Timecrimes - Interview and Review
Advertisement
Sign in
Username   Password         Forgot password?
Wanna join? Sign up
Nicholas Nickleby
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Rate this movie.

Watch trailerWatch trailer

Rent it, watch it, find it

Advertisement
Directed by Stephen Whittaker
This 2000 TV miniseries is based on an 1839 Charles Dickens novel, The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby. The film begins with the burial of Mr. Nickleby beneath snow-covered earth. Attending are Nickleby's wife and teenage children, Nicholas (James D'Arcy) and Kate (Sophia Myles). Because Mr. Nickleby died broke after speculating on stocks, Nicholas needs money fast to provide for his mother and sister. When he seeks help from his uncle, Ralph Nickleby (Charles Dance) -- a cold-hearted businessman -- Ralph refuses cash and instead arranges for Nicholas to assist at a boarding school operated by Wackford Squeers (Gregor Fisher), a sadistic overlord who whips and starves his students. Soon, Nicholas rebels against the inhumane conditions at the school, thrashes Squeers, and flees. A pitiful and sickly student named Smike (Lee Ingleby) joins Nicholas and becomes a family friend. After working as an actor, Nicholas gets a good job at a counting house operated by the kindly Cheeryble brothers. Meanwhile, Ralph Nickleby tricks Kate into meeting his friend, Sir Mulberry Hawk (Dominic West), who wants to defile her. When Hawk strongarms her onto a billiard table, Kate escapes. Enraged, Nicholas and Ralph become thoroughgoing enemies. When Ralph uses his financial leverage to force an innocent young woman, Madeleine Bray (Katherine Holme), to marry one of his cronies, Nicholas foils the plot -- then falls in love with Madeleine himself. Ralph tries to strike back at his nephew through Smike, but fails -- although poor Smike dies. As the production reaches its climax, Ralph learns a startling secret when he and Nicholas confront each other. The final scenes of the film reveal the fates of the principal characters. ~ Mike Cummings, All Movie Guide
[More]
All Movie Guide Logo
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
In this faithful adaptation of the Charles Dickens novel, director Stephen Whittaker skillfully develops the central theme: the abuse of children by adults. It is a familiar motif with Dickens, occurring in Oliver Twist, David Copperfield, The Old Curiosity Shop, and other novels. In Nicholas Nickleby, director Whittaker develops this theme with a graphic depiction of a dark and filthy boarding school in which little boys go hungry, suffer the lash, and stutter in fear while adult overseers gorge on food, comfort, and sadism. The children in the school, and in society at large, are commodities that bring a profit -- nothing more. The teenage heroes of the film, Nicholas and Kate Nickleby, refuse to yield to the impoverishment thrust upon them after their father dies and to the wrongdoing of the adult raptors -- in particular, their greedy and unfeeling uncle, Ralph Nickleby, portrayed brilliantly by Charles Dance. As the chief villain, Dance never once flinches as he sucks the marrow out of his prey. His odious presence makes evil almost palpable, setting off by contrast the righteous characters, the Nicklebys and the Cheerybles -- and the poor halfwit, Smike (Lee Ingleby). The rest of the cast performs capably, although director Whittaker tilts some of them over the edge of caricature. For example, Debbie Chazen as schoolmaster Wackford Squeers' daughter is so gluttonous and self-centered that she seems more like a cartoon character than a real person. On the other hand, Sophia Myles as Kate acts entirely within her character -- innocent, loyal, and beautiful inside and out. As Nicholas, James D'Arcy projects the earnestness and resolve required for the role, as well as enough stage presence to anchor the production. Overall, the production is a handsome one that does justice to the Dickens book. ~ Mike Cummings, All Movie Guide
 

Community ratings

mavens
Spout mavens
haven't rated it
most people
Most people
disliked it.

Other opinions

aidanbrack
aidanbrack
disliked it.