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IMDbPro

Strip-tease chez Minsky

Original title: The Night They Raided Minsky's
  • 1968
  • PG-13
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Strip-tease chez Minsky (1968)
A naive young Amish woman runs away from her home in Pennsylvania to New York City, where she hopes to act in religious stage plays but ends up performing in Burlesque theatre.
Play trailer3:02
2 Videos
71 Photos
Comedy

A naive young Amish woman runs away from her home in Pennsylvania to New York City, where she hopes to act in religious stage plays but ends up performing in Burlesque theatre.A naive young Amish woman runs away from her home in Pennsylvania to New York City, where she hopes to act in religious stage plays but ends up performing in Burlesque theatre.A naive young Amish woman runs away from her home in Pennsylvania to New York City, where she hopes to act in religious stage plays but ends up performing in Burlesque theatre.

  • Director
    • William Friedkin
  • Writers
    • Arnold Schulman
    • Sidney Michaels
    • Norman Lear
  • Stars
    • Jason Robards
    • Britt Ekland
    • Norman Wisdom
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William Friedkin
    • Writers
      • Arnold Schulman
      • Sidney Michaels
      • Norman Lear
    • Stars
      • Jason Robards
      • Britt Ekland
      • Norman Wisdom
    • 34User reviews
    • 24Critic reviews
    • 67Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 3:02
    Trailer
    The Night They Raided Minsky's: You're A Gentleman
    Clip 2:51
    The Night They Raided Minsky's: You're A Gentleman
    The Night They Raided Minsky's: You're A Gentleman
    Clip 2:51
    The Night They Raided Minsky's: You're A Gentleman

    Photos70

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Jason Robards
    Jason Robards
    • Raymond Paine
    Britt Ekland
    Britt Ekland
    • Rachel Schpitendavel
    Norman Wisdom
    Norman Wisdom
    • Chick Williams
    Forrest Tucker
    Forrest Tucker
    • Trim Houlihan
    Harry Andrews
    Harry Andrews
    • Jacob Schpitendavel
    Joseph Wiseman
    Joseph Wiseman
    • Louis Minsky
    Denholm Elliott
    Denholm Elliott
    • Vance Fowler
    Elliott Gould
    Elliott Gould
    • Billy Minsky
    Jack Burns
    Jack Burns
    • Candy Butcher
    Bert Lahr
    Bert Lahr
    • Professor Spats
    Gloria LeRoy
    Gloria LeRoy
    • Mae Harris
    Eddie Lawrence
    • Scratch
    Dexter Maitland
    • Duffy
    Lillian Hayman
    • Singer in Speakeasy
    Richard Libertini
    Richard Libertini
    • Pockets
    • (as Dick Libertini)
    Judith Lowry
    Judith Lowry
    • Mother Annie
    • (as Judith Lowery)
    Will B. Able
    Will B. Able
    • Clyde
    Mike Elias
    • Immigration Officer 1
    • Director
      • William Friedkin
    • Writers
      • Arnold Schulman
      • Sidney Michaels
      • Norman Lear
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews34

    6.11.9K
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    Featured reviews

    6blanche-2

    disappointing

    A gorgeous Amish girl, Rachel (Britt Ekland) leaves the sect and comes to New York to dance, and winds up at Minsky's Burlesque House in "The Night They Raided Minsky's." Wide-eyed and innocent, she explains that she dances to portions of the Bible. When she shows what she can do, well, it's not burlesque.

    But this gives Raymond (Jason Robards), one of the comics, an idea. A group wants to close down the burlesque house because they think the numbers are indecent. If they announce a star from Paris, Madame Fifi, and send Rachel out with her Bible dances right as the place is being raided, it should put an end to the raids.

    Meanwhile, Rachel's father (Harry Andrews) is looking for her.

    This is a wonderful cast that includes, besides those mentioned, Elliot Gould, Forrest Tucker, Bert Lahr, and Denholm Elliot I guess I thought there would be a little more story to this film, instead of so many burlesque numbers. It's just a matter of taste. I've just never been that fond of burlesque.

    Sadly Bert Lahr died during this film, so his part was shortened and he was replaced.

    The end is very good, with the invention of the striptease. If you're a fan of burlesque, you will love this film.
    8armoscot

    A curiously innocent Mulligan stew of bawdy humor and music.

    This can be a wonderful guilty pleasure, as it mixes a little (and I mean a little) skin, music hall numbers, traditional burlesque routines, a slightly salacious backstage story, and film-style slapstick.

