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La souris qui rugissait

Original title: The Mouse That Roared
  • 1959
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
9.8K
YOUR RATING
La souris qui rugissait (1959)
Trailer for this comedy starring Peter Sellers
Play trailer2:30
1 Video
28 Photos
ParodySatireComedy

A tiny, impoverished European nation declares war on the United States of America, planning to lose in order to collect post-war compensation, but things don't go according to plan.A tiny, impoverished European nation declares war on the United States of America, planning to lose in order to collect post-war compensation, but things don't go according to plan.A tiny, impoverished European nation declares war on the United States of America, planning to lose in order to collect post-war compensation, but things don't go according to plan.

  • Director
    • Jack Arnold
  • Writers
    • Roger MacDougall
    • Stanley Mann
    • Leonard Wibberley
  • Stars
    • Peter Sellers
    • Jean Seberg
    • William Hartnell
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    9.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jack Arnold
    • Writers
      • Roger MacDougall
      • Stanley Mann
      • Leonard Wibberley
    • Stars
      • Peter Sellers
      • Jean Seberg
      • William Hartnell
    • 90User reviews
    • 31Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Mouse That Roared
    Trailer 2:30
    The Mouse That Roared

    Photos28

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    Top cast49

    Edit
    Peter Sellers
    Peter Sellers
    • Grand Duchess Gloriana XII…
    Jean Seberg
    Jean Seberg
    • Helen Kokintz
    William Hartnell
    William Hartnell
    • Will Buckley
    David Kossoff
    David Kossoff
    • Doctor Alfred Kokintz
    Leo McKern
    Leo McKern
    • Benter
    MacDonald Parke
    • General Snippet
    • (as Macdonald Parke)
    Austin Willis
    Austin Willis
    • United States Secretary of Defense
    Timothy Bateson
    Timothy Bateson
    • Roger
    Monte Landis
    Monte Landis
    • Cobbley
    • (as Monty Landis)
    Alan Gifford
    Alan Gifford
    • Air Raid Warden
    Colin Gordon
    Colin Gordon
    • BBC Announcer
    Harold Kasket
    • Pedro
    Joe Beckett
    • American General
    • (uncredited)
    Nigel Bernard
    • Fenwickian MP
    • (uncredited)
    Wally Brown
    Wally Brown
    • Air Raid Warden
    • (uncredited)
    Jacques Cey
    • Ticket Collector
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Clay
    • British Ambassador
    • (uncredited)
    Henry De Bray
    • French Ambassador
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Jack Arnold
    • Writers
      • Roger MacDougall
      • Stanley Mann
      • Leonard Wibberley
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews90

    6.99.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7ma-cortes

    A tiny Duchy decides to wage war on the United States , lose and accept a generous aid

    Peter Sellers show with his particular talent playing three different and funny roles. Fun film with amusing screenplay by Roger MacDougall & Stanley Mann , from the novel by Leonard Wibberley , being well directed by Jack Arnold . The Hilarious Story of How the Duchy of Grand Fenwick , a tiny European nation devises a foolproof method of filling its depleted treasury as declaring war on the U.S. and winning , but collects reparations from generous Americans . An impoverished backward nation declares a war on the United States of America, hoping to lose, but things don't go according to plan . They send an invasion army to New York commanded by Tully Bascombe (Peter Sellers commander of their medieval force) which arrives during a nuclear drill that has abandoned the streets . In the megalopolis they discover a scientist , Professor Alfred Kokintz (David Kossoff), with a special ultimate weapon that can destroy the Earth and they capture him along with his daughter (Jean Seberg).

