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Mickey

  • 1918
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Mabel Normand in Mickey (1918)
SlapstickComedyDrama

Mickey, an orphan who has been brought up in a mining settlement, is sent to New York to live with her aunt.Mickey, an orphan who has been brought up in a mining settlement, is sent to New York to live with her aunt.Mickey, an orphan who has been brought up in a mining settlement, is sent to New York to live with her aunt.

  • Directors
    • F. Richard Jones
    • James Young
  • Writers
    • Hampton Del Ruth
    • J.G. Hawks
  • Stars
    • Mabel Normand
    • George Nichols
    • Laura La Varnie
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • F. Richard Jones
      • James Young
    • Writers
      • Hampton Del Ruth
      • J.G. Hawks
    • Stars
      • Mabel Normand
      • George Nichols
      • Laura La Varnie
    • 20User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos40

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    Top cast13

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    Mabel Normand
    Mabel Normand
    • Mickey
    George Nichols
    George Nichols
    • Joe Meadows
    • (as George O. Nicholls)
    Laura La Varnie
    Laura La Varnie
    • Mickey's Aunt - Mrs. Geoffrey Drake
    Lew Cody
    Lew Cody
    • Reggie Drake
    • (as Lewis J. Cody)
    Minta Durfee
    Minta Durfee
    • Elsie Drake
    • (as Minta Durffy)
    Wheeler Oakman
    Wheeler Oakman
    • Herbert Thornhill
    Tom Kennedy
    Tom Kennedy
    • Tom Rawlings
    Minnie Devereaux
    Minnie Devereaux
    • Minnie
    • (as Minnie Ha Ha)
    Joe Bordeaux
    • Stage Driver
    • (uncredited)
    William Colvin
    William Colvin
    • Butler
    • (uncredited)
    Edgar Kennedy
    Edgar Kennedy
    • Stage Driver
    • (uncredited)
    • …
    Clarence Lyndon
    • Grocer
    • (uncredited)
    Eva Thatcher
    Eva Thatcher
    • Cook
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • F. Richard Jones
      • James Young
    • Writers
      • Hampton Del Ruth
      • J.G. Hawks
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.11.2K
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    Featured reviews

    Snow Leopard

    A Lively, Engaging Performance By Mabel Normand

    Mabel Normand gives a very lively, engaging performance that makes "Mickey" an entertaining movie with several other strengths. The supporting cast all help out as well, and the story effectively moves back-and-forth between the backwoods and the big city. It combines comedy and melodrama effectively, and while it contains mostly familiar elements, it's the kind of movie that is quite enjoyable to watch.

    The role of "Mickey" gives Normand some good material to work with, and as always she is sympathetic and charming. Part of the story is set in a mining settlement, where Mickey is right at home, and part of it moves into high society, where she is ill at ease. Both settings are believable and make good backdrops for comedy, and both are also used to bring things out about Mickey and the other characters.

    The supporting cast, which includes Wheeler Oakman as Mickey's suitor, has its own comic moments, and Minta Durfee gives an effective performance as the snobbish society girl who is Mickey's romantic rival.

    While none of the components of "Mickey" are especially imaginative or innovative, they are all of good quality. It all fits together to make an enjoyable movie.
    7hte-trasme

    In the right vein

    Mack Sennett had a strong reputation for producing wild, violent, fast- paced slapstick that often got its laughs without even a superficial attempt to make sense. He got that reputation for the simple reason that it's true. However, it's interesting to see how when Sennett knew he had on his hands a comedian whose laughs come from subtleties or reactions rather than fast antics, he knows to slacken the pace. That was true with many of the brilliant Harry Langdon shorts he would produce later, and it is true here in "Mickey" with Mabel Normand.

    Mabel is the star and it is she on which the movie turns. She steals every scene she appears in and has infinite screen magnetism, with her attractive, fascinating face, constantly changing expression, and childlike and uninhibited yet somehow ironic manner. The greatest moments of comedy come in little bits of performance, as Mabel comes up with many ingenious ways to hide dust she has swept up, or simply can't resist eating cherries off a cake.

    That said, there are not actually a lot of scenes of overt comedy in this film, and sometimes when there is overt comedy it comes out as a digression or bit of broad slapstick that is well-executed but has a different feel -- the battle in the country store (which looks a lot like the one Arbuckle worked at in "The Butcher Boy") over Mable's dog or the animal the scurries up her pantleg. It's not actually an uproariously funny film, but doesn't usually try to be, and it's always pleasant.

