I was born in the late fall of 1978. The 1968 Classic, Iconic Movie Oliver! is one of my favorite movies of all time. This Musical Number Song and Dance Number is Amazing, and the Amazing Awesome Choreography by Onna White received one of the Six Academy Awards Awarded this Movie Masterpiece!
I love how Fagin in this film bears a strong resemblance to creator Charles Dickens. I think Ron Moody probably came up with the suggestion to honour the greatest Victorian writer of all time.
@@The_Real_Serial_Designation_Nwell, he did do two attempts at the trick with the watch and failed (granted, I'm almost certain it was for comedic effect) and the young lad of about 7 manages it first try. He was probably thinking "young upstart, showing me up like that."
Oliver is from the novel Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens. The musical is from England. This 1968 movie isn’t from Broadway, it’s a British musical film.
I agree, but the acoustics of the film studio, if an actor can sing and dance at the same time, what an sctors singing voice is like (though in this case it was ron moody's voice being used ) can all play a part in if a song in a film is overdubbed or not .
Because you couldn’t cut to different shots or camera positions or edit the takes or correctly balance the sound. Also with a large cast moving around there would be too much extraneous sound and miking issues. Plus the actors would be breathless from movement and dancing. Then you’d have to have an enormous live orchestra on set somewhere for months on end! If you see very early movies where they sang live with an orchestra off camera, the musical numbers are static and the sound is poor.
@@tommoncrieff1154 Exactly! The classic MGM musical Movies such as my all-time favorite movie, the 1939 MGM Briilant, Classic, Iconic Fantasy Musical Movie, The Wizard of Oz, all of the songs were prerecorded in the very early part of 1938, a week before filming began and all of the songs were dubbed just like in all other musical movies including today!
Superb performance by Ron Moody.
3:33 *sigh*....you've got to pick a pocket or toooo! 😇
"Put 'em all back in the box!"
I was born in the late fall of 1978. The 1968 Classic, Iconic Movie Oliver! is one of my favorite movies of all time. This Musical Number Song and Dance Number is Amazing, and the Amazing Awesome Choreography by Onna White received one of the Six Academy Awards Awarded this Movie Masterpiece!
Ron Moody唱作俱佳.
Hermosa pelicula.
I love how Fagin in this film bears a strong resemblance to creator Charles Dickens.
I think Ron Moody probably came up with the suggestion to honour the greatest Victorian writer of all time.
I hear Ron Moody once turned down play The Doctor in Doctor Who. He would’ve been brilliant imo
2:07
" A pocket (on a shirt)"
my favourite part is this 2:30 when fagin is saying you got to pick a pocket or two
1:49 he looked pissed
@@The_Real_Serial_Designation_Nwell, he did do two attempts at the trick with the watch and failed (granted, I'm almost certain it was for comedic effect) and the young lad of about 7 manages it first try.
He was probably thinking "young upstart, showing me up like that."
❤❤
When Broadway was magical!❤
Oliver! Ia a British musical form london it’s not amrican
Oliver is from the novel Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens. The musical is from England. This 1968 movie isn’t from Broadway, it’s a British musical film.
i dont get it why they have to over voice for song?
I agree, but the acoustics of the film studio, if an actor can sing and dance at the same time, what an sctors singing voice is like (though in this case it was ron moody's voice being used ) can all play a part in if a song in a film is overdubbed or not .
Because you couldn’t cut to different shots or camera positions or edit the takes or correctly balance the sound. Also with a large cast moving around there would be too much extraneous sound and miking issues. Plus the actors would be breathless from movement and dancing. Then you’d have to have an enormous live orchestra on set somewhere for months on end! If you see very early movies where they sang live with an orchestra off camera, the musical numbers are static and the sound is poor.
@@tommoncrieff1154 Exactly! The classic MGM musical Movies such as my all-time favorite movie, the 1939 MGM Briilant, Classic, Iconic Fantasy Musical Movie, The Wizard of Oz, all of the songs were prerecorded in the very early part of 1938, a week before filming began and all of the songs were dubbed just like in all other musical movies including today!
3:32