    This is a funny and entertaining comedy with Peter Sellers as a real showman playing various characters . As Sellers acting as the scheming Prime Minister of Grand Fenwick, as the scheming Grand Duchess and as Tully Bascombe, commander of their medieval army . Sellers made this film in part as a means of emulating his intimate actor , Alec Guinness, by playing multiple roles in ¨Kind Hearts and Coronets¨ . Picture is a vehicle Peter Sellers , he's an authentic comic and real farceur . It's a pretty amusing farce with the master comic Sellers who displays efficiently his abilities. If you like Sellers's crazy interpretation ,you will most definitely enjoy this one . Colorful cinematography by John Wilcox , filmed in studios and on location as Marseilles and New York harbor sequences were filmed in Southampton, UK , the presence of the Queen Elizabeth ocean liner there was a lucky coincidence. The New York invasion sequence was filmed in Manhattan on a Sunday morning, accounting for the city's empty streets and good sets by production designer Geoffrey Drake . Atmospheric musical score by by Edwin Astley , among the musical quotations used in the film were excerpts from Felix Mendelssohn's "Hebrides Overture", "Rule Britannia", "A Life on the Ocean Waves", "Frankie and Johnnie", and a number of American marches . It is followed by a sequel ¨The mouse on the moon¨.

    This well-edited motion picture is compellingly directed by Jack Arnold in his best foray into the comedy genre. He reigns supreme as one of the greatest filmmakers of 50s science , achieving an important cult popularity with classics as "The Creature from the Black Lagoon," and its follow-up titled "Revenge of the Creature" that was a nice sequel . "Tarantula" was likewise a lot of amusement and of course "The Incredible Shrinking Man" attained his greatest enduring cult popularity , it's a thought-provoking and impressive classic that's lost none of its power throughout the years . Arnold's final two genre entries were the interesting "Monster on the Campus" and the outlandish "The Space Children¨ . In addition to his film work, Arnold also directed episodes of such TV shows .
    6arte-verme

    An enjoyable,delightful comedy

    This movie is about war.War in its funniest forms. Peter Sellers takes on three roles;Grand Duchess Gloriana X, Prime Minister Count Rupert of Mountjoy and Tully Bascombe.Each character is unique in its own way and none is despicable. Set in a world where nothing makes sense and lightly attached to reality,a small 15th century country declares war on the United States hoping to lose.This rather easy plan is thwarted when the country's naive field marshal wins the war. It's not quite a masterpiece,but if you're a fan of British comedy lead by its finest Peter Sellers,this movie is a great way to spend your evening and have a couple of laughs.
    6slokes

    Sellers Conquers America

    A fey, light-hearted frolic that almost floats away on its own marshmellowy charm, "The Mouse That Roared" served to introduce American audiences to the man who would reshape film comedy in the 1960s much the way his countrymen the Beatles did with pop music.

    Yes, that's Peter Sellers making what amounted to his debut as an over-the-title star, playing not one but three roles. First, he's Count Rupert Mountjoy, prime minister of the tiny nation of Grand Fenwick, who hatches the scheme of declaring war on the United States in order to quickly surrender and reap Marshall Plan-style aid. Then he's Tully Bascombe, the nearsighted leader of the Fenwick expeditionary force, who stumbles upon a weapon to force an American surrender. Finally, he's the Grand Duchess Gloriana, ruler of Grand Fenwick and very keen on war so long as no one gets hurt.

    With that premise, and Sellers in the driver's seat, you expect more than "Mouse That Roared" delivers. Not that it's bad, or unentertaining. But after a rousing opening 20 minutes spent basking in Fenwick's goofy ambiance and establishing the daring plot, the film loses steam; first moving the action to an unconvincing Manhattan setting, then inserting a romantic subplot between Tully and an American girl (Jean Seberg) which features neither actor to good effect. The comedy is never sharp, but over time it becomes forced, recovering a bit only at the end.

    It's a shame because the premise, as said, offers much, and director Jack Arnold, while no Kubrick, seems to appreciate both Sellers' gift for light comedy and the kind of film which suits that best. At times, especially with some inspired breaks from the action, "The Mouse That Roared" feels more like an Ealing comedy than the Ealing comedy Sellers actually made four years before, the far darker "Ladykillers."

    "Mouse" has an edge to it, regarding the folly of mutually assured destruction and American hegemony, yet it manages to couch this very cleverly by emphasizing how essentially good the U.S. really is. You try selling the idea of a film showcasing a successful sneak attack against New York, in which the attackers are presented as the good guys. Yet "Mouse That Roared" was a monster hit, and for that Arnold and his team deserve credit.

