All Fall Down and one of the 1960s chief film dramas, Hud. Member is largely centered around Frankie, Berenice and John Henry; however, among the rest of the cast, William Hansen does well as Frankie’s sometimes patient, sometimes exasperated father, Nancy Gates exudes compassion as Janice, the bride-to-be, James Edwards adds fervor to his playing of Berenice’s wayward foster brother, Honey Camden Brown and former child actor Dicke Moore makes his final screen appearance as the young soldier Frankie encounters in town.

                Released in December of 1952, The Member of the Wedding proved too offbeat to general audiences to repeat its Broadway success but found favor with critics impressed by Zinnemann’s moving stage-to-screen translation of the material, and the profound, overpowering work of Harris and Waters. During awards season, Zinnemann was singled out for his direction of the more popular High Noon over his conscientious, deft work on Member; however, the merits of the movie did attract some kudos, with inclusion on Time magazine’s top ten list, DeWilde earning a special Golden Globe for Juvenile performance, and Harris’ monumental film debut gaining the movie’s sole Academy Award nomination, for Best Actress. Although the movie remains something of a hidden gem for most audiences, the impactful nature of Frankie’s quest for happiness lingers in memory long after a viewing, and movie lovers interested in seeing a sublimely interpreted example of McCullers’ singular work will find ample rewards attending the stellar Member of the Wedding. 

Friday, November 14, 2025

Sir Carol Reed Hits All the Right Notes with the Diverting Oliver!

 

                Offering an intoxicating cavalcade of absorbing drama (including tragic elements), enlivening comedy, beautifully constructed and performed musical numbers, and a host of richly drawn, unforgettable characters portrayed in pitch-perfect style by an ideally chosen cast, 1968’s rousing Oliver! provides veteran director Carol Reed the chance to gain a late-career crowning glory helming a colorful change-of-pace production with his distinct taste, style and talent. Based on the 1960 London hit (which also scored on Broadway in 1963), the moving, creditably drawn musical retelling by Lionel Bart of Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist reaches the screen with maximum impact, thanks to Reed’s sure hand in opening up events to bring a spontaneous, natural flow to Vernon Harris’ involving screenplay, specifically when moving into some artfully setup, enthralling numbers aided by Oona White’s playful, exhilarating chorography. Also utilizing a cast of pros to emphasize their multi-talents in stunning fashion as they enact all the humor, humanity and heartbreak found in the story, Reed is able to craft a singular musical entertainment that deserves mention among the best works of its genre.

                By this stage in his esteemed career Reed, who become “Sir” in 1952 upon his knighthood, had gained fame and respect as one of the cinema’s most valued talents, with a 1935 start in British films via Midshipman Easy, before helming such classic offerings as The Stars Look Down, Kipps, then co-directing The True Glory with Garson Kanin, which went on to win the Best Documentary Oscar. Reed moved onto “Heavyweight” status among directors with his incredible late-1940’s one-two-three punch of Odd Man Out, The Fallen Idol and closing out the decade at his zenith with The Third Man. All three landmark films won British Academy Awards for Best British Film (with Third Man also winning the Grand Prize at Cannes), with the last two also gaining Reed Best Director wins from Britain and Oscar nominations for his direction. The 1950s also proved fruitful for Reed, with the fascinating Outcast of the Islands, A Kid for Two Farthings, gaining a major hit with the entertaining Burt Lancaster-Gina Lollobrigida-Tony Curtis starrer Trapeze, The Key, then finishing the decade with the bright comedy of Our Man in Havana, penned by Graham Greene and starring Alec Guinness. The new decade would see Reed slowing down his film output while maintaining his status as a top-tier director, taking on the challenging The Agony and the Ecstasy prior to his work on Oliver!

 However, despite his honorable achievements, Reed was a somewhat out-of-left-field choice to oversee an elaborate, large scale musical comedy/drama, and it’s admirable how effectively Reed, seemingly in his comfort zone, appears to skillfully ensure one excellent staged sequence following another, be they of a musical or dramatic ilk, from the introduction of the orphaned title character toiling at a workhouse before famously asking for “more” gruel, to the joyous, free-spirited ”Consider Yourself” jaunt through London after Oliver meets the Artful Dodger, then emphasizing the comic liveliness on display in “Be Back Soon” and “You’ve Got to Pick a Pocket or Two,” with Fagin and his brood, before later switching to the delicate aura maintained throughout the lovely “Who Will Buy” number, wherein Oliver witnesses marketers beginning to sell their wares at the day’s onset. Reed is firmly in control of each tonal shift in the eventful storyline, and, as in his best films, he maintains a clear rapport with each actor, allowing them to offer believable, stellar characterizations that allows an audience to understand their motives and strongly relate to them. Reed would only direct two more movies following this astounding effort, ending his career with 1972’s Follow Me! Before his passing in 1976, with Oliver! serving as his last great success, and one that aptly illustrates Reed’s undimmed mastery of his craft.