    The plot is simple and of a kind that has spawned infinite variations. Mabel is a rough-hewn girl from a miner town who loves playing with animals and skinny dipping (from a very wide angle); she is sent to her rich aunt and becomes involved in a kind of love square through no fault of her own. It's really as much melodrama as anything else, but it comes off. There are plenty of twists, especially as the end draws near, involving who is rich and who is poor when; these remain able to keep the interest, and make a kind of commentary too, intentional or not, on the true insignificance of wealth.

    This has been cited as the first feature-length comedy starring a single comedian rather than an ensemble cast, but even so it feels fairly developed as a form, with decent pacing and plot developing in two places at once. This is a simple story well told, and really made by its star, who is well showcased.
    8overseer-3

    Campy fun with Mabel (Mickey)

    I sure wish someone would restore the prints and create new soundtracks for these silent gems. This one, Mickey, a Mabel Normand - Mack Sennett comedy, is virtually screaming out for a restoration. It was extremely popular when it first came out in 1918, and a song "Mickey" sold a million sheets, and was recorded by many of the orchestras and singers of the day on 78 rpm records.

    It's great fun, with Mabel (Mickey) playing a country miner's daughter who is sent East to live a privileged life in Great Neck, Long Island. Only the aunt who takes her in discovers that Mickey's mine is failing and so the poor girl is made a servant.

    There is a sweet romance that brightens up the action, fight scenes, and a rather risque sequence where Mabel runs through the woods and dives from a rock into a lake stark naked. Definitely made before censorship came in!

    Mickey is a great feature to watch if you are interested in what made Mabel Normand such a great star in her day. Drama queens in the silents are a dime a dozen, but true comedy stars, especially female, are rare and should never be forgotten.
    8lawprof

    Spunky Gal, Wicked Witch, Cute Animals, Dashing Gentleman: "Mickey" Has It All

    Mack Sennett and star Mabel Normand co-produced this 1918 silent comedy/melodrama which, surely, satisfied the era's moviegoers. Normand, a natural comedienne, plays "Mickey," an orphan raised by a rough and grizzled down-on-his-luck miner abetted by a corpulent, exasperated but loving woman-of-all-chores.

    Back East, New York to be exact, Mickey's aunt, as impecunious as she is extravagant, skirts with ruin as she hopes her daughter will win the affections of The Decent Man. Scheming mom and grasping daughter hope an engagement will bring them real solvency.

    Not too hard to guess what happens. As the piano music goes on - and on and on and on - the hero goes West to handle a mine boundary issue. He meets the sparkling Mickey and her menagerie before she leaves for the East with her miner guardian. But the seeds of love have been planted.

    Mickey's been cordially invited to live with auntie under that harridan's very mistaken and soon to be blown belief that the young girl is the key to a rich mine's bounty. Finding that to be very wrong, Mickey is ordered into domestic service by nasty auntie. Yep, Cinderella story, sort of. And we all know - as did the Great War audiences - how such stories MUST end. A happy Mickey and her guy.

    Sennett was a master at comedies that entertained without surprising. No dazzling or innovative cinematography here, just a guaranteed good hour and a half at the theater (or, now, in front of a TV).

    Normand strayed off the reservation of both respectability and sobriety not that many years after "Mickey" when she was at the height of popular acclaim with a Goldwyn contract. Stars didn't have the bounce-back capability many seem to enjoy today and her close association with two lurid murders, neither of which she was implicated in, hastened a downward spiral already in freefall.

    She died fairly young of tuberculosis, her career practically ended. But she remains alive in films that show the depth of comedic ability of a talented actress who could make audiences laugh without their ever hearing her utter a syllable. "Mickey" is one of her best efforts.

    In 1970, Bernadette Peters, who just opened in a well-received Broadway revival of "Gypsy," played Mabel in "Maude and Mack," a musical about the director/star duo. The play didn't do well on the Great White Way but it's become something of a staple for amateur theatrical groups. Normand would have appreciated that.

    Well worth renting or buying.

    8/10.
    Michael_Elliott

    Normand Keeps the Film Going

    Mickey (1918)

    ** 1/2 (out of 4)

    When Mack Sennett and Mabel Normand's personal relationship took a hit (two stories are out there), he tried to bring some peace by forming the Mabel Normand Feature Film Company, a separate division of Keystone. This new studio only turned out one film but it was a hit for the studio even after a disastrous production. In the film Normand plays Mickey, a poor girl helping her uncle in a worthless mine. Feeling she's all grown up, the uncle sends her to New York to live with an aunt hoping that she will turn the young lady into a woman. