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IMDbPro

Where Has Poor Mickey Gone?

  • 1964
  • 59min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,3/10
221
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Where Has Poor Mickey Gone? (1964)
DramaFantasy

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaFour youths, after being kicked out of a nightclub, decide to break into a magic shop and terrorize the owner. They soon discover that the owner is involved in more than just illusions, lead... Leggi tuttoFour youths, after being kicked out of a nightclub, decide to break into a magic shop and terrorize the owner. They soon discover that the owner is involved in more than just illusions, leading to dire consequences for their actions.Four youths, after being kicked out of a nightclub, decide to break into a magic shop and terrorize the owner. They soon discover that the owner is involved in more than just illusions, leading to dire consequences for their actions.

  • Regia
    • Gerry Levy
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Gerry Levy
  • Star
    • Warren Mitchell
    • John Malcolm
    • Ray Armstrong
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,3/10
    221
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Gerry Levy
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Gerry Levy
    • Star
      • Warren Mitchell
      • John Malcolm
      • Ray Armstrong
    • 13Recensioni degli utenti
    • 4Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto1

    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali19

    Modifica
    Warren Mitchell
    Warren Mitchell
    • Emilio
    John Malcolm
    John Malcolm
    • Mick
    Ray Armstrong
    • Ginger
    • (as Raymond Armstrong)
    John Challis
    John Challis
    • Tim
    Christopher Robbie
    Christopher Robbie
    • Kip
    Karol Hagar
    • The Girl
    Joseph Cook
    • The Boy
    Vincent Shaw
    • First Bouncer
    Tommy Eytle
    • Second Bouncer
    Philip Newman
    • First Detective
    Kenneth Laird
    • Second Detective
    Sheila Barker
    Jane Probyn
    Douglas Thorne
    Patricia Quinn
    Patricia Quinn
    Janet Lees-Price
      Sandra Burrows
      George Lee
      • Regia
        • Gerry Levy
      • Sceneggiatura
        • Gerry Levy
      • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
      • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

      Recensioni degli utenti13

      6,3221
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      Recensioni in evidenza

      7kalbimassey

      A lost garnet

      Three young hoodlums and a hanger on commence their evening's recreation by being forcibly ejected from a jazz club, regaling the two burly, built like a brick bog-house bouncers with a torrent of abuse and threats, as they depart, smashing the club sign for good measure, before scarpering into the darkness.

      They're not looking for trouble; they know exactly where to find it! Next up, a brutal, unprovoked attack upon a courting couple, leaves the man lying unconscious and the girl deeply traumatized.

      A quick visit to the local chippy, followed by a further bout of taunting teenage girls and the night's work seems to be winding down.....until, peering into a dimly lit, low brow warehouse, they discover an Aladdin's cave of fairground attractions and novelties, presided over by slight, balding, middle-aged proprietor Warren Mitchell, checking the day's takings, prior to heading home.

      With a suddenly rejuvenated, kid in a sweet shop mentality, they are instantly using and abusing both props and equipment, destroying Mitchell's livelihood and potentially, one fears, his life. He has, however, a single outside chance to outwit his assailants.....and that's magic!

      With the action taking place entirely by night, pretty much in real time and with a constant sense of threat and menace, 'Mickey' evokes an inherently noirish tone. Throw in a title song performed by Ottilie Patterson, with support from Chris Barber and Sonny Boy Williamson and you have an intriguing period piece. A long lost movie, a significant find.
      7andy-e-goss

      Bradbury or Kubrick?

      Where Has Poor Mickey Gone? Was made at a time of rapid change in Britain. The old, post Victorian world was fading under the assault from the 'demob' generation, now free to build their lives and apply what they had learned from overseas postings and contact with US culture. This is exemplified by Ottilie Patterson, who wrote and performed the powerful title and credits song. She was born in Norther Ireland to an Irish father and a Latvian mother, who had met in Georgia during the war.

      Watching this film on Talking Pictures, I was struck by the visual, as well as textural, resemblance to A Clockwork Orange. In particular, Mick himself, with his signature hat and pointy nose, looks so much like Alex, and acts so much like him I can't believe it is a coincidence. The book had been published two years before Where Has Poor Mickey Gone? Came out, so it is quite possible that it was inspired by, if not based on, Bradbury's novel. Stanley Kubrick's film was a decade in the future, but the parallels are such that there must have been an influence. I never rely on "must have", but it would be worth pursuing for a film academic.
      5davidvmcgillivray-24-905811

      The return of a spooky featurette barely seen since it was released in 1966

      Tony Tenser and Michael Klinger, who ran Compton-Cameo Films, famously gave several young directors their first opportunities. One of them was Gerry Levy, who came to them with a script he'd written under the name Peter Marcus. The story of four tearaway lads who break into a fairground novelties warehouse and terrorise the owner (Warren Mitchell) before getting their come-uppance has a horror comic feel to it, but not a great deal of suspense. The business of a posh boy (Christopher Robbie) joining the other lads in their drunken spree takes up a lot of time but seems of marginal relevance. (Levy's brother has confirmed to me that this material was added to increase the running time, thereby qualifying the film for the government's Eady fund). Nevertheless this is a very unusual independent British spook film of the period. A good deal of time and effort was spent on it and this includes a lot of night shooting in London's Soho, the renting of a studio for the interiors, and a title song written and performed by Ottilie Patterson. Because it has few exploitable elements it was shelved after it was made in 1963 and eventually released as a second feature in 1966. Levy went on to direct "The Body Stealers" for Tenser's Tigon company, but then became a production manager. "Mickey" disappeared until a tattered print, with at least 20 minutes missing, turned up at BFI Southbank in 1997. A very good copy of the complete version is currently on the Talking Pictures channel. Two other points of interest are that it was Patricia Quinn's first film (can anyone confirm that she's one of two young women who come out of Portland Mews and reject the advances of the boys?) and that it was originally classified "X" but is now "U". The original certificate must have been awarded solely because the BBFC was still obsessed in the 1960s with the alleged influence of films showing juvenile delinquency.
      6matthewmercy

      They came...but they went...