For the title role, Reed was fortunate to have largely unknown Mark Lester cast in the demanding part. Born in 1958, Lester started in British television, before making his film debut in 1964, followed by a cameo in Fahrenheit 451 and fine work in 1967’s tense and unusual Our Mother’s House. The maturity and acting skill Lester demonstrated in House served him well as Oliver Twist, with Lester definitely lending both angelic countenance and an apt streetwise toughness to the role, making one believe the fragile-looking but contemplative lad possesses the nerve and knowhow to face the many adversities that come his way with fearless resolve, starting with his initial conflict with the foreboding Mr. Bumble over the aforementioned gruel. Lester’s likable presence and unforced, earnest playing style has the audience firmly rooting for Oliver’s well-being throughout, as a strong protective leaning towards the character grows with every scene. Although he is at least partially dubbed during his musical moments such as “Where is Love?” the singing tones of Kathe Green are an excellent match to Lester’s speaking voice, and one can buy it’s Oliver thrilling the lovely refrain of “Who Will Buy?” After his high-profile breakthrough, Lester would continue in films throughout his adolescence, including the intriguing Whoever Slew Auntie Roo? opposite Shelley Winters, then retire from the screen with 1977’s The Price and the Pauper before studying for, then adopting, a career in osteopathy.

Recreating his star-making stage appearance in the original production, Ron Moody puts his stamp on the flamboyant role of Fagin, the masterful pickpocket who oversees a stable of young boys, and trains them to excel in his ignoble chosen profession. Performing in an animated, free-spirited manner, Moody turns the seedy character into a likable comic figure for the most part, specifically while cavorting with the boys in rollicking fashion in Fagin’s big musical moments, wherein Moody is inspired and irresistibly funny, bringing great levity to the film amid squalid surroundings, with his constant sense of fun making later scenes wherein Fagin faces serve setbacks all the more profound. Moody manages a convincing shift into this more dramatic territory wherein Fagin’s fortunes are quickly altered, and audience sympathy moves to Fagin, despite his criminal background, thanks to Moody’s emotionally centered work. After his major accomplishment Moody, who started in British films in 1958, would foster many more credits on the stage and screen, making another fine comic impression in Mel Brooks’ The Twelve Chairs from 1970, then gaining a Tony nomination for recreating Fagin on Broadway in a 1984 revival of Oliver!, before his final screen work in 2005, then retirement before passing in 2015 at 91.

Theater veteran Shani Wallis, who started on the London stage in the early 1950s but had limited film credits, pours all of her substantial talent into her best chance on the screen to create the definitive portrait of Nancy Sikes, perfectly illustrating the loving character’s compassion, humor and world-weariness as she forms a bond with Oliver and becomes a protective force in his life, thereby facing conflict with her brutish husband, Bill. Wallis, utilizing her solid background as a singer, puts over the show’s big ballad, “As Long As He Needs Me,” with a soulful, poignant persuasion, while adopting a more uplifting, buoyant tone to “It’s a Fine Life” and the incredibly effective and climatic “Oom-Pah-Pah” number, wherein a seemingly carefree Nancy cheerfully attempts to get patrons at the barroom she toils in to join in the lively number and dance along with her, in order to help Oliver out of a dire situation. It’s one of the most dramatic and compelling numbers found in a musical, and Wallis is thrilling to watch as Nancy throws herself into the song with heart and purpose. Wallis instills so much warmth and humanity into the part, that Nancy’s ultimate fate can leave any viewer with a pulse emotionally shattered. Although Wallis never again found a choice part on the level of Nancy, she enjoyed an active career post-Oliver! on the stage and in television (with Columbo, Gunsmoke, Night Gallery and Murder, She Wrote among her credits) and films, including vocal work for 1986’s The Great Mouse Detective (more on Wallis' stellar work in the Oliver! here).

