Home » Reviews » A Personal History of David Copperfield review: A beautiful new take on a classic story

Reviews

A Personal History of David Copperfield review: A beautiful new take on a classic story

Read on to find out our review of this modern spin on a classic tale...

4.0/5
A Personal History of David Copperfield review: A beautiful new take on a classic story

The Personal History of David Copperfield

What’s it about?

At its heart, A Personal History of David Copperfield is a dramatic excursion of self-revelation, where our storyteller (magnificently played by the perpetually adaptable Dev Patel) decides to decide if he is "the saint of his own story", battling to become famous (in a real sense) as he walks through a distinctively acknowledged scene of memory and innovation.

What’s hot?

We open with Copperfield in front of an audience, beginning the reading of his story prior to stepping through a painted scenery straight into the sparkling scene of East Anglia. It's a method that will be returned to as scenes fall away like backdrop settings and recollections are projected onto dividers, interlaced with handwritten headings. Iannucci plays imaginatively with the inventive interaction, showing a sharp eye for visual narrating as the grown-up Copperfield observes his own introduction to the world. The encounters with his innocent, more youthful selves (spectacularly played by Ranveer Jaiswal and Jairaj Varsani ), and the way he figures out how to weave characters all through his life as he pens a composed memory wherein misfortune and love live next to each other.

Going along with him on his excursion are a surprising cluster of players, cast with refreshing inclusivity that permits Iannucci to expand the extension and reach of his film past that of numerous other Dickens variations. From Benedict Wong as the wine-pursuing Mr. Wickfield to Rosalind Eleazar as his little girl Agnes, who holds the genuine key to Copperfield's kind gestures, Sarah Crowe encompasses Patel with an assorted cluster of entertainers. As Betsey Trotwood, an eminent Tilda Swinton is presented with her nose crushed against a window, while Darren Boyd's unpleasant Murdstone is a vile orchestra of hair, eyebrows and teeth. Peter Capaldi plays Mr. Micawber as a big-hearted Fagin with horrible squeezebox abilities ("Angels in his fingertips!" says Bronagh Gallagher's merry Mrs. Micawber) while Nikki Amuka-Bird loans genuine steel to the harsh figure of Mrs. Steerforth.

What’s not?

NOTHING.

Best of everything is Ben Whishaw's Uriah Heep, a pudding-bowled ghost who creeps through halls like a hybrid of Norman Wisdom and Riff-Raff from Rocky Horror – an unstable blend of acquiescence and disobedience; a beaten canine prepared to chomp. Concerning Patel, he shows in excess of a dash of the heavenly poignancy of Charlie Chaplin, whether he is charming the miserably unseemly Dora Spenlow (Morfydd Clark, who splendidly serves as David's mom Clara) or partying in an intoxicated celebration with the opulent students whose "gentlemanly" organization he aches for. All through, our storyteller – who is differently named Daisy, Doady, Trotwood, Davidson and even "the acclaimed gnawing kid" – endeavors to declare his right to the name David Copperfield.

There's a Terry Gilliam-esque quality to a few scenes. For example, the overturned boathouse of childhood recollections, broken by a goliath’s hand as dreams give away to the real world. Cinematographer Zac Nicholson utilizes wide-point focal points to catch a child's-eye feeling of marvel, loosening up single minutes in slow-mo, inspiring an underworld that helped me on occasion to remember Nicola Pecorini's work on Gilliam's frequently ignored Tideland.

Cristina Casali and Charlotte Dirickx's set decoration and production design bring out a solid feeling of the area both geologically and emotionally, from the rustic warmth of Yarmouth to the jumbled bedlam of the bottling factory, the exciting risk and energy of London's roads, and the unconventional sanctuary of Trotwood's bungalow (a restricted air space for donkeys), where Copperfield finds a close ally in Hugh Laurie's Mr. Dick. Like our storyteller, Mr. Dick likes to record his musings, connecting his jotted notes to a kite in a scene of unadulterated joy and satisfaction.

Verdict:

With an ideal telling of the changing tones and mindsets of the book– from exciting activity to more calm despairing, all permeate within the viewer with a clamoring feeling. It truly is a superbly engaging film, figuring out how to both regard and rehash the novel from which it takes its lead, making something new and energizing simultaneously.

Share

Cast and Crew

Where To Watch