      For a long time the 'holy grail' of 1960s' low-budget British genre movies that I longed to see appear as an official DVD or Blu-ray release was the Edward Judd sci-fi oddity Invasion (1966), but that was finally issued by StudioCanal in 2014. Since then, another film from the same period has taken its place on my 'must have' list - Gerry Levy's little-seen and much underrated debut b-movie Where Has Poor Mickey Gone? (1964); the full cut of this film has played a handful of times on Talking Pictures TV over the last year or two, though it still shows no signs of a DVD release on the associated Renown label.

      The tale of four nominally 'juvenile' delinquent lads who break into a fairground supplies shop in pursuit of vicious kicks, only to receive a chilling comeuppance at the hands of Warren Mitchell's troubled magician, it mainly resembles a prototype episode of Tales of the Unexpected (complete with a creepy twist ending not unlike something from novelist Roald Dahl's The Witches). Despite some obvious padding included to bring it up to the usual one-hour second feature running time and thus qualify the film for the Eady Levy, it remains a compact little 'short story' that benefits from a genuine sense of mystery and from Mitchell's committed (if not always totally convincing) lead performance.

      The quartet of youths are three ne'er-do-well Cockneys and a 'posh nosh' hanger-on, who bully courting couples and pick fights with nightclub bouncers before deciding to give Mitchell's 'The Great Dinelli' a lot of trouble for no reason other than their own boredom and mean-spiritedness. Though Mitchell initially appears cringingly terrified of the boys, he's actually the guardian to some seriously powerful supernatural forces, and it is of unleashing them that he is actually most wary. In this way, the film almost invites the audience to enjoy the eventual fate of the 'boys', which isn't really difficult given that they are well-characterised as genuine assholes, despite being very 'weak beer' by modern standards (remember the days when ASBO kids wore ties and jumpers? Eden Lake this ain't), and the perhaps slightly lacking casting. John Malcolm, who plays the titular gang leader Mickey, was around twenty-seven when the film was made but with his dopey trilby and chronically receding hairline he looks nearer forty (Malcolm continually calling Mitchell 'Pop' seems silly because the two men appear to be the same age - Mitchell was in his late thirties and despite playing a feeble codger, he doesn't really look any older than that). Other members of the gang will be familiar to Tom Baker-era Doctor Who fans; Christopher Robbie was the Cyberleader in Revenge of the Cybermen, whilst John Challis more notably played the nasty Scorby in The Seeds of Doom, although he's obviously much better known as Boycie from Only Fools and Horses.

      Levy had a lengthy career in the movies, eventually working as a production manager on 1980s' A-pictures like Out of Africa and Cry Freedom. His only other movie as a director, however, was the Tigon stinkbomb The Body Stealers (1969), a film as lame-brained, unpersuasive and un-scary as Where Has Poor Mickey Gone? is quietly compelling and eerie. Another plus is Ottilie Patterson belting out a great little title track, but unfortunately, Where Has Poor Mickey Gone? didn't see immediate release following its completion and apparently only went out as support to Polanski's Cul-De-Sac in 1966, before vanishing from circulation for over thirty years. Now that it is back doing the rounds, if it turns up I'd advise that you try to catch it.
      5fostrhod

      Is Mickey actually in the film?

      Where has poor Mickey gone? That is the question, apart from the first on screen appearance from John Challis and a wonderful performance from Warren Mitchell there's very little to write about in this film. Oh yes there is, Otillie Paterson singing the theme song about " poor Mickey" her performance is unique in that I've never ever seen this performer on screen before, picture Kathy Kirby singing a jazz blues number and you'll get the idea. As for the film, it's a somewhat dated curio and well worth watch, sadly it will be forgotten just like the whereabouts of poor Mickey. Actually Mickey is Mick whose the leader of the gang of hoodlums, but Mickey sounds better than Mick I guess. Ps This is the sort of play that Pemberton and Shearsmith do with Inside#9 only better. PPS Thanks to the wonderful Talking Pictures for showing this, even the duds are worth a viewing.

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      Trama

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      Lo sapevi?

      Modifica
      • Blooper
        The clock in Emilio's workshop shows 20 minutes to eight in more than one shot, when it should have moved on.
      • Curiosità sui crediti
        There are no opening credits to the film. Possibly a first. Instead the title of the film is sung by Ottilie Patterson
      • Colonne sonore
        Where Has Poor Mickey Gone..?
        Title song written, composed and sung by Ottilie Patterson

        accompanied by Chris Barber, bass;

        Eddie Smith, banjo,

        Graham Burbridge, drums,

        Sonny Boy Williamson, harmonica.

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      Dettagli

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      • Data di uscita
        • 1964 (Regno Unito)
      • Paese di origine
        • Regno Unito
      • Lingua
        • Inglese
      • Luoghi delle riprese
        • Berwick Street, Soho, Londra, Inghilterra, Regno Unito(fish and chip shop)
      • Azienda produttrice
        • Ledeck Productions
      • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

      Specifiche tecniche

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      • Tempo di esecuzione
        59 minuti
      • Colore
        • Black and White
      • Proporzioni
        • 1.37 : 1

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      By what name was Where Has Poor Mickey Gone? (1964) officially released in Canada in English?
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