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The Rise and Rise of Michael Rimmer

  • 1970
  • R
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
743
YOUR RATING
Peter Cook in The Rise and Rise of Michael Rimmer (1970)
SatireComedy

Fresh-faced young Michael Rimmer worms his way into an opinion poll company and is soon running the place. He uses this as a springboard to get into politics, and in the mini-skirted, flared... Read allFresh-faced young Michael Rimmer worms his way into an opinion poll company and is soon running the place. He uses this as a springboard to get into politics, and in the mini-skirted, flared-trousered world of 1970 Britain, he starts to rise through the Tory ranks.Fresh-faced young Michael Rimmer worms his way into an opinion poll company and is soon running the place. He uses this as a springboard to get into politics, and in the mini-skirted, flared-trousered world of 1970 Britain, he starts to rise through the Tory ranks.

  • Director
    • Kevin Billington
  • Writers
    • Peter Cook
    • John Cleese
    • Graham Chapman
  • Stars
    • Ann Beach
    • Desmond Walter-Ellis
    • Peter Cook
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    743
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kevin Billington
    • Writers
      • Peter Cook
      • John Cleese
      • Graham Chapman
    • Stars
      • Ann Beach
      • Desmond Walter-Ellis
      • Peter Cook
    • 26User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos13

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    Top cast72

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    Ann Beach
    Ann Beach
    • Receptionist
    Desmond Walter-Ellis
    Desmond Walter-Ellis
    • Buffery
    Peter Cook
    Peter Cook
    • Michael Rimmer
    Arthur Lowe
    Arthur Lowe
    • Ferret
    Dudley Foster
    • Federman
    John Cleese
    John Cleese
    • Pumer
    James Cossins
    James Cossins
    • Crodder
    Valerie Leon
    Valerie Leon
    • Tanya
    Graham Chapman
    Graham Chapman
    • Fromage
    William Job
    • Waring
    Elspeth March
    Elspeth March
    • Mrs. Ferret
    Dennis Price
    Dennis Price
    • Fairburn
    Marilyn Rickard
    Marilyn Rickard
    • Girl in Commercial
    Diana Coupland
    • Mrs. Spimm
    Rosalie Westwater
    • Tart
    Michael Trubshawe
    Michael Trubshawe
    • Mandeville
    Harold Pinter
    Harold Pinter
    • Steven Hench
    Denholm Elliott
    Denholm Elliott
    • Peter Niss
    • Director
      • Kevin Billington
    • Writers
      • Peter Cook
      • John Cleese
      • Graham Chapman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews26

    6.9743
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    Featured reviews

    10brad-94

    One of the best satirical films I have ever seen.

    This film was shown recently on Channel 5 in the UK. Basically, a young official looking man with a clipboard, Michael Rimmer (Peter Cook) walks into a dead beat polling company - and begins to change it dramatically. Very soon, the company is a thrusting dynamic organisation - with Michael Rimmer as it's head. He is loved by everyone, and he can manipulate people easily. He then begins to move into politics, and rises very quickly up to Prime Minister. It is then that his true motives begin to appear - he wants to be President of Great Britain. Will he succeed? Of course, he's Michael Rimmer. Watch this film and be amazed. Don't be concerned if you find you rewind it and watch it all over again. It is superb.
    9Sinafter

    Utterly brilliant, possibly by accident.

    This cynical tale of politicians and spin-doctors gives me goosebumps because I am amazed how prescient it is fifty years on. Either it accurately predicted the future or politics never changes. If it had been released when it was finished it would have been topical and might have been more of a success, instead it was held back for a year and then vanished without a trace. I ordered a copy when it was first released on dvd, because of the involvement of John Cleese and Graham Chapman; but I was amazed by how much I enjoyed it and I also remembered seeing it on late night TV many years ago, when I was too young to appreciate it.

    Peter Cook's unemotional performance in the title role has drawn criticism, even from the man himself but I think it is just right. I have met people in real life who are just as wooden as Michael Rimmer, with nothing behind their eyes. I find the character menacing and I think Cook has a great screen presence, even though this movie apparently ruined his career! The wonderful Vanessa Howard plays Rimmer's wife; I think she should have been a huge star but at least a few of her movies are now available on dvd. Arthur Lowe does a great turn in a supporting role as the lazy and envious Ferret, and many other well known English actors appear, including Denholm Elliott and Dennis Price.

    The Rise and Rise of Michael Rimmer is a comedy but a decidedly black one and all the better for it. There is a shortage of characters to relate to and root for which shows how well it reflects the world of politics but this will have contributed to it being so quickly forgotten when it first came out. At least there have been many favourable reviews since the dvd release.
    10jimdoyle111

    British Comedy Gem

    I was lucky enough to discuss this film with David Frost in 2005 and it is a film he is still (he was the producer) very proud of, citing it as one of Peter Cook's best works.

    The film was given a very limited release in 1970. I saw it in the Cosmo Cinema in Glasgow in 1970 and fell off my seat laughing - the first time I have ever done that in a cinema - and I was not the only one. The Cosmo by the way (now the Glasgow Film Theatre) was a specialist cinema which attracted intellectuals and serious film students, so they clearly saw the importance of this film from the word go and it is such a shame that Warner Brothers are unable to do the same and recognise this as an important historical film document.