    Jason Robards and Norman Wisdom are a very convincing comedy team, although Robards is a bit dark. Give the actor and the filmmakers credit for maintaining the character as a ruthless SOB and not trying to make this guy cute and lovable.

    You'll also see Bert Lahr (the Cowardly Lion) in his last film performance, which had to be truncated as he died during production (his role would have been more important and added a touch of surrealism). Also on hand is Elliott Gould, in pre-"Bob, Carol, Ted & Alice" days as a sweet schnook (and the title character), as well as Forrest Tucker as a gangster, Jack Burns as a candy butcher (that's the guy who sells the crummy boxes of candy that MIGHT have a watch in them--and if you believe that...,) Denholm Elliott (Indiana Jones' friend) as the guy who conducts the raid, as well as some real burlesque dancers and comics from the old days.

    Adams and Strouse, who wrote BYE BYE BIRDIE contribute a small group of peppy songs, including "From Head To Toe You're A Gentleman" a duet for Robards and Wisdom (the latter a beloved variety star in Britain) and the immortal production number, "Take Ten Terrific Girls But Only Nine Costumes And You're Cooking Up Something Grand."

    Britt Ekland inadvertently invents the striptease (it's complicated, read the plot synopsis), but reliable rumor and legend is that the breasts on display belong to a double. Incidentally, the nudity here is about as extensive as in Titanic, so if your kids have already seen that, this will not corrupt them.

    The fact is the whole thing is a curiously innocent Mulligan stew of comedy and music, given its subject matter.

    Norman Lear wrote and produced in his pre-ALL IN THE FAMILY DAYS, and William Friedkin directed in his pre-FRENCH CONNECTION days. According to the book "WHEN THE SHOOTING'S DONE THE CUTTING BEGINS" by Ralph Rosenblum, the film's editor, Friedkin shot the film indifferently and left immediately. Rosenblum spent the best part of a year recutting the film with the blessing of United Artists production chief David Picker. Rosenblum uses a technique of editing in hokey old silent footage to indicate to the audience that no one is taking the story too seriously, which lifts the curse over some purple writing and acting. Also Rosenblum seems to have invented a trick of mixing authentic B&W archive footage with new footage printed in black and white, which suddenly switches to color. This is an exciting and startling effect the first couple of times, but it is a bit overplayed.

    Anyway, this film is better than you probably think it is, and better than it needs to be. Give it a look, it couldn't hurt.
    10Tom Murray

    Why Don't You All Love This Film?

    Why doesn't everybody just love this movie? It is one of most delightful comedies that I have ever seen. I saw it when it first came out in the cinema and watched it three times that first week and at least four times since.

    It is a very stylized movie, with an introductory narration right out of the 1920's. The style carries right through the film, with wonderful vaudeville routines. The "girls" are not particularly beautiful and are, by current standards a little overweight. Also they seem to be going through the motions with a variety of personalities. They do not have beautiful singing voices and they do not dance in perfect synchronization but nobody, especially them, seems to care. Burlesque is, after all, light entertainment. The comedy skits are very simple and unintelligent but they are performed with great panache. Sir Norman Wisdom (born 1915), the great British stage and screen clown of the Charlie Chaplin ilk, and Jason Robards Jr., the dapper Oscar-winning, American actor of the classic stage are the two central male characters and are both attracted to the beautiful Amish girl who has left home to dance stories from the Bible on stage. Wisdom is a master clown and can move in ways that are magically humorous. Burlesque has two meanings, with two spellings: - a humorous and provocative stage show featuring slapstick humour, comic skits, bawdy songs, striptease acts, and a scantily clad female chorus. (Burlesk) - an artistic composition, especially literary or dramatic, that, for the sake of laughter, vulgarizes lofty material or treats ordinary material with mock dignity. (Burlesque) The movie is a burlesque about burlesk. It also makes fun of religion, stage performances, censorship, prudery, friendship, business, fraud, crime, police, audience intelligence, class distinction, love, seduction, hypocrisy, etc. The mood is intense from start to finish, with several collages of scenes from the past and the movie's present. When I was not laughing out loud, I was laughing inside. The comedy on the stage is very elementary but the comedy in the story is often quite subtle and intelligent. Back to the initial question — I think that the movie may be too stylized for many people to enjoy, especially since the style has long been almost extinct. But if one accepts the style and allows oneself to become immersed in it and flow with it, the movie can be great.
    10sstover

    one of the best

    This movie captures the time period so beautifully and is the only movie I've ever seen that does so with this genre, it must be accepted as exceptional. The cinematography is very good, the acting excellent, the story very good, and the music perfect. The final touches are real burlesque acts in their entirety, great side acts not part of the stage yet depicting burlesque, great tension (the Amish father, Minskys father, and the threat of closing the theater down for moral reasons), and most of all seeing the movie through the eyes of a titillated Amish virgin, create the kind of perfection rarely seen in cinema. I saw this movie 35 years ago and forgot about it. I just viewed it and realize it deserves to be recognized as exceptional. Not a discarded movie rarely seen on cable.
    doctor-49

