Our Mutual Friend
- TV Mini Series
- 1998
- 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
Intertwining tales of love, greed, and secret identities in Charles Dickens's 1860s London.Intertwining tales of love, greed, and secret identities in Charles Dickens's 1860s London.Intertwining tales of love, greed, and secret identities in Charles Dickens's 1860s London.
- Won 4 BAFTA Awards
- 9 wins & 6 nominations total
Browse episodes
Storyline
Did you know
- Quotes
Lizzie Hexam: Will you walk beside me, Mr. Wrayburn, and not touch me.
Eugene Wrayburn: I'll TRY.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Dickens (2002)
Featured review
Our Mutual Friend is my favourite on-screen adaptation to date, and there are obviously some weighty contenders.
I appreciate that some people think there are too many characters, but most Dickens books are full of many and varied, wonderful characters and I think that Sandy Welch mastered the quantity in adaptation, without cutting out important characters and then sewing the plot closed around them (I still mourn the loss of Orlick from Lean's 'Great Expectations').
The casting and acting in Our Mutual Friend is superb and I feel slightly guilty to pick out certain actors above the rest so I will choose only one to shower with praise, David Morrissey, who performed with such convincing emotional rawness that I hoped for some kind of redemption for Bradley Headstone.
The opening scene gave me goosebumps when it first came on the BBC in 1998 and it sometimes has had that effect since, despite repeat viewings. The atmosphere captures the murk and mystery of the Thames and illustrates the ghoulish occupation of the boatmen.
This murk is matched with some scenes of great beauty, lavish outdoor scenes which celebrate the English countryside, great houses, colourful costumes and the chocolate box cottage. This serves to contrast against the stench of the dust heaps and the grime of Mr Venus's home.
Dear BBC, can you have Sandy or Andrew adapt Dombey and Son sometime soon?!
I appreciate that some people think there are too many characters, but most Dickens books are full of many and varied, wonderful characters and I think that Sandy Welch mastered the quantity in adaptation, without cutting out important characters and then sewing the plot closed around them (I still mourn the loss of Orlick from Lean's 'Great Expectations').
The casting and acting in Our Mutual Friend is superb and I feel slightly guilty to pick out certain actors above the rest so I will choose only one to shower with praise, David Morrissey, who performed with such convincing emotional rawness that I hoped for some kind of redemption for Bradley Headstone.
The opening scene gave me goosebumps when it first came on the BBC in 1998 and it sometimes has had that effect since, despite repeat viewings. The atmosphere captures the murk and mystery of the Thames and illustrates the ghoulish occupation of the boatmen.
This murk is matched with some scenes of great beauty, lavish outdoor scenes which celebrate the English countryside, great houses, colourful costumes and the chocolate box cottage. This serves to contrast against the stench of the dust heaps and the grime of Mr Venus's home.
Dear BBC, can you have Sandy or Andrew adapt Dombey and Son sometime soon?!
- flaming_nora
- Sep 10, 2010
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- 我們共同的朋友
- Filming locations
- The Historic Dockyard Chatham, Chatham, Kent, England, UK(back streets of the workhouse)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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