    "Only an imbecile could have won this war, and he did!" complains Mountjoy of Bascombe, seeing no good in holding America hostage with a football-shaped explosive device 100 times more powerful than an H-Bomb.

    Sellers is distinctive if not a laugh magnet in his three roles, but the film suffers from poor supporting work around him. Except for Leo McKern, playing Mountjoy's scheming ally, no one distinguishes him- or herself around Sellers, and a couple of key performances are gratingly bad. The humor of the Fenwickians being mistaken as spacemen by Manhattanites is beaten to the ground, as is the "comedy" of Tully's gang peppering the QEII with arrows as it passes them on the ocean.

    History favors the big battalions, but comedy loves the underdog. Here you are presented with a vehicle for an underdog who would prove every bit as worthy of our favor as Chaplin or Keaton, though it would take better films to make that point.
    dancziraky

    A superb satire eclipsed only by its source material!

    The film version of "The Mouse That Roared" was so funny and charming that, upon spying an old, used paperback edition of Leonard Wibberley's book and its two immediate sequels, I felt compelled to buy them. What an utter delight they are! The book is somewhat different from the film, in that Duchess Glorianna XII is a very sexy, young woman, who ends up marrying the heroic Tully Bascomb (who isn't as much of a dullard as he was portrayed by Peter Sellers). Perhaps the characters that are the closet in the film to their literary counterparts are Count Mountjoy and Professor Kokintz. In fact, Sellers truly nailed the sly, pompous Mountjoy to a tee in the film, even if the character isn't quite as odious in the novel. Wibberley's "The Mouse That Roared" is the only book in the "Mouse" series currently in print, but many libraries carry the others: "The Mouse on the Moon" (also filmed, in 1963), "The Mouse on Wall Street," "The Mouse That Saved the West," and the illustrated prequel, "Beware the Mouse."
    7moonspinner55

    Predictably nutty comedic triumph for Peter Sellers, who shines

    Very cute, very funny farce has fictional European country, the Duchy of Grand Fenwick (billed as "the smallest country in the world") facing a financial crisis after the United States drops their main export (wine) for a lower-priced imitation. Hoping to derive sympathy bonds for their efforts, the powers that be declare war on the U.S., but things don't go as planned. Wonderful British film put Peter Sellers on the map stateside, and deservedly so (he's terrific in three different roles, one in drag as Grand Fenwick's bosomy Duchess). Love-interest Jean Seberg also good as the daughter of the famous scientist responsible for creating the new Q-Bomb. Clever, amusing picture runs a little long but is nevertheless a high time. *** from ****

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jack Arnold soon learned that Peter Sellers did his best work on the first take and was usually useless by take three. The actor, schooled in improvisation, couldn't keep the lines fresh if he had to say them over and over.
    • Goofs
      After Grand Fenwick's army sets sail for home, the headline in one American newspaper (the San Francisco Review) references war mobilisation. American newspapers would spell it mobilization.
    • Quotes

      Grand Duchess Gloriana: How did the war go?

      Tulley Bascombe: Well, Your Grace, we're home. Actually, there's been a slight change of plan. I know it will come as a surprise, a pleasant one, I hope, but we sort of won.

      Prime Minster Count Rupert Mountjoy: You sort of WHAT?

    • Crazy credits
      The Columbia Pictures logo in the beginning has the Torch Lady spot a mouse and run off.

      The logo at the end of the film has the Lady return back to the logo.
    • Connections
      Featured in L'univers du rire (1982)
    • Soundtracks
      Romeo and Juliet Love Theme
      (1868) (uncredited)

      Written by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

      Played often in the score

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    FAQ18

    • How long is The Mouse That Roared?Powered by Alexa
    • Was this based on a novel?
    • Who were the Duchess and the Prime Minister based on?
    • Where exactly is Grand Fenwick?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 20, 1960 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Rugido de ratón
    • Filming locations
      • Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • Highroad Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $450,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 23 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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