Our Mutual Friend

1976
Our Mutual Friend

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

EP1 Episode 1 Mar 01, 1976

Finding a body in the Thames is a common enough occurrence in Victorian London. But a corpse that carries a claim to a fortune naturally excites the curiosity of fashionable society...

EP2 Episode 2 Mar 08, 1976

Gaffer Hexam has been drowned in the Thames and, as a result, Lizzie has had to move from her riverside home. Mortimer Lightwood has an early appointment with Mr Boffin.

EP3 Episode 3 Mar 15, 1976

Mr Boffin has given a home to Bella and employed Rokesmith as his secretary. Charley Hexam resents the attention his sister is receiving from Eugene Wrayburn.

EP4 Episode 4 Mar 22, 1976

Affronted by Wrayburn's insolence, Headstone has visited Lizzie a second time and his strange manner has disturbed her. Bella has clearly shown that she is not interested in Rokesmith's friendship.

EP5 Episode 5 Mar 29, 1976

Lizzie has rejected Headstone's marriage proposal. Frightened by his reaction, she has fled into hiding. Determined to prove Bella's worth, John Kokesmith continues to hide his true identity....

EP6 Episode 6 Apr 05, 1976

Boffin's sudden miserliness has alerted Bella to the evils of wealth and she has had a change of heart towards Rokesmith. Meanwhile Silas Wegg is plotting the ' Golden Dustman's ' downfall.

EP7 Episode 7 Apr 12, 1976

Rokesmith, married to Bella, is still concealing his true identity. Headstone, enraged by Wrayburn's assignations with Lizzie, has murderously attacked his rival. Lizzie has dragged Wrayburn's body from the river.
8.3| 0h30m| en| More Info
Released: 01 March 1976 Ended
Producted By: BBC
Country: United Kingdom
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Based on the Dickens novel, tells the story of a young man who's inherited fortune hangs on his marriage to a woman he's never met. But many have their eyes on his fortune and scheme to claim it; placing him in a poor situation where he must fight for this woman as a mere secretary.

