David Copperfield

    David Copperfield
    1935

    Synopsis

    Charles Dickens' timeless tale of an ordinary young man who lives an extraordinary life, filled with people who help and hinder him.

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    Cast

    • Freddie BartholomewDavid Copperfield as a Boy
    • Frank LawtonDavid Copperfield as a Man
    • Edna May OliverAunt Betsey Trotwood
    • Jessie RalphClara Peggotty
    • Madge EvansAgnes Wickfield as a Woman
    • Maureen O'SullivanDora Spenlow
    • Elizabeth AllanClara Copperfield
    • Harry BeresfordDr. Chillip
    • Hugh WalpoleThe Vicar
    • Basil RathboneMr. Edward Murdstone

    Recommendations

    • 100

      Chicago Tribune

      The best-loved Hollywood Dickens, with a cast that might have been pulled right out of the Cruikshank illustrations. [28 Nov 2008, p.C7]
    • 100

      Empire

      This MGM classic remains the most faithful and powerful adaptation of the great Dickens novel.
    • 100

      The New York Times

      The most profoundly satisfying screen manipulation of a great novel that the camera has ever given us.
    • 100

      TV Guide Magazine

      Directed with restraint and impeccable taste by Cukor, produced by Selznick, David Copperfield is diverse and satisfying intellectually and emotionally, capturing the unparalleled beauty of Dickens's melancholic truths about life's hardships and human survival.
    • 88

      Chicago Tribune

      The movie suffers a bit from the sentimental, violin-underscored valentine approach favored in Selznick movies, but the characterizations, particularly in delivering Dickens' cartoon grotesqueries, are plum. None is better than W. C. Fields, who might be faulted for bringing his own legendary screen persona to Mr. Micawber, but he does so superbly, without sacrificing Dickens' own creation. [13 Aug 1989, p.20C]
    • 80

      Orlando Sentinel

      This 1935 adaptation flourishes because of a tasty, idiosyncratic cast (W.C. Fields, Basil Rathbone, Lionel Barrymore) that nicely matches up with Dickens' characterizations, and because of the assured production and direction of David O. Selznick and George Cukor, both at the top of their respective games. [02 Feb 1992, p.G1]
    • 80

      Los Angeles Times

      Lovely, lavish 1935 adaptation of Charles Dickens' beloved story about a plucky young lad living in 19th century England. [15 Oct 2006, p.E10]
    • 70

      Variety

      It was almost an adventure to try to bring to the screen the expansively optimistic Micawber, but he lives again in W.C. Fields, who only once yields to his penchant for horseplay.