    Lost Classic

    And I mean that most sincerely, this is one of the great films of the 1960s, charting the last days of the burlesque music-hall theatricals in America. The plot of the film is something of a mish-mash, mixing up Britt Ekland as an Amish runaway who finds herself onstage, with Denholm Elliot as a moralistic do-gooder trying to close down Minsky's theatre, but in truth, as with a large number of films of the period (see also The Pink Panther films), the plot is merely a convenience, a washing line upon which to hang a large number of characters, theatrical set-pieces and little illustrations of life in and around the theatrical world. A host of fine actors grace the screen, with Elliot Gould making an early appearance as Minsky jr, Harry Andrews as Ekland's glowering father, Joseph Wiseman as Minsky sr and most affectingly, Bert Lahr in his final screen performance. Even Ekland is OK, and it takes a lot to say that. But at the centre of it all are Jason Robards and Norman Wisdom as the theatre's chief comedy double-act. An odd pairing that works amazingly well, with Robards an effectively sleezy straight man (his seduction of Ekland is both funny and stomach churning). But if Robards is good, Wisdsom is fantastic, his comedic skills honed in England finally being given full rein (I enjoy a lot of his British films, but few of them really allow him full use of his abilities), and the song and dance routine and when he defines burlesque to Ekland rank as his finest on-screen moments. it's a bitter shame that the failure of this film and personal circumstances forced him to leave Hollywood, because with the right material he could have gone so much further. Truth is, if you have no sympathy for this sort of material, this will not change your mind. But for an utterly unique film, packed with beautiful little minutiae of theatrical life and a great mix of dark humour and bawdy comedy, this is really something to be cherished.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The first cut of the film was considered disastrous by all involved. Editor Ralph Rosenblum worked for more than a year to save it, with director William Friedkin long gone. The extensive use of period film clips was Rosenblum's idea. The technique of returning from these clips to the movie by starting with a black-and-white version of a shot and changing to color was invented accidentally when the editor's assistant couldn't find the color copy of a piece of film fast enough.
    • Goofs
      Rachel refers to herself as "Amish". The word "Amish" is a term used by non-Amish; the Amish would refer to themselves as the "plain folk".
    • Quotes

      Jacob Schpitendavel: Louis Minsky, if you do not now go at once to prevent thy son from bringing my daughter to such ignominy, I shall, as Agnon

      [?]

      Jacob Schpitendavel: did, raise the finger of righteousness

      [raises index finger]

      Jacob Schpitendavel: to call down the wrath of heaven.

      Vance Fowler: My father, an Episcopal vestryman, used this

      [raises pinkie finger]

      Vance Fowler: as the finger of righteousness.

      Louis Minsky: Bah! And again, Bah! There is no finger of righteousness. This

      [raises pinkie and turns it in his ear]

      Louis Minsky: is the finger of cleanliness. This

      [raises ring finger]

      Louis Minsky: is the finger of marital bliss

      [points to wedding band]

      Louis Minsky: . This

      [raises index]

      Louis Minsky: is the finger of vengeance. This

      [levels middle finger toward Fowler, palm downward]

      Louis Minsky: is the finger of meddling in other people's lives

      [pokes Fowler in chest with middle finger]

      Louis Minsky: . And this

      [sticks out thumb]

      Louis Minsky: is the finger of transportation. It will get us a taxi to the theater. You speak with the fist of authority, gentlemen, but you do not know your fingers.

    • Crazy credits
      The words in the title flash on the screen individually in between shots of the raiding vice cops.
    • Connections
      Featured in Casting By (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Perfect Gentleman
      (uncredited)

      Music by Charles Strouse

      Lyrics by Lee Adams

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 9, 1969 (Italy)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Night They Raided Minsky's
    • Filming locations
      • Myrtle Avenue Elevated Subway, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • Tandem Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $3,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 39 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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