Development While the British production company
Bryanston Films was hesitating over whether to make the film in colour, it went bankrupt.
United Artists stepped in to finance the film and make it a colour production. Overall the production faced challenges of disasters, near-disasters and squabbles caused by films being shot on location in the spotty English weather. The film has an unusual comic style: the opening sequence has
intertitles and brisk action in the manner of a
silent film. Later in the film, characters sometimes break the
fourth wall, often by looking directly into the camera and addressing the audience. In one scene the character of Tom Jones suddenly appears to notice the camera and covers the lens with his hat. Another unusual feature is an unseen narrator, voiced by
Micheál Mac Liammóir. His mock-serious commentaries between certain scenes deplore the action of several characters as well as the weaknesses in human character, and he provides a poetic
denouement for the film. Despite its success, director
Tony Richardson said that he was dissatisfied with the final product. In his autobiography, Richardson wrote that he "felt the movie to be incomplete and botched in much of its execution. I am not knocking that kind of success – everyone should have it – but whenever someone gushes to me about
Tom Jones, I always cringe a little inside."
Writing John Osborne, in adapting the screenplay from
Henry Fielding's novel
The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling (1749), truncated and removed notable episodes and characters from the book. He ends the film with the narrator's quoting from a portion of
John Dryden's poetic translation of
Horace's Ode:
To Maecenas: "Happy the man, and happy he alone,He who can call today his own: He who, secure within, can say, Tomorrow do thy worst, for I have lived today."
Filming Castle Street in
Bridgwater,
Somerset was used as a location in several scenes.
Cerne Abbey, Abbey Street and The Royal Oak in
Cerne Abbas were used as major locations during the film. Cinematographer
Walter Lassally has said that he thought the location unit got on very well together under the circumstances and that the experience was satisfying. He thought Richardson rather lost his way in post-production, endlessly fixing what was not really broken. ==Release==