Scoring perhaps his finest screen role as Bill Sikes, Fagin’s nefarious colleague in crime, Oliver Reed comes through for his uncle Carol with a forceful sinisterness that adds a sense of unease to any scene wherein Sikes appears, as one ponders how far the immoral burglar is capable of going to achieve his aims. Surly and unkept, Reed suggests the seething, diabolical aspects that are integral to Sikes’ hateful makeup, and is truly frightening in his violent outbursts. Starting in films in 1955, Reed would gain notice in Hammer movies, particularly as the lead in 1961’s The Curse of the Werewolf, while also gaining noticer for his bad boy persona on and off screen, during the age wherein “The Angry Young Man” become a key factor of British Cinema. After his breakthrough in Oliver! Reed would reach his peak of success in the 1970’s, particularly working with Ken Russell (with whom Reed started collaborating with in 1965) in such notable fare as Women in Love, featuring his famous nude grappling with Alan Bates and 1975’s surreal Who rock opera Tommy, as well as scoring as Athos in The Three (then Four) Musketeers. The 1980’s would prove a downturn in the quality of Reed’s output, but he would rise again for a glorious posthumous final curtain after his passing in 1999 via 2000’s Oscar-winning Gladiator, standing out in the elite cast as Proximo, a tough, sage teacher to the heroic protagonist, Maximus.

Also enacting a signature screen role as the nimble, quick witted Artful Dodger, Jack Wild gives one of the more assured, entertaining teen performances in film. Starting in movies the year prior with a bit in Poor Cow after appearing on stage (including playing on the West End in Oliver! as one of Fagin’s brood, Wild is remarkably self-assured and mature in the showy role, adding impish flair and immense good nature to his ace interpretation of the sly Dodger. Clearly defining the Dodger’s street smart makeup and quick wit, Wild glides through the part with an easy charm, while also handling the Dodger’s final meeting with Fagin, as the youngster shows his support and loyalty towards his father figure, with an intelligence and simplicity that makes the moment one of the most moving in the picture, with an impact that lingers in memory for viewers. After this resounding success, Wild would immediately gain a second major credit as Jimmy on television’s H.R. Pufnstuf, which also hit the big screen in a 1970 iteration, Pufnstuf. Post adolescence, Wild would have trouble maintaining his career wherein, in addition to the normal challenges faced by child stars vying for work as an adult actor he also battled substance abuse issues, but occasionally an interesting opportunity arose, such as a role in 1991’s big hit Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, before his death from oral cancer in 2006 at 53.

Among others in the imposing cast, as the formidable Mr. Bumble Harry Secombe is all one could ask for in the part, in physical stature and thespian temperament, starting out with his “More!?” reply to Oliver, then with his compelling rendering of “Boy for Sale” as he traverses the city streets with the unwanted orphan, using the famous tenor voice that had gained him fame on records to touching effect. Hugh Griffith gives one of his direct, gruff, ostentatious performances as the Magistrate, while Shelia White has a sweetly plaintive quality as Bet, a friend of Nancy. Joseph O’Conor is appropriately fatherly and gentle as Mr. Brownlow, who becomes a benefactor for Oliver, and Megs Jenkins makes an impression as Brownlow’s housekeeper, Mrs. Bedwin, similar to her work in the same occupation in 1961’s The Innocents.

Oliver! proved a major success with both critics and audiences upon its release in late 1968, going on to place among the top ten box-office hits of the year (according to Variety) with an eventual gross of $16,800,000, while scoring a host of rave reviews, helping it stand out during the 1968-69 award season. The film was ranked on the National Board of Review’s list of top ten films, while also scoring Golden Globes for Best Musical/Comedy Picture and Actor (Moody). In a competitive year, Oliver! would go on to win five Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Director, and a special Oscar for Oona White’s inventive choreography. However, due to the Oscar wins (especially Best Picture), Oliver! has faced backlash over the years, falling prey to a lot of barbs being thrown its way as a “lesser” effort that shouldn’t have won over rival nominees, specifically the tonier The Lion in Winter. Used as one of the ultimate examples supporting the tired bias that lighter comedies or musicals don’t merit awards over serious drama, actually watching Oliver! one is hard pressed to measure how Reed and a prodigious cast and crew could have brought the story as gloriously to life as they manage to, bringing Dicken’s timeless tale to the screen with an abundance of riveting drama, comedy and musical elements. One of the most satisfying entries in filmdom’s musical catalog, viewers need only journey along with Oliver! to experience an engrossing adventure filled with laughs, heartache and thrills.