The Olde Dickens Shoppe

Dickens, Literature, London, TV & Film, UK

This is going to be long — LOL. On the upside, there will be several miniseries and film recommendations, and lots of photos!

Being a bit layed-up recently, I’ve been watching some film & mini-series adaptations of the lesser known Dickens novels.

There are a few adaptations of the big titles that I can watch over and over again with absolutely no problem — seriously stunning, with incredible performances. If you’d like to get into some Dickens, check out one of these.

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The Bleak House principal cast

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I highly recommend the brilliant 1999 David Copperfield with Maggie Smith and Daniel Radcliffe (and a boatload of British film faces). Also remarkable — the 2005 Bleak House with Gillian Anderson & Charles Dance (it’s my favorite). The third of my top three, (however by no means at the bottom), is the 2011 Gillian Anderson Great Expectations. All absolutely top-drawer. The Helena Bonham Carter/Ralph Finnes Great Expectations is quite well done too. I’ve seen all of these several times, and will see them again.

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Gillian Anderson & Oscar Kennedy in Great Expectations

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I didn’t care for the 2023 FX/Hulu version of GEx with Olivia Colman, much as I love her work. The 2012 The Mystery of Edwin Drood is at the bottom of my list. I don’t think I made it through one episode. (They made it very romance-y, dwelled on Rosa, and didn’t quite capture the atmosphere.

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Hard Times, 1977

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I binged a 1977 version of Hard Times over the last day, and quite liked it! Didn’t strike me as corny/silly and 70s at all. I also enjoyed — I don’t even know what to call it — The four-episode 2001 Dickens “spinoff,” Micawber. A rare Dickens comedy, not corny, and well done. The characters are intact, but the plot for each episode is original. There’s a 1995 Martin Chuzzlewit that I liked enough to finish, but wouldn’t watch it again. On the silly side of things, there’s a goofy comedy called The Bleak Old Shop of Stuff, a sort of Dickens-inspired sitcom mash-up. It’s okay, just not my thing.

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Bill Sykes, Compeyson, Miss Havisham, Inspector Bucket, Fagin, The Artful Dodger, and Mr. Bumble in Dickensian

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All in all, I liked the miniseries, Dickensian. It’s very clever, and it’s certainly beautiful. They’ve stuck a ton of Dickens characters into the same few blocks of London, woven their lives all together, and explored how they became who they are in the novels. Brilliantly written. Of course, once you’ve seen it, there’s no reason to watch it again.

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The principal characters of the 1998 Our Mutual Friend

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Today, I’m starting a 1998 BAFTA Award-winning version of Our Mutual Friend, with Timothy Spall (a favorite) in the cast. We’ll see how it goes.

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Joel Grey & Patrick Stewart in A Christmas Carol

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To answer the question which must be answered — my favorite version of A Christmas Carol is the 1999 version with Patrick Stewart as Ebenezer Scrooge. It keeps a lot of what most of the other versions toss out, the language is more poetic and true to the original, and their version of Scrooge’s London is stunning; in addition to the terrific performances.

6 thoughts on “The Olde Dickens Shoppe

  1. karenadair1017's avatar

    did you not like Little Dorrit with Matthew Macfadyen and Claire Foy? i liked it very much! but i must say my favorite all-time dickens production is the 1982 play adaptation of The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby with Roger Rees in the title role. it was presented in two parts and i watched it on PBS. it was in ’82, so i might’ve been yet an 8th grader or maybe a freshman. it made me absolutely fall in love with Dickens! and i read the book cover to cover so descriptive, and i loved the way he wrote in the different accents! ❤ ❤ 😀

    1. Phill's avatar

      I like both of those! In fact, I have plans to watch Little Dorrit again. I really enjoyed the Roger R play too — watched it last year, and it was such an odd thing to see him so young! Whoever did the redirection of the play for the camera did an amazing job too! I remember that was one of the very first Tony Award broadcasts I watched!

  2. karenadair1017's avatar

    well, the play was written in two parts, but i am pretty sure it was presented in several installments on PBS. Daddy actually got annoyed listening to the british accents– and even his annoyance amused me. 😀 😀 😀

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