BBC
9 November 1997
Historical Comedy, Romance
DVD
B+
This first part of a five-part miniseries runs an hour and a half and covers everything from the finding of the foundling to his departure from his foster father's estate in disgrace.
Regular cast:
- Max Beesley as Tom Jones
- Brian Blessed as Squire Western
- Kathy Burke as Honour
- Camille Coduri as Jenny Jones
- Ron Cook as Benjamin Partridge
- James D'Arcy as Blifil
- Frances de la Tour as Aunt Western
- Christopher Fulford as Mr. Square
- Brian Hibbard as George Seagrim
- Sarah Kestelman as Mrs. Wilkins
- Sylvester McCoy as Mr. Dowling
- Samantha Morton as Sophia Western
- Tessa Peake-Jones as Bridget Allworthy
- Brian Pettifer (who was on one episode of Paul Merton, the Series) as Parson Supple
- Richard Ridings as Reverend Thwackum
- John Sessions (several years after his Whose Line Is It Anyway? appearances) as Henry Fielding
- and Benjamin Whitrow (Mr. Bennet in Pride and Prejudice a couple years earlier) as Squire Allworthy
Also, Laura Harling, who plays Young Sophia, was the younger version of Samantha Morton in Jane Eyre as well.
Simon Burke adapted the Fielding novel and, while not a word for word adaptation of course, it manages to capture the flavour of the classic story. Having Sessions narrate as Fielding, onscreen in period costume, is a clever touch, helping to not only keep some of the (quite extensive) narration but also give us someone who reacts to the onscreen antics with indulgent amusement. Sessions, who was stage-hogging and literary on Whose Line, is perfectly cast, although the characters interrupt him far more than Paul Merton, Tony Slattery, and others ever did.
The casting is overall solid, with characters looking straight out of Hogarth and sounding (I imagine) as they would've on the 18th-century stage. Beesley and Morton don't look like Fielding's descriptions (one thing I particularly remember about Sophia is her lustrous black hair) but they inhabit the characters satisfactorily. The best performances are those of Whitrow, using his Mr. Bennet sanity and dryness as the least cartoonish character, and of de la Tour, who manages to both plausible as the sister of scenery-devouring Blessed and a very human aunt.
The direction by Metin Hüseyin manages to go back and forth among slapstick, romance, pathos, and what you will. The scene of Blifil's father falling off a cliff is not in the book, but we've already grown to despise him so much in his few minutes onscreen that it's OK that the fall is drawn out, with a visual punchline that the book he dropped was Statistics on Mortality.
Music, costumes, everything is well done. Possibly the best literary adaptation for television that I own. (And on a level with novel, reviewed here: http://rereadingeverybookiown.blogspot.com/2011/12/tom-jones.html.) We'll see how the other episodes hold up....
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