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Great Expectations
Directed byDavid Lean
Produced byAnthony Havelock-Allan
Ronald Neame
Written byDavid Lean
Anthony Havelock-Allan
Cecil McGivern
Ronald Neame
Kay Walsh
Based onGreat Expectations
by Charles Dickens
StarringJohn Mills
Anthony Wager
Jean Simmons
Valerie Hobson
Alec Guinness
Martita Hunt
Finlay Currie
Music byWalter Goehr
CinematographyGuy Green, (Robert Krasker shot opening sequence)[1]
Edited byJack Harris
Production
company
Distributed byGeneral Film Distributors (GFD) Ltd. (UK)
Universal-International (US)
Release date
Running time
118 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget£375,000[2]
Box office$2 million (US rentals)[3]

Great Expectations is a 1946 British film directed by David Lean, based on the 1861 novel by Charles Dickens and starring John Mills, Bernard Miles, Finlay Currie, Jean Simmons, Martita Hunt, Alec Guinness and Valerie Hobson. It won two Academy Awards (Best Art Direction and Best Cinematography) and was nominated for three others (Best Picture, Best Director and Best Screenplay).

The script, a slimmed-down version of Dickens' novel – inspired after David Lean witnessed an abridged 1939 stage version of the novel,[4] in which Guinness (responsible for the adaptation) had played Herbert Pocket, and Martita Hunt was Miss Havisham – was written by David Lean, Anthony Havelock-Allan, Cecil McGivern, Ronald Neame and Kay Walsh. Guinness and Hunt reprised their roles in the film, but the film was not a strict adaptation of the stage version. The film was produced by Ronald Neame and photographed by Guy Green.[5] It was the first of two films Lean directed based on Dickens' novels, the other being his 1948 adaptation of Oliver Twist.

The film is now regarded as one of Lean's best; in 1999, on the British Film Institute's Top 100 British films list, Great Expectations was named the 5th greatest British film of all time.

Plot[edit]

Orphan Phillip 'Pip' Pirrip (Anthony Wager) lives with his shrewish older sister and her kind-hearted blacksmith husband, Joe Gargery (Bernard Miles). One day, Pip runs into an escaped convict, Abel Magwitch (Finlay Currie), who intimidates the boy into getting him some food and a file for his chains. Magwitch is caught when he attacks a hated fellow escapee (Compeyson in the book but un-named in the film), and is taken back to the prison ship.

Miss Havisham (Martita Hunt), an eccentric and rich spinster, arranges to have Pip come to her mansion regularly to provide her with company and to play with her adopted daughter: a cruel but beautiful teenage girl, Estella (Jean Simmons). Estella mocks Pip's coarse manners at every opportunity, but Pip quickly falls in love with her. He also meets a boy called Herbert Pocket, whom he bests in an impromptu boxing match. The visits come to an end when Pip turns 14 and begins his apprenticeship as a blacksmith. Estella also leaves, for France, to learn to become a lady.

Six years later, Miss Havisham's lawyer Mr Jaggers (Francis L. Sullivan) visits Pip (played as adult by John Mills) to tell him that a mysterious benefactor has offered to transform him into a gentleman with 'great expectations'; Pip assumes it is Miss Havisham. He is taken to London, where Mr Jaggers arranges for Pip to stay with Herbert Pocket (played as an adult by Alec Guinness), who will teach him how to behave like a gentleman. From Herbert, Pip learns that Miss Havisham was left at the altar many years ago; she is determined to avenge herself against all men and Estella is her instrument to break men's hearts.

After Pip turns 21, Joe Gargery comes to visit him, bringing a request from Miss Havisham to visit her. There he is delighted to be reunited with Estella (played as an adult by Valerie Hobson), who tells him, 'You must know, Pip, I have no heart.' Estella and Pip spend much time together. She confesses to Pip that despite flirting with the wealthy but unpopular Bentley Drummle, she has absolutely no feelings for him.

Pip suddenly receives another visitor from the past: Magwitch; who reveals that he is Pip's patron, having escaped again and made a fortune sheep-farming in New South Wales. Jaggers is his lawyer, aware that Magwitch is in London and at risk of arrest but formally representing him by correspondence in Australia.

Growing suspicious of Drummle's overtures towards Estella, Pip visits Estella at the old woman's house, where she tells him that she is going to marry Drummle. Pip confronts Miss Havisham, saying, 'I am as unhappy as you could have ever meant me to be.' Miss Havisham, finally realising what she has done, begs his forgiveness. Pip leaves, but when she stands up to follow him, a piece of flaming wood from the fireplace rolls out and ignites Miss Havisham's dress. Her screams alert Pip, who runs back to save her, but fails.

