Charles Dickens - Classic Or Dud?

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (324 of them)

there was a nice BBC4 documentary the other week that intercut different adaptations of the novels together, wd also love a more fleshed-out version of that concept

dayove cool (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 2 February 2012 16:25 (fourteen years ago)

oh Abbott david copperfield is so great! now i wish i were reading it, too.

horseshoe, Thursday, 2 February 2012 16:28 (fourteen years ago)

Like the idea of the silent shorts, just do the good bits:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0215705/
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1499626/
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0285750/

you don't exist in the database (woof), Thursday, 2 February 2012 16:34 (fourteen years ago)

Quilp! How could I forget about Quilp! Quilp IS the subject of The Old Curiosity Shop. Arthur Machen said the chapter where he dies describes "a city transformed into the very mystery of terror".

Fizzles, Thursday, 2 February 2012 19:14 (fourteen years ago)

Great proto-Metamorphosis moment when Quilp wakes up -

“The first sound that met his ears in the morning - as he half opened his eye, and, finding himself so unusually near the ceiling, entertained a drowsy idea that he must have been transformed into a fly or blue-bottle in the course of the night, - was that of a stifled sobbing and weeping in the room.”

so many ideas per page in Dickens, just thrown away, in the sense that they're not followed up. Condtant sense of an over abundance of creative energy. No imaginative cheese paring: he disliked misers of all types (and hated their counterpart debt).

Fizzles, Thursday, 2 February 2012 19:33 (fourteen years ago)

yeah, the abundance is just ridiculous. I like the way he'll sometimes just ramp it the fk up and throw out a few pages of borderline visionary prose to distract you from a stupid coincidence that's coming.

woof, Thursday, 2 February 2012 19:40 (fourteen years ago)

& re kafka, I read this on wiki earlier today, did not know:

Franz Kafka called his own first novel Amerika "sheer imitation" of David Copperfield.

woof, Thursday, 2 February 2012 19:51 (fourteen years ago)

That's very interesting! I still haven't read Amerika yet, despite the fairly constant suggestions to do so by a friend.

I did think when I read that bit in The Old Curiosity Shop "C'mon, it's not that unlikely Kafka would ha read this - not outside the borders of likelihood it provided the germ".

Fizzles, Thursday, 2 February 2012 20:02 (fourteen years ago)

Happy Birthday big man.

woof, Tuesday, 7 February 2012 10:37 (fourteen years ago)

We'll always remember you as inspiration for the Bleak Old Shop of Stuff.

woof, Tuesday, 7 February 2012 10:41 (fourteen years ago)

had the misfortune to see 90 seconds of that :(

dayove cool (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 7 February 2012 10:44 (fourteen years ago)

It was like that Blackadder version of Scrooge, with none of the laughs.

good luck in your pyramid (Neil S), Tuesday, 7 February 2012 10:47 (fourteen years ago)

saw ten minutes, decided against spending two and half hours watching R Webb + 'amusing' character names.

woof, Tuesday, 7 February 2012 10:53 (fourteen years ago)

WC Fields was born to play Micawber

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=058M-5S5qJM

Literal Facepalms (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 8 February 2012 02:59 (fourteen years ago)

If I taught American history, I'd be sure to assign American Notes.

Exile in lolville (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 8 February 2012 03:05 (fourteen years ago)

one year passes...

so has anyone seen The Invisible Woman, Ralph Fiennes' film about CD and his mistress? I was hopeful cuz I liked his Coriolanus, but reviews v mixed at best on this one.

images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Monday, 3 February 2014 18:28 (twelve years ago)

^i thought it was great

Hungry4Ass, Friday, 7 February 2014 05:40 (twelve years ago)

well a christams carol was just a pot boiler but people lvoed taht shit!!

Brian Eno's Mother (Latham Green), Friday, 7 February 2014 21:19 (twelve years ago)

ten months pass...

reading David Copperfield this christmas, am 2/3rds of the way through. feels as though something is missing though. doesn't seem as involving as the others i've read. seems to be a lack of villians in it as well. (ok, Uriah and his step-Father / step-Aunt). Great Expectations was better.

saw Muppet Christmas Carol for the first time since reading the book and hadn't realised that a lot of the dialogue is verbatim and the designs of ghosts are spot on taken from the books.

koogs, Saturday, 3 January 2015 17:34 (eleven years ago)

To enjoy an author you have to effect some meeting of minds and the vehicle within which you and the author must travel together from start to finish is the writing style. I never seem to engage with Dickens' style as I can with most other authors of his period.

It isn't so much that his books are histrionic as that the particular flavor of his histrionics has no appeal for me. Consequently, his books miss their mark, paragraph by paragraph, page by page, and I can't wring any enjoyment out of them. I consider this to be a mere accident that says little of importance about Dickens or about me.

earthface, windface and fireface (Aimless), Saturday, 3 January 2015 18:25 (eleven years ago)

seven months pass...

so, in april it was Old Curiosity Shop which had very little actual Shop in it (was hoping for something like the description of the taxidermists in OMF). but i enjoyed the trek to wolverhampton.

now: barnaby rudge. published same year as OCS so potentially written in parallel. not far enough into it yet though.

