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Nicholas Nickleby

Nicholas Nickleby

  • Status: Released
  • 27-12-2002
  • Runtime: 132 min
  • Score: 6.893
  • Vote count: 177

Nicholas Nickleby, a young boy in search of a better life, struggles to save his family and friends from the abusive exploitation of his coldheartedly grasping uncle.

Charlie Hunnam

Nicholas Nickleby

Nathan Lane

Vincent Crummles

Jim Broadbent

Mr. Wackford Squeers

Christopher Plummer

Ralph Nickleby

Jamie Bell

Smike

Anne Hathaway

Madeline Bray

Alan Cumming

Mr. Folair

Timothy Spall

Charles Cheeryble

Romola Garai

Kate Nickleby

Andrew Havill

Mr. Nickleby

Stella Gonet

Mrs Nickleby

Hugh Mitchell

Boy Nicholas Nickleby

Tom Courtenay

Newman Noggs

Juliet Stevenson

Mrs. Squeers

Lucy Davis

Maid

Kevin McKidd

John Browdie

Edward Fox

Sir Mulberry Hawk

Nicholas Rowe

Lord Verisopht

Angus Wright

Mr. Pluck

Barry Humphries

Mrs. Crummies/Mr. Leadville

Eileen Walsh

The Infant Phenomenon

Mark Wells

Romeo in Play

Daisy Haggard

Juliet in Play

Phil Davis

Brooker

Gerard Horan

Ned Cheeryble

William Ash

Frank Cheeryble

Sophie Thompson

Miss Lacreevy

David Bradley

Nigel Bray

Edward Hogg

Young Mr. Bray

Roger Ashton-Griffiths

Doctor

Angela Curran

Parent

Bruce Cook

Little Wackford Squeers

CinemaSerf

When his father dies leaving his family not far short of penury, the eponymous young man (Charlie Hunnam) does a deal with his wealthy uncle "Ralph" (Christopher Plummer) that will ensure the comfortable survival of his mother and sister "Kate" (Romola Garai). This deal involves him travelling to the north of England to teach at the school of "Wackford Squeers" (a good effort from Jim Broadbent). Now this is a brutal man who beats and extorts from his pupils and from his factotum "Smike" (Jamie Bell) with abandon. Finally at the end of his tether, young "Nickelby" exacts some punishment of his own and absconds with the young "Smike" to make a life free from this abuse. Meantime his rather unscrupulous uncle is using the young "Kate" as a pawn in his dealings with the predatory "Sir Mulberry Hawk" (Edward Fox). Can her brother return home in time save her from a rather grizzly fate? This is one of Charles Dickens' weaker stories, I found. Once the gritty and darker first half hour or so is over, it falls into a pattern of rather unlikely serendipity. Too many coincidental relationships, friendships and dependencies start to turn it all a bit sour for me. Anne Hathaway adequately provides our hero with some love interest, and as with the brief appearances from Juliet Stevenson as "Mrs. Squeers" and the newly knighted Sir Tom Courtenay as the honourable and decent "Noggs" adds a bit of richness to the story, but handsome though he is, Hunnam hasn't quite the gravitas to take this on nor Plummer quite the dastardliness intended in the original book. It does look good, the costumes and settings all deliver well but somehow I always prefer adaptations of this author's work to be in black and white. Colour seems to overly sanitise his stories of poverty, cruelty and exploitation. It certainly does here.