    The film disappeared and has only been shown on TV 3 times - originally shown on ITV in 1979 by various channels who usually used it to pad out their late night schedules - and the version I taped then runs about 8 minutes short. It has also been shown on Channel 5 twice and they have made less cuts, but there is still some material missing which is why it needs to be issued on DVD with care and by someone who knows the film well and understands its importance to fans of John Cleese, Peter Cook, Monty Python - and 60s British comedy.

    Another perspective is that Michael Rimmer is essentially Tony Blair, so this film predicts presidential style UK politics and spin and contrasts it with old fashioned Labour thud and blunder with Harold Wilson lookalike George A Cooper in his best ever role.

    This should be compulsory viewing for all political students and if you liked the "Yes Minister" TV series, chances are you will very much enjoy this.

    Post Mortem Since I wrote the initial comment above, the DVD has been released complete with director commentary - and I still find this an incredibly funny film all these years later.
    7cherold

    Fun and Cynical Political Satire

    In Bedazzled, Peter Cook played the devil. Here he plays something worse; a man with a clipboard.

    As the movie begins, Peter Cook starts following people at an ad agency, writing things down on a clipboard and introducing himself to everyone as Michael Rimmer. He claims to be an employee, yet he has to introduce himself to every single person at the company.

    Soon Cook is a pollster, then a politician, each step preceding from the last, each move built on deceit in a world that accepts deceit as the norm, and Cook as one of them.

    Cook is a mysterious character. We can see him manipulating events and working his way up the food chain, but there's never a sense of what it's all for. He seemingly just wants power, but it's never enough, and he never uses it for anything except gaining more power. This is interesting, but at the same time its distancing, leaving one intellectually engaged but emotionally disinterested.

    The movie is at its best when it lays out the manipulations, as when a politician practices for a speech in an odd way, and then we see the speech and exactly what the rehearsal was all about.

    The film is also interesting as a time capsule. It's strange to watch any non-war movie that is so man-heavy. While many movies of the time should men exclusively in business roles, there is usually a counterbalance of women in roles of emotional support. But in a movie all about power made at a time where only men had power, women are pure decorative, used for sex jokes and gratuitous nudity. This is true to what was going on at the time, although in a satire one always notices where the creators seemingly accept the status quo, and here there seems to be no thoughts for the ladies.

    The movie didn't do well, but then, how often does satire do well? If you're one of those rare people who are drawn to satire this is a very worthwhile film.
    10wild_pepsi_child

    And so Spin was Invented

    It is a real shame that this film has not been released on DVD or even VHS. The remarkable thing about it is that even though it has been aired so few times, its imagery is so immediately fresh in the mind, from the bumbling assassination attempts in a JFK style by Arthur Lowe, to the 'First British Gold Bar' extracted from the north sea.

    This film is about manipulation and orchestration from the start to the end !! done with a very dry and British style sense of humour.

    The manipulation and 'Spin' of the Political Party Broadcast filming - who could not forget the scene with the rotating countryside backdrop and tread mill - BRILLIANT!! The guile of a Prime Minister who offers the nation the right to decide on every issue -with the piles of paper work such referendums incurred - to the ultimate presidential / dictatorship power gained from the final referendum.

    The film as many people have mentioned before may not have a plot, in fact it is more like a documentary at times, but it is wholly unimportant. Its content is a precise satire of the government and issues at the time of production - preceding the change to decimalization - entry into the EU and the discovery of oil in the North sea, the general feeling of social discontent and mistrust in Government that was brewing and what would almost prophetically occur several years later.

    One possible reason for its lack of public viewing could be because Peter Cooks brilliant genius cut close to the bone, unashamedly attacking the political processes and media circuses that surround general elections and political manifesto.

    Without any doubt if this film was ever released on DVD I would have to buy at least 3 copies.

    If there was ever a point in history were spin doctor politics was defined - look no further than this film for it origins.

    A monument to Peter Cook and a host of brilliant British comedy actors.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Sir Eric Bentley is inspired by the late British Conservative politician Enoch Powell, who made the famous "Rivers of Blood" speech about immigration to the UK. Bentley repeats a piece of gossip about an old lady from an embarrassingly unreliable source - much as Powell had. Bentley mentions Powell by name at the end of the speech.
    • Goofs
      During the sex survey scene, Michael Bate's character exclaims that the last time he and his wife made love was Tuesday June 3rd 1953 and it was the Coronation of HM Queen Elizabeth II that 'got her going'. Whilst he may remember the occasion with some nostalgia, he doesn't remember the day as June 3rd 1953 fell on a Wednesday.
    • Quotes

      Mrs. Ferret: Have you been fired?

      Ferret: [brushing it off] Fired?

      [laughs]

      Ferret: Hahaha! Fired? Hahahaha

      [more nervous now]

      Mrs. Ferret: Then why is the car for sale?

      [we see the car through the house window; in the side window there is a crudely written sign saying FORSALE]

      Ferret: Oh that? That's a mistake. That's one of Rimmer's cockups. That should read Fors Ale. A new beer we're advertising.

      [as giving a slogan]

      Ferret: Fors Ale - keeps you hearty and hale.

      Mrs. Ferret: Well I've never heard of it.

      Ferret: And you may never! Very hush hush.

    • Connections
      Featured in Omnibus: Some Interesting Facts About Peter Cook (1995)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 23, 1971 (Ireland)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Взлёт и подъём Майкла Риммера
    • Filming locations
      • Porchester Halls, Queensway, Bayswater, London, England, UK(party conference)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros./Seven Arts
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 34 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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