Film Review
Of all Charles Dickens' novels, the one which poses the greatest
challenge for anyone wishing to make a decent film adaptation of it is
probably
Nicholas Nickleby.
Lacking a strong central theme and burdened with a rambling episodic
narrative that is populated with dozens of secondary characters, it
would appear that the novel was written specifically to defy any
attempt at dramatisation. This could explain why to date there
have only been three screen adaptations - this brave attempt from
Ealing Studios made just after the war and two previous silent
versions, which are probably best forgotten.
Ealing's adaptation of
Nicholas
Nickleby was further compromised by the fact it would inevitably
be compared with David Lean's superlative adaptation of
Great Expectations, released
one year before this film. Lean and his team had a far
easier job adapting
Great Expectations, since the
original novel was much shorter and far more focussed than the
monumental tome that Ealing Studios lumbered themselves with.
With Lean's masterpiece still fresh in everyone's memory, Ealing's
Nicholas Nickleby was inevitably
set up for a thrashing from the critics that even the cane-wielding Mr
Squeers could not match.
But is the film really that bad? Once we make allowance for the
muddled plot, which attempts to compress too much of the source novel
into the film, it actually stands up rather well. In his
last film for Ealing, director Alberto Cavalcanti shows an inspired use
of chiaroscuro, achieving a startlingly realistic evocation of Dickens'
dark, dank world in which despicable villains prospered at the expense
of the God-fearing poor. The sequences in the boys' school are
the most memorable, looking like an expressionistic nightmare, with dark
menacing shadows creating a spiders' web effect which we know will
forever imprison the boys in a life of penury and ignorance.
The film also offers some memorable turns from a high calibre cast of
character actors, although some of these admittedly veer towards
over-theatricality. Cedric Hardwicke gives a standout performance as
the villainous Ralph Nickleby, the archetypal Dickensian monster who
takes great relish in tormenting widows and orphans.
Derek Bond makes a sympathetic if over-earnest Nicholas Nickleby,
although he would be far more successful with his portrayal of Captain Oates
in Ealing's subsequent
Scott of the
Antarctic (1948). Some wonderfully over-the-top
contributions from Bernard Miles and Stanley Holloway help to make up
for the dry and somewhat confused narrative, which is the film's only
real failing. Whilst it clearly isn't up to the standard of
David Lean's faultless Dickens adaptations, Cavalcanti's interpretation
of
Nicholas Nickleby still
manages to be a stylish and strangely beguiling work, and a much darker
film than you might expect from Ealing.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Alberto Cavalcanti film:
Rien que les heures (1926)
Film Synopsis
Ralph Nickleby, a mean-spirited usurer, is not pleased when he learns
that he is expected to make provision for his sister-in-law and her two
grown-up children, Nicholas and Kate, after the death of his
brother. Grudgingly, he finds work for Kate as a seamstress in a
London fashion house and has Nicholas take up the post of an assistant
schoolmaster at a private school for boys in Yorkshire. The young
Nicholas is appalled at the way in which his employer, Mr Squeers,
treats the boys, particularly Smike, who is beaten like a dog and
worked like a slave. After a violent confrontation with
Squeers, Nicholas flees the school with Smike and they set about trying
to find gainful employment elsewhere. Fortune smiles on them and
they soon find work with a travelling theatre company run by the kindly
Mr Crummles. Kate is less fortunate and finds herself being used
by her unscrupulous uncle to entertain his business clients...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.