Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueYoung girl is constantly getting into trouble and embarrassing her father, who finally puts his foot down.Young girl is constantly getting into trouble and embarrassing her father, who finally puts his foot down.Young girl is constantly getting into trouble and embarrassing her father, who finally puts his foot down.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Skip Homeier
- Hank Evans
- (as Skippy Homeier)
Edna Bennett
- Woman in Audience
- (non crédité)
Bobette Bentley
- Barbara
- (non crédité)
George M. Carleton
- Dr. Pierson
- (non crédité)
Victor Cutler
- Intern
- (non crédité)
Shirley Doble
- Janet
- (non crédité)
Edward Earle
- Dr. Merckle
- (non crédité)
Almeda Fowler
- Woman in Audience
- (non crédité)
Jon Gilbreath
- Soda Jerk
- (non crédité)
Ronald Harris
- Tubby
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
I love this movie. I saw it when I was a kid and then again many years later. It holds up quite well. The performances are very sincere, and I will never forget Hattie McDaniel, in the kitchen, putting vanilla extract behind her ears for perfume. I also love the muted color photography and the title song. Lois Butler is great, and she has wonderful support from the rest of the cast, especially Irene Hervey. It was also the first film I saw featuring Skip Homeier who continued in movies for many years, mostly in western roles. This 1948 film reminds me of those wonderful days when I would go to the neighborhood theatre for a Saturday matinée and live alongside all the characters on the screen.
10aatpct
Lois is my aunt. She was my favorite person. She would always sing to me when I was young, she always had a beautiful smile and I loved her very much. I am so happy that people liked "Mickey", I thought it was a darling movie. Thanks for all the positive responses. She was also married to Hall Bartlett, producer of "Jonathon Livingston Segull". He was a gorgeous man with steel blue eyes and black wavy hair. He wanted her to continue her career but she wanted to have children and raise a family. She married a wonderful man after Hall. He was a dentist. They moved into a great home that had been owned by Chuck Conners previously.
Like "Montana Mike," another childhood film I loved, "Mickey" was avidly watched by my brother and me as children in the early days of television. I don't remember it in detail, but it used to be aired fairly frequently and my brother and I would both eagerly anticipate its broadcast. I do remember that Mickey was a "tomboy" and we both thought "Mickey" was the greatest. I think children today might enjoy it too, although I am not so sure that it would stand up for me as an adult. But who knows? It should be released on video if only as a cinematic artifact of a more charming and innocent period in American history.
Lois Butler made her film debut in the title role. She lives with her father and housekeeper Bertha (played by Oscar winner Hattie McDaniel. Of course she plays the maid and perhaps Mickey's mother figure in the story. Mickey is a tomboy who prefers to play baseball than take piano and voice lessons. She tries to set her father up with her neighbor's single aunt because she doesn't like her father's taste in women. This is fine melodrama with decent acting. The writing could be better. The quality of the screen color is poor between black and white and color. It's too dark in some scenes. You can't even tell whether it is black and white or early color. I don't hold it against the film.
Back in the '50s, before the major studios released their old movies to TV, several so-called "poverty row" companies (Republic, Monogram, PRC, etc.) filled the void with the television equivalent of "garage sales" of their low-budget 'B' products. Because of the paucity of old movies on TV in that era, a number of these films were shown over and over again--and proved, to viewers' delight, that an economy budget didn't necessarily spell mediocrity. Case in point: Eagle-Lion's sprightly "Mickey," a thoroughly disarming tale of a feisty teenaged tomboy coming of age in small-town America. A charming young actress with a lilting soprano voice, Lois Butler played the title role, supported by such pros as Bill Goodwin as her understanding widowed Dad, and the always-lovely Irene Hervey as their next-door neighbor. The likeable Skip Homeier supplied additional charm as Mickey's highschool crush, and the magnificent Hattie McDaniel added her customary zing as--what else?--the wisecracking housekeeper. Released the same year as MGM's glossy, big-budget, all-star "A Date with Judy" (1948), "Mickey" was no match for that MGM blockbuster but exudes its own unpretentious charm. A dated artifact of its era, to be sure, but nevertheless a breezy, endearing portrayal of the trials and tribulations of small-town teenagers way back when. Films like "Mickey" shouldn't be ridiculed and forgotten but cherished and enjoyed for their candy-coated portrayal of a bygone era. A la Jane Powell, Ms. Butler even gets to sing a few tunes (most memorably "Someday My Prince Will Come") and the pleasing production is further enhanced by the pasteled Cinecolor cinematography. A modest, beguiling treat--long overdue for a re-discovery and restoration (are you listening, TCM?)
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFinal film of George Irving.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Fräulein Wildfang
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 27min(87 min)
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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