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Reviews

TheLittleSongbird Even if the adaptation didn't work, anybody who does try to adapt the work of Charles Dickens deserves a brownie point for trying. Dickens is not easy to adapt, and the bigger and richer the book the more complicated it gets to adapt it. Our Mutual Friend, like Bleak House(which if remembered correctly is even bigger), is one of those examples. And fortunately this 1976 adaptation is an example of Dickens being adapted very well, same goes for the 1998 adaptation.One of the things that was so good about Our Mutual Friend(1976) was its atmosphere, done in a way that is both compellingly real and powerful. It is true that the 1998 adaptation has a better contrast between the rich and the poor, but the atmosphere there didn't quite feel as powerful as it did here. The costumes and sets are beautifully produced and natural, not too clean or stage-bound and the camera work is splendid and stylish throughout, never once showing its age. The music at the start is appropriately brooding, and from then on it really fits the atmosphere and moods of each scene, and if a scene needs an intimacy it's either used sparingly or not used at all.For any film or TV series to adapt source material, it should not only be a solid adaptation(and this doesn't mean word for word, true in spirit works just as well) but work on its own too. Our Mutual Friend(1976) does wonderfully at both. There are a few omissions but essentially this adaptation is very detailed- it was great to see some scenes that were not there in the later adaptation- and faithful in spirit. As well as told intricately and compellingly, with stately dignity. The dialogue is rich in flavour with moments of elegant comedy and heartfelt tragedy, done in an intelligent way and it is Dickenesian all over. As with other BBC adaptations from a similar period of Dickens' work, the series is long and quite lengthy with some slowness but considering the length of the book that is appropriate.Excellent performances also help, and Our Mutual Friend(1976) has them. You can never go wrong with Leo McKern, Warren Clarke does besotted and chilling brilliantly and John McEnery's restraint and quiet authority more than compensates for that he is too old for the role. Lesley Dunlop is an appealing and appropriately honourable Lizzie, she doesn't play her as too meek like Dickens heroines can fall into the trap of being(to me how he wrote his female characters was Dickens' weak point). Nicholas Jones has a conflicted character and portrays him very touchingly. Jane Seymour plays the unpleasant and selfish character of Bella very convincingly as well as making her somewhat attractive too, it helps that Seymour was a beautiful woman and actually still is. Silas and Ridderhood and are also beautifully played and true to Dickens' concept if a little more convincing in the later adaptation. In fact everybody from the lead roles down to the minor roles play their parts well.All in all, a really fine adaptation and recommended without hesitation. 10/10 Bethany Cox
keith-moyes The 1998 version of 'Our Mutual Friend' is one of my favourite TV book adaptations, but I am pleased that this 1976 production is finally available again. It is well worth discussing in detail as a stand-alone production in its own right, but I will leave that to other reviewers. What intrigues me is how two comprehensive dramatisations of the same book came to be so different.This version is the most faithful to Dickens in both story-telling and performances, but that is not always a merit.Inevitably, both versions have many scenes in common, but there are some slight differences. This version includes scenes (and expanded scenes) that I would have liked to have seen in the 1998 version. For example, the early scene with Charley and Lizzie looking into the embers of the fire helps establish their relationship and her 'fancies'. The scene where Harmon (in disguise) gets Riderhood to retract his accusation against Gaffer Hexham redresses the most questionable aspect of Harmon's behaviour and is sorely missed in the later version. This version also makes it slightly clearer that Charley's selfish objections to Eugene Wrayburn aren't completely unreasonable (he fears the seduction that Wrayburn eventually contemplates) and it is more specific about the burying and unearthing of the various wills.On the other hand, I regret the loss of the Laemmles, which is symptomatic of the major weakness of this production: we don't see enough of the fashionable world into which the Boffins and Bella are abruptly pitched. This was probably due to budgetary constraints, but it means we only get half the story. One of the triumphs of the later version is the startling visual contrast between the murky world of the poor, with its muted, muddy tones, and the glittering world of the rich - flooded with light and saturated with vibrant yellows and greens.Overall, I feel the 1998 version tells the story more effectively - partly because it doesn't try to replicate Dickens's own method.Dickens disperses his complex plots over a wide range of characters. Each chapter just inches the story forward, but is worked up into a richly detailed scene, reflecting Dickens's love of the theatre. However, this means that characters disappear for long stretches so it is easy to lose track of them and their role in the story. Dickens can mitigate this by prefixing each scene with a retrospective narrative bridge.This 1976 version is structured in a similar way, with a stately procession of lengthy scenes, but without the narrative bridges, so at times it feels a bit disjointedThis is partly dictated by the medium. Videotape is difficult to edit, so directors tend to shoot whole scenes in a single take with multiple cameras, switching from camera to camera while the scene is in progress. This favours fewer, but longer, scenes - as in a stage play. Actors often prefer to work this way, but it does mean they don't have the luxury of fine-tuning their performances, line-by-line, as movie actors can. It also means that the camera is not always in the best position to punch up a line or capture a necessary reaction shot.The 1998 version was shot on film and is structured more like a movie. It trims individual scenes and sharpens up Dickens's sometimes prolix dialogue. It continually inter-cuts between the various plot strands, keeping everything in better focus and inserts Dickens's narrative bridges in correct chronological sequence so the story flows better. In this version, I was struck by how long it takes to introduce all the main characters. For a while, I feared that Mr Venus had been cut altogether.The use of cinema technique means that the staging in the 1998 version is much more precise, so the big set pieces are all more powerful and emotionally affecting (compare the two versions of the big revelation scene that exonerates Mr Boffin). Basically, the camera does much more work.Then there are the performances.In virtually every case the later ones are vastly superior. In this version, even when we have good actors giving good performances, such as Leo McKern, Warren Clarke, Jane Seymour and Ronald Lacey, they are still overshadowed by Peter Vaughan, David Morrissey, Anna Friel and Timothy Spall. In most other instances, the discrepancy is even greater. The 1998 version is already an unparallelled feast of great acting when, at the very end, up steps Robert Lang's Mr Twemlow to steal the whole show with his only speech (sadly missing here). In Hollywood, they will tell you: "If a performance is good, that is the actor. If all the performances are good, that is the director." Take a bow, Julian Farino.However, these performances are not necessarily more faithful. For example, while Dickens had enormous sympathy and respect for the poor and dispossessed, he was a man of his times and found it hard not to patronise them. This is evident in his treatment of Silas Wegg and Rogue Riderhood and is accurately reflected in the playing of Alfie Bass and John Collin. But in the 1998 version there is no hint of condescension in the fierce, envious malice of Kenneth Cranham's Wegg and the cool, calculating villainy of David Bradley's Riderhood. Dickens might well have approved of this change of emphasis.From the Fifties through to the end of the Eighties, the BBC utilised live broadcasting and videotape to bring us consistently excellent dramatisations of classic books. This version of 'Our Mutual Friend' is a good example of what they could achieve and it deserves to find a whole new audience today.However, in the Nineties these serials were upgraded to film. Actors may regret this, and the extra cost may mean there will be fewer classic book adaptations in the future, but a comparison of the videotape and film versions of 'Our Mutual Friend' shows that there is no going back.
jonathanvince I remember watching this series in 1976, transfixed. From the start, the brooding, stirring theme music (by Carl Davis)draws you into the Dickensian world. The acting is faultless and excellent. Many of the actors were some of the finest British actors going at the time and they were only playing the bit parts; e.g. Alfie Bass, Ronald Lacey. Some of the actors would go on to make big names for themselves. Warren Clarke (one of the then established actors) who played the infatuated schoolmaster, is not only well known for the current Dalziel & Pascoe, but has a highly distinguished film career including being one of the Droogs in A Clockwork Orange. So fine is the acting and production that you simply believe in the characters and become part of their world.Oh, and the story is cracking as well!!The later version was OK, but I do not understand why the BBC chose to redo the novel when the apex had so clearly been reached. That it is not available on DVD or even VHS is, in my view, a travesty. I will be lobbying the BBC but I wouldn't hold one's breath.If you get a chance to see this version, grab it with all your might
elmartino-1 A fine adaption of the book, soon to be available on DVD again. While I found the later 1998 BBC version well played, I think that this version was more powerful in that the characters were really brought to life by the actors in this version.Many of the key parts were played by actors who were destined later to become household names. Jane Seymour's portrayal of Bella Wilfer was particularly inspired as she made the selfish, shallow, spoiled yet beautiful young woman really live, repelling and attracting at the same time. Lesley Dunlop as Lizzie Hexham made me really wish for her eventual happiness.Another great role was that of Bradley Headstone who was played by Warren Clarke, familiar to British viewers as the policeman Dalziel in "Dalziel and Pascoe". He put real menace into the part of the disturbed headmaster.Even the minor roles were played by some of the finest actors of the time, Alfie Bass et al.This version will be available again from April 2008.