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| Oliver Twist | |
|---|---|
![]() DVD cover | |
| Directed by | Hal Sutherland |
| Screenplay by | Ben Starr Alan Dinehart |
| Based on | Oliver Twist byCharles Dickens |
| Produced by | Norm Prescott Lou Scheimer |
| Starring | Josh Albee Phil Clark Cathleen Cordell Michael Evans Lola Fisher Robert Holt Davy Jones Larry D. Mann Dallas McKennon Billy Simpson Larry Storch Les Tremayne Jane Webb Helene Winston |
| Cinematography | R.W. Pope |
| Edited by | Joseph Simon Doreen Dixon |
| Music by | Yvette Blais Jeff Michael (original score) Dave Roberts (song orchestrations and conductor) Sherry Gaden Richard Canada (song composers) Richard Delvy Ed Fournier (song producers) Dave Roberts Richard Delvy Ed Fournier (song arrangements) |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date |
|
Running time | 91 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $1.050.000 |
Oliver Twist is a 1974 American animatedadventuremusicalcomedydrama film directed byHal Sutherland that is based onCharles Dickens's 1838 novelof the same name. The film was the second and last to be produced byFilmation and distributed byWarner Bros.[1]Davy Jones, who played The Artful Dodger in the original Broadway production ofOliver!, reprises his role.
In the 19th century, orphan Oliver Twist is sent to a workhouse, where the children are barely fed and mistreated. He moves to the house of an undertaker, but after an unfair severe spanking and slapping, he starts a seven-day runaway to London. He arrives exhausted and starving, and is welcomed by a gang of pickpockets led by old crook Fagin. When he is mistakenly taken as a thief, wealthy victim Mr. Brownlow brings Oliver to his home and shelters him. But Fagin and the dangerous Bill Sykes decide to kidnap Oliver to burglarize Mr. Brownlow's fancy house. Oliver is wounded, while Mr. Brownlow tries to save Oliver.
The film was announced to be produced in mid-January 1972, as part ofFamily Classics, a series of films based on concepts in thepublic domain commissioned by Warner Bros. Production for the film andTreasure Island had been finished by late 1973. The film's budget amounted to $1,050,000, with the million given by Warner Bros., and the rest put in by the studio itself.[1]
Oliver Twist was first released in theaters on July 10, 1974.[citation needed] According tomedia historianHal Erickson, its distributor, Warner Bros., "virtually threw away the film when it performed poorly in previews." An edited version was broadcast as anNBCSpecial Treat special on April 14, 1981.[3]The movie was first released on VHS on December 5, 1994,[4] and re-released on August 13, 1996, as part of the Warner Bros. Classic Tales series.[4] It was first released on DVD on September 3, 2002, byWarner Home Video, throughWarner Bros. Family Entertainment.[5][1]
Variety panned the film, saying that "neither Dickens nor the youngsters watching will profit much from this one," although the animation showcasing the streets of London received praise.[1]