4 to go and i still find it hard to pick a favourite.

koogs, Monday, 3 August 2015 12:44 (ten years ago)

took me a long time to get around to liking dickens; surprised i don't complain about him on this thread

♛ LIL UNIT ♛ (thomp), Monday, 3 August 2015 13:25 (ten years ago)

3 years ago:
"Like the idea of the silent shorts"

there was a BFI dvd in fopp a month ago that had a few.

http://shop.bfi.org.uk/dickens-before-sound-dvd-bluray.html

Disc one (90 min)

Gabriel Grub (date unknown) (8 min)
Scrooge; or, Marley's Ghost (W R Booth, UK, 1901, 4 min)
The Cricket on the Hearth (D W Griffith, USA, 1909, 14 min)
Oliver Twist (J Stuart Blackton, USA, 1909, 9 min)
The Boy and the Convict (David Aylott, UK, 1909, 12 min)
Nicholas Nickleby (George O Nichols, USA, 1912, 20 min)
The Pickwick Papers – The Honourable Event (Larry Trimble, UK/USA, 1913, 15 min)
David Copperfield (Thomas Bentley, UK, 1913, 8 min extracts)

Disc Two (98 min)

Oliver Twist (Frank Lloyd, USA, 1922, 74 min)
Dickens' London (Frank Miller and Harry B Parkinson, UK, 1924, 12 min)
Grandfather Smallweed (Hugh Croise, UK, date unknown, 12 min)

koogs, Monday, 3 August 2015 13:33 (ten years ago)

The only thing I remember about Old Curiosity Shop is Quilp flogging the figurehead - haven't ever had the courage to try to parse what's going on there.

Some pretty lol reactions both pro and con per Wiki:

Probably the most widely repeated criticism of Dickens is the remark reputedly made by Oscar Wilde that 'One would have to have a heart of stone to read the death of little Nell without dissolving into tears...of laughter.' (Nell's deathbed is not actually described, however.) Of a similar opinion was the poet Algernon Swinburne, who called Nell "a monster as inhuman as a baby with two heads."[6]

The Irish leader Daniel O'Connell famously burst into tears at the finale, and threw the book out of the window of the train in which he was travelling.[7]

The hype surrounding the conclusion of the series was unprecedented; Dickens fans were reported to have stormed the piers in New York City, shouting to arriving sailors (who might have already read the final chapters in the United Kingdom), "Is Little Nell alive?" In 2007, many newspapers claimed that the excitement at the release of the last instalment of The Old Curiosity Shop was the only historical comparison that could be made to the excitement at the release of the last Harry Potter novel, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.[8]

The Norwegian author Ingeborg Refling Hagen is said to have buried a copy of the book in her youth, stating that nobody deserved to read about Nell, because nobody would ever understand her pain. She compared herself to Nell, because of her own miserable situation at the time.

bentelec, Monday, 3 August 2015 17:18 (ten years ago)

The burial was much more moving, I thought, the way they hid the truth from the old man.

koogs, Monday, 3 August 2015 18:09 (ten years ago)

seven years pass...

Didn't know Dickens was mad.

Here's Dickens personal plans for all 350 million Indians alive at the same time as he was pic.twitter.com/7e9guOFM4s

— Shiv Ramdas Traing To Rite Buk (@nameshiv) February 7, 2023

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 7 February 2023 20:55 (three years ago)

Love Great Expectations & Christmas Carol, didn’t mind Nicolas Nickleby but otherwise haven’t read a ton. Started Tale of Two Cities for the bookclub i do with my friend, looking forward to…a long bookclub i guess

Was completely baffled by the first chapter
all that mail carriage stuff —but once I got used to the serialization structure (describe describe describe aaaand PLOT; describe describe describe aaaand PLOT; etc) i’m now enjoying it. Definitely settling into the soapy mystery of it all.

Sometimes though i get impatient like
Yep ok it’s a room with a dormer window no yes i know what those look like no I get how they open I can absolutely picture the window perfectly thank you OMG can you please get to the point now (cries)

werewolves of laudanum (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 8 February 2023 02:46 (three years ago)

two months pass...

*bump*

The Titus Andromedon Strain (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 18 April 2023 22:14 (three years ago)

Tale of Two Cities - my final verdict is the last few chapters made the rest of it worthwhile

but he had this thing with using violent out of context French Revolution scenes without ever really ~dealing- with the Revolution except as handwavey bloothirsty “godlessness”
almost pointless having it be the Revolution at all tbh?

and omg the drawn out mystery of the Doctor drove me IN. SANE.

werewolves of laudanum (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 18 April 2023 23:23 (three years ago)

want to read that one again

recently reread David Copperfield, a lovely sentimental book, and now I want to read Barbara Kingsolver's Demon Copperhead

Dan S, Tuesday, 18 April 2023 23:26 (three years ago)

DC is a favorite. Just starting OMF and really digging it.