After being warned that an old enemy (Compeyson) has learned that Magwitch is in London, Pip and Herbert prepare to smuggle the old man onto a packet ship leaving England, on which Pip is to accompany him. Pip, Herbert and Magwitch row out to the ship but are intercepted by waiting police, tipped off by Compeyson. Magwitch is injured in a struggle with Compeyson, who is pushed down to his death by the ship's paddlewheels, while Magwitch is captured and sentenced to death.

Magwitch had spoken to Pip of his lost daughter, and Pip's suspicion that she is Estella is confirmed by Jaggers. Pip visits Magwitch, now dying in prison, and tells him of her fate and that he, Pip, is in love with her; Magwitch dies a contented man.

Stricken by illness and with his expectations gone, Pip is taken home and nursed back to health by Joe Gargery. He revisits Miss Havisham's deserted house, where he finds Estella. Her plans for the future have also gone awry, as Drummle had broken off their engagement after Jaggers informed him of her true parentage. Learning that Estella plans to live in seclusion in the house, which she has inherited, Pip proceeds to tear down the curtains and force open the boarded-up windows; for the first time in years sunlight illuminates the room, revealing cobwebs, dust, and decay. Pip tells Estella that he has never stopped loving her. After hesitating, she embraces him and they leave the house together.

Cast[edit]

  • John Mills as Pip as an adult
    • Anthony Wager as Pip as a boy
  • Valerie Hobson as Estella as an adult, and as Molly
    • Jean Simmons as Estella as a girl. (Simmons later played Miss Havisham in the 1989 miniseries)
  • Martita Hunt as Miss Havisham
  • Finlay Currie as Abel Magwitch
  • Francis L. Sullivan as Mr. Jaggers
  • Bernard Miles as Joe Gargery
  • Alec Guinness as Herbert Pocket as an adult
    • John Forrest as Herbert Pocket as a boy
  • Freda Jackson as Mrs. Joe Gargery
  • Eileen Erskine as Biddy
  • Ivor Barnard as Mr. Wemmick
  • Torin Thatcher as Bentley Drummle
  • O. B. Clarence as the Aged Parent
  • Hay Petrie as Uncle Pumblechook
  • Everley Gregg as Sarah Pocket

Locations[edit]

Restoration House in Rochester was Dickens' inspiration for 'Satis House', the decaying mansion of Miss Havisham. The production reproduced Restoration House in Denham Film Studios in Buckinghamshire.[citation needed]

Dickens based Joe Gargery's house on the forge in the village of Chalk, near Gravesend, Kent – a replica was erected on St Mary's Marshes on the Thames Estuary.[4]:212 Pip and Herbert Pocket arrange to meet Magwitch and help him escape at Chatham Docks where slip 8 was used for the scene as well as exterior shots of the prison hulk ships.[citation needed] The River Medway and the adjacent St Mary's Marshes appear in scenes where Pip and his friend, Herbert Pocket, row their boat to a small inn whilst waiting for the paddle steamer to arrive. The ship used in the film was called Empress, dating from the latter half of the nineteenth century and owned by Cosens & Co Ltd of Weymouth. She was brought down to Stangate Creek[citation needed] on the River Medway for the shoot.[6] 'New masts were stepped-in with square rigging and dummy sails, the funnel was lengthened and the paddle-boxes enlarged until it looked exactly right.' [4]:224

The company was based at Rochester, and stayed for six weeks at the Royal Victoria and Bull Hotel – the Blue Boar in Dickens' novel. The unit for the location work for the film was based on a derelict naval fort on Darnett Ness Island in the River Medway.[7]

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Development of the script[edit]

The script is a slimmed-down version of Dickens' novel. It was inspired after David Lean witnessed an abridged 1939 stage version of the novel,[4] by Alec Guinness. Guinness had played Herbert Pocket, and Martita Hunt was Miss Havisham in the stage version of 1939. The script for the film was written by David Lean, Anthony Havelock-Allan, Cecil McGivern, Ronald Neame and Kay Walsh.

David Lean approached Clemence Dane to write the script, but considered what she wrote 'so awful [-] It was hideously embarrassing' – that he decided he and Ronald Neame should write their own versions. In January 1945 they went to the Ferry Boat Inn at Fowey in Cornwall and wrote a continuity. When Lean worked on Brief Encounter Neame worked on the script with Havelock-Allan, and later with Cecil McGivern. Kay Walsh was another writer given a screen credit and wrote the ending.

