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David Copperfield

David Copperfield (1969)

1h 58m | PG-13

⭐ 5.4 / 10

A made for TV movie of the Charles Dickens' classic novel, turns Dickens' picaresque tale into an extended flashback, with David Copperfield Robin Phillips as a young man, brooding on a deserted beach, recalling his youth. The characters are all trotted out in choppy flashbacks as David remembers his life as a young orphan, brought to London and passed around from relatives, to guardians, to boarding school.

Director: Delbert Mann

Studio: 20th Century Fox Television

Genre: Drama, TV Movie

Video: 720p

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Cast

Richard Attenborough

Richard Attenborough

as Mr. Tungay

Cyril Cusack

Cyril Cusack

as Barkis

Edith Evans

Edith Evans

as Aunt Betsy Trotwood

Pamela Franklin

Pamela Franklin

as Dora Spenlow

Susan Hampshire

Susan Hampshire

as Agnes Wickfield

Wendy Hiller

Wendy Hiller

as Mrs. Micawber

Reviews

By CinemaSerf

This was never one of my favourite Dickens stories - I always found the title character just a bit , well, wet! Anyway, the really quite mediocre Robin Phillips take the role for this adaptation, and we follow his rather brutal adventures of childhood and early adulthood that see him deal with bullying, beating, extortion and tragedy. As with the book, to which this is fairly faithful, there are quite literally heaps of curious and engaging characters he encounters along the way, most notably Sir Ralph Richardson's wonderfully over the top "Micawber", Sir Michael Redgrave's "Peggotty" desperately seeking his errant daughter "Emily" (Sinéad Cusack) and from Ron Roody as the duplicitous, downright nasty piece of work that is "Uriah Heap"! The production is pretty lacklustre. The photography offers us lots of long, moody shots of the contemplative hero on the beach - and the cameraman seems content to try out his new zoom lens just once (or thrice) too often. Malcolm Arnold provides us with an unremarkable score and the whole story irather plods along without much potency. As an introduction to the work of Dickens, it might have a purpose in diverting the viewer to the author's (and his other, better) novels, but a piece of cinema it's little better than a very well cast television movie.