I'll Never Forget What's'isname
- 1967
- 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
The professional and romantic misadventures of an advertising executive in 1960s swinging London.The professional and romantic misadventures of an advertising executive in 1960s swinging London.The professional and romantic misadventures of an advertising executive in 1960s swinging London.
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
6.21.1K
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
A high mark of Brit 60s flicks
There were so many good British films made in the 60s ,that you rarely hear this one mentioned .Thou,it is a worthy film and is comparable to 'Performance' and 'Women in Love' as one of the best films of the era.It's about a Business executive who has to re-think his life and relationships for what they are worth. Orson Welles is great as his creepy Boss and all of the female actors who play his many girlfriends did a very convincing job. The Dream sequences are very LSD inspired.
If you like it also See 'The System' by the the same filmmaker.
If you like it also See 'The System' by the the same filmmaker.
Oliver Reed, Orson Welles, and Dolly Birds...
I first saw this movie on Canadian TV on the midnight movie on CJOH and it has stuck in my head ever since. Back then, I enjoyed it for the psychedelic dream sequences, the dolly birds, and the good ol' "frank sexuality." Watching it again on DVD thirty years later, I find it still resonates, but for different reasons. Now, I relate more to Quint's rejection of his entire way of life and the way he wants to be free of it, but ultimately can't escape it.
The Super-8 commercial he makes at the end of the film is still dazzling -- one would think that Michael Winner would have gone on to greater things, but this film is the best thing he ever did. Same goes for Oliver Reed, although he made some good ones in the late '60s and early '70s. Several other Reed-Winner collaborations, THE SYSTEM (a/k/a THE GIRL GETTERS), THE JOKERS, and HANNIBAL BROOKS, are also worth checking out.
Excellent performances by Reed, Orson Welles, Carol White, and Harry Andrews, and a top script by Peter Draper (who also wrote THE SYSTEM).
Favorite bit of dialogue:
QUINT: I'm going to find an honest job.
LUTE: Silly boy. There aren't any.
The Super-8 commercial he makes at the end of the film is still dazzling -- one would think that Michael Winner would have gone on to greater things, but this film is the best thing he ever did. Same goes for Oliver Reed, although he made some good ones in the late '60s and early '70s. Several other Reed-Winner collaborations, THE SYSTEM (a/k/a THE GIRL GETTERS), THE JOKERS, and HANNIBAL BROOKS, are also worth checking out.
Excellent performances by Reed, Orson Welles, Carol White, and Harry Andrews, and a top script by Peter Draper (who also wrote THE SYSTEM).
Favorite bit of dialogue:
QUINT: I'm going to find an honest job.
LUTE: Silly boy. There aren't any.
The year of 1967
The year of 1967 was significant for the 'swinging London', psychedelic music and some of the craziest movies ever made. This fine film from the much derided Michael Winner is one of the very good ones. Much use is made of UK locations, London, Cambridge and small but accurate details like the colourful boutiques and rather the awful public school. Also very apt for the time is the idea that work should be 'honest', that joint the 'rat race' or treadmill of life was all wrong. That there was an alternative. The concept of free love also prevalent at the time is also much to the fore although Winner does not shy away from tackling the downside, divorce, jealousy, children etc. But, this is a colourful and mostly cheerful film with great performances from a host of British stars. Reed is great, Carol White does very well, as does Wendy Craig (don't think I've seen her in her underwear before!) and must also mention delightful cameo from a gorgeous looking Marianne Faithful. It's all much ado about nothing essentially but there is an edge to this and it is a very accurate slice of life in 1967.
10soverein
The swinging sixties grows up
Although constructed around "swinging " London this tale of futility in the pursuit of happiness endures. Oliver Reed will come as a surprise to most people who would not have thought the latter day hell raiser could deliver such a sensitive performance as the central character Andrew Quint.
A successful advertising exec Quint belabours the notion of a simple life and eschews the trappings of his current situation ( both professional and domestic ) to work at a small literary magazine with a friend from his days at Oxford. These trappings include two mistresses and an ex wife. The scenes with the mistresses are perhaps the least pleasing of the whole film.
"I never really saw the money anyway, it came in and went out ; if I felt like being successful I'd go and buy a new shirt"
A series of symbolic events unfold ( most notably a public school reunion and the pointless death of his new girlfriend )which only serve in Quint considering joining an equally exploitative competitor to the ad agency he quit at the outset.
A successful advertising exec Quint belabours the notion of a simple life and eschews the trappings of his current situation ( both professional and domestic ) to work at a small literary magazine with a friend from his days at Oxford. These trappings include two mistresses and an ex wife. The scenes with the mistresses are perhaps the least pleasing of the whole film.
"I never really saw the money anyway, it came in and went out ; if I felt like being successful I'd go and buy a new shirt"
A series of symbolic events unfold ( most notably a public school reunion and the pointless death of his new girlfriend )which only serve in Quint considering joining an equally exploitative competitor to the ad agency he quit at the outset.
"I'm going to find an honest job." .. "Silly boy, there aren't any!"
32-year-old advertising executive in London walks to his office one morning carrying an axe, which he then uses to break up his desk before he resigns; his boss tries talking him out of it while his many women friends express concern for his future. Director Michael Winner and screenwriter Peter Draper eschew most of the clichés of the era's trendy surroundings for a somewhat more sober portrait of the upwardly mobile working class. Draper writes some very incisive dialogue (example: "Why is it these days everybody but me seems to be 22? What happened 22 years ago tonight?" .. "All the grown-ups went home to bed."). However, Draper's protagonist (played smugly by Oliver Reed) is hardly a likable guy. Handsomely-made film is edited with precision and was considered quite frank and provocative in its day. **1/2 from ****
Did you know
- TriviaOften named as the first movie to use the word "fuck" in its dialogue. Another contender is "Ulysses (1967)," another film of 1967. However, "The Victors" - which features the F-word in a song soldiers are heard singing - was first seen four years earlier. (This scene appears now to vanished completely from the film and is not on the DVD version; however, it was remarked by critics in 1963).
- ConnectionsFeatured in Film Review: Marianne Faithfull (1968)
- How long is I'll Never Forget What's'isname?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- I'll Never Forget What's 'Isname
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 37m(97 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content