Production notes[edit]

Great

Alec Guinness admired the way Lean directed him, singling out a close-up in which he had to laugh out loud, and which he struggled to make look un-manufactured. Lean told him to forget about the whole thing, sat by his side, and made a little signal to the camera to start turning in the course of the conversation. He said something which made Guinness laugh and then said, 'Cut'. Guinness: 'So he got this shot on a totally false premise... but thank God. I don't think I would have ever achieved it otherwise'. Valerie Hobson however called the experience of working with Lean on the film 'the unhappiest' and called him 'a cold director – he gave me nothing at all as an actress'.[4]:207, 219

At the end of the film, a shot of Valerie Hobson staring into a mirror was taking longer than anticipated and was suspended – it was lunchtime – and returned to in the afternoon. Later, some three months after the film had been on exhibition, a cinema-goer asked what was meant by a Chad being reflected in the mirror. It seems that a worker on the film had drawn it on the wall during the break in filming, and it is dimly visible in the final scene behind John Mills' shoulder as he says 'I've never ceased to love you when there seemed no hope in my love'.[4]:220

The musical score is credited to Walter Goehr, known primarily as a conductor, but significant portions were actually written by Kenneth Pakeman.

Reception[edit]

Critical[edit]

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The film won critical praise on first release, with many commentators hailing it as the finest film yet made from a Dickens novel. Dilys Powell, writing for The Sunday Times, was 'grateful for cinema which includes so much of Dickens, which constructs its narrative from the original material with scarcely an intrusion' and Richard Winnington, in the News Chronicle, wrote that 'Dickens has never before been rendered effectively into cinema terms'. Gavin Lambert however, writing for the short-lived, but influential Sequence magazine, felt 'that it is not so much an attempt to recreate Dickens on the screen, as a very graceful evasion of most of the issues'. In America James Agee praised the film – 'almost never less than graceful, tasteful and intelligent'.[8]

A 1999 review in the US by Roger Ebert noted the film as 'the greatest of all the Dickens films' and added that 'The movie was made by Lean at the top of his early form'.[9]

Box office[edit]

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It was also the third most popular film at the British box office in 1947[10] and most popular movie at the Canadian box office in 1948.[11][12] According to Kinematograph Weekly the 'biggest winner' at the box office in 1947 Britain was The Courtneys of Curzon Street, with 'runners up' being The Jolson Story, Great Expectations, Odd Man Out, Frieda, Holiday Camp and Duel in the Sun.[13]

The film's critical status has generally stayed high. Kevin Brownlow, a biographer of Lean, wrote that 'Dickens' brilliance at creating characters was matched by Cineguild's choice of actors', and Alain Silver and James Ursini have drawn attention to the film's 'overall narrative subjectivity', finding Lean 'more than faithful to the original's first person style'.[14]

In 1999, it came fifth in a BFI poll of the top 100 British films, while in 2004, Total Film named it the fourteenth greatest British film of all time. It was the first British film to win an Oscar for its cinematography.

Awards[edit]

Great Expectations won Academy Awards in 1947 for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White (John Bryan, Wilfred Shingleton) and Best Cinematography, Black-and-White, and was nominated for Best Director, Best Picture and the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.[15]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^American Cinematographer, March 2000, p.136
  2. ^McFarlane, Brian (1997). Autobiography of British Cinema. Metheun Publishing. p. 432. ISBN978-0413705204.
  3. ^'Top Grossers of 1947', Variety, 7 January 1948 p 63
  4. ^ abcdefBrownlow, Kevin (1996). David Lean: A Biography. St Martin's Press. p. 206. ISBN978-0312145781.
  5. ^'Obituaries: Ronald Neame'. The Daily Telegraph. 18 June 2010.
  6. ^Kent Film Office. 'Kent Film Office Great Expectations Film Focus'.
  7. ^Picturegoer, 14 September 1946
  8. ^McFarlane, Brian (26 September 2014). Screen Adaptations: Great Expectations: A close study of the relationship between text and film. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 166–172. ISBN978-1-4081-4902-7.
  9. ^Ebert, Roger (22 August 1999). 'Great Movie: Great Expectations'. Roger Ebert Reviews. Retrieved 2 December 2018.
  10. ^'Anna Neagle Most Popular Actress'. The Sydney Morning Herald. National Library of Australia. 3 January 1948. p. 3. Retrieved 24 April 2012.
  11. ^'FILM NEWS'. The Mercury. Hobart, Tasmania: National Library of Australia. 11 June 1949. p. 14. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
  12. ^Thumim, Janet. 'The popular cash and culture in the postwar British cinema industry'. Screen. Vol. 32 no. 3. p. 258.
  13. ^Lant, Antonia (1991). Blackout : reinventing women for wartime British cinema. Princeton University Press. p. 232.
  14. ^Silver, Alain; Ursini, James (1992). David Lean and His films. Silman-James Press. ISBN978-1879505001.
  15. ^'NY Times: Great Expectations'. New York Times. Archived from the original on 21 February 2009. Retrieved 19 December 2008.

Further reading[edit]

  • Vermilye, Jerry (1978), The Great British Films, Citadel Press, pp. 102–105, ISBN0-8065-0661-X

External links[edit]

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  • Great Expectations an essay by Adrian Turner at the Criterion Collection

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