The Titus Andromedon Strain (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 19 April 2023 01:14 (three years ago)

first time in about 10 years that I've not read any Dickens in April. usually April, August and December. the recent bbc thing has made me want to read Expectations again though.

that and Omf and Two Cities probably my favourites

koogs, Wednesday, 19 April 2023 07:32 (three years ago)

Never sure why OMF begins with a Nick Hornby essay about why OMF is rubbish

Chuck_Tatum, Wednesday, 19 April 2023 08:28 (three years ago)

two different versions of david copperfield on tv on sunday

daniel radcliffe version on bbc4 at 22:00
recent film on ch4 at midnight

(didn't really rate the book)

koogs, Wednesday, 19 April 2023 09:14 (three years ago)

recent Iannucci film v.bad. Not seen the Radcliffe, don't remember it at the time

Toploader on the road, unite and take over (Bananaman Begins), Wednesday, 19 April 2023 09:58 (three years ago)

xps context-free handwaving about bloodthirsty godlessness was the standard british interpretation of the revolution afaict (other interpretations could be dangerous)

your original display name is still visible (Left), Wednesday, 19 April 2023 10:46 (three years ago)

Charles D's politics were for shit, the OG melt

but i love his work

contrapuntal aversion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 19 April 2023 10:50 (three years ago)

and tbf Tale of Two Cities is no more about the Revolution than Casablanca is about the war

contrapuntal aversion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 19 April 2023 10:51 (three years ago)

i liked the iannuchi film. sue me.

heard hornby on Front Row (a while ago) talking about Dickens and Prince. but i think your problem is that you bought the wrong edition (iirc the vintage editions also don't have the footnotes)

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001dnbl

koogs, Wednesday, 19 April 2023 10:55 (three years ago)

my problem is that Nick Hornby is a useless cunt

contrapuntal aversion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 19 April 2023 10:57 (three years ago)

that LRB takedown of his Dickens/Prince book was pretty funny

Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 19 April 2023 11:01 (three years ago)

I think there should be a moratorium on British TV adaptations of Great Expectations, feels like there's new one every few years.

Maggot Bairn (Tom D.), Wednesday, 19 April 2023 11:04 (three years ago)

yeah it's the laziest possible choice

contrapuntal aversion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 19 April 2023 11:09 (three years ago)

it seemed Hornby's one dimensional autistic boy character became the template for all subsequent British autistic characters for years. To the point where some people might assume autism only affects extremely middle class, charmingly winsome white males. I'm not blaming him for that, but he's still shite!

calzino, Wednesday, 19 April 2023 11:11 (three years ago)

Never sure why OMF begins with a Nick Hornby essay about why OMF is rubbish

Nick Hornby? Which edition is this? Not the Penguin Classics? Certainly rubbish seems to be a big theme of the book but…

The Titus Andromedon Strain (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 19 April 2023 11:25 (three years ago)

It's the Vintage edition - you can read the intro in the Amazon excerpt

Chuck_Tatum, Wednesday, 19 April 2023 11:39 (three years ago)

Great Expectations is classic but I agree I don’t need any more adaptations of it.

Heaven knows we need never be ashamed of our tears, for they are rain upon the blinding dust of earth, overlying our hard hearts. I was better after I had cried, than before--more sorry, more aware of my own ingratitude, more gentle.

treeship., Wednesday, 19 April 2023 11:45 (three years ago)

but he had this thing with using violent out of context French Revolution scenes without ever really ~dealing- with the Revolution except as handwavey bloothirsty “godlessness”
almost pointless having it be the Revolution at all tbh?

Yeah he was politically a simpleton. Orwell argues in his essay “Charles Dickens” was that his blindness to so many things about the world allowed him certain other insights relating to human personality. His limitations enabled his greatness. This is one of many proto-deconstructive insights Orwell had — his literary criticism weirdly does not fit into the “blunt truth teller” mythos that had grown up around him and which he himself cultivated.

treeship., Wednesday, 19 April 2023 11:48 (three years ago)

Orwell like Dickens is a victim of a nasty irony, that his biggest boosters nowadays really don't get him and misuse his work

contrapuntal aversion (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 19 April 2023 11:54 (three years ago)

Great Expectations is classic but I agree I don’t need any more adaptations of it.

Established actresses who fancy hamming it up as Miss Havisham seem to need them. This latest one has Olivia Colman (of course) and I think the last one had Gillian Anderson.

Maggot Bairn (Tom D.), Wednesday, 19 April 2023 11:54 (three years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.