Menu
Great Expectations Poster

Great Expectations

From the Vivid Pages of Charles Dickens' Masterpiece!
1946 | 118m | English

(27802 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

In this Dickens adaptation, orphan Pip discovers through lawyer Mr. Jaggers that a mysterious benefactor wishes to ensure that he becomes a gentleman. Reunited with his childhood patron, Miss Havisham, and his first love, the beautiful but emotionally cold Estella, he discovers that the elderly spinster has gone mad from having been left at the altar as a young woman, and has made her charge into a warped, unfeeling heartbreaker.
Release Date: Dec 26, 1946
Director: David Lean
Writer: Anthony Havelock-Allan, Cecil McGivern, David Lean, Charles Dickens, Ronald Neame, Kay Walsh
Genres: Drama, Romance
Keywords london, england, based on novel or book, escaped convict, orphan, spinster, 19th century, benefactor
Production Companies Cineguild, J. Arthur Rank Organisation
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 09, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
John Mills Pip
Valerie Hobson Estella
Tony Wager Young Pip
Jean Simmons Young Estella
Bernard Miles Joe Gargery
Francis L. Sullivan Mr. Jaggers
Finlay Currie Abel Magwitch
Martita Hunt Miss Havisham
Alec Guinness Herbert Pocket
Ivor Barnard Mr. Wemmick
Freda Jackson Mrs. Joe
Eileen Erskine Biddy
George Hayes Convict
Hay Petrie Uncle Pumblechook
John Forrest The Pale Young Gentleman
Torin Thatcher Bentley Drummle
O.B. Clarence The Aged Parent
John Burch Mr. Wopsle
Richard George The Sergeant
Grace Denbigh Russell Mrs. Wopsle
Everley Gregg Sarah Pocket
Anne Holland Relation
Frank Atkinson Mike
Gordon Begg Night Porter
Edie Martin Mrs. Whimple
Walford Hyden The Dancing Master
Roy Arthur Galley Steersman
Howard Lang Man sitting next to Pip at Magwitch's Trial (uncredited)
Name Job
Anthony Havelock-Allan Screenplay
Cecil McGivern Screenplay
Walter Goehr Conductor, Original Music Composer
Pat MacDonnell Casting
Wilfred Shingleton Art Direction
Ernest Gasser Makeup Artist
Stanley Lambourne Sound Recordist
Robert Huke Camera Operator
George Paternoster Boom Operator
Jack Harris Editor
Maude Spector Casting
George Blackler Makeup Artist
Margaret Furse Assistant Costume Designer
Winston Ryder Sound Editor
Suria Magito Choreographer
Erik Blakemore Set Decoration
Adele Raymond Casting
Sophie Devine Costume Design
Gordon K. McCallum Sound Recordist
Maggie Unsworth Continuity
Norman Spencer Production Manager
Jim Body Focus Puller
David Lean Director, Screenplay
Charles Dickens Novel
Ronald Neame Screenplay
Kay Walsh Screenplay
Guy Green Director of Photography
George Pollock Assistant Director
John Bryan Production Design
Name Title
Anthony Havelock-Allan Executive Producer
Ronald Neame Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Picture N/A Nominated
Academy Awards Best Actor John Mills Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 20 35 12
2024 5 25 39 16
2024 6 21 35 11
2024 7 21 32 12
2024 8 16 23 10
2024 9 15 26 9
2024 10 13 28 9
2024 11 13 28 7
2024 12 13 24 6
2025 1 17 43 8
2025 2 12 25 3
2025 3 5 13 1
2025 4 1 3 1
2025 5 1 4 1
2025 6 2 4 1
2025 7 1 3 1
2025 8 2 4 1
2025 9 3 4 2
2025 10 3 3 3

Trending Position


No trending metrics available.

Return to Top

Reviews

Geronimo1967
8.0

If I were ever to be given the chance to be a fly-on-the-wall at a conversation, then It'd have to be one with Charles Dickens and David Lean. How the latter managed to visualise and dramatise so expertly the finely honed characters of the former is astonishing. In this, possibly less well known sto ... ry - "Pip" (Tony Wager) encounters an escaped convict in an eery graveyard when he goes to tend his late mother's grave.. Despite his fear, he helps feed the old man and free him from his chains. As he ages, he is summoned by a local, wealthy, spinster "Miss Havisham" (a wonderfully imperious Martita Hunt) who wants him to befriend the truly unpleasant, spoilt, "Estella" (Jean Simmons). Skip forwards a few years and "Pip" (now, John Mills) is rescued from his rural existence by a lawyer, the ever avuncular, sagacious, Francis L. Sullivan who advises him that he has is to receive an income and an inheritance, from an unknown benefactor, that will change his life - which it duly does! Soon, he and new room-mate "Mr. Pocket" (Alec Guinness) are settled into their new lives of plenty. Dickens' had such a wonderfully alliterative way with his characters - "Pip", "Pocket", "Jaggers", "Pumblechook" & "Magwitch" - they allow so much more scope for your imagination to define the characters, their traits and flaws and Lean manages to use light, shade, an understated Walter Goehr score and a really splendid ensemble effort from all concerned on screen to really draw us into the plot as "Pip" edges nearer to finding out where his largesse is coming from and, of course, how his relationship with a now adult "Estella" (Valerie Hobson) might develop/conclude/collapse. Dickens wasn't a man prone to excessive sentiment in his stories, and for that I am externally grateful - and you know, well, that the good times never last for too long...!

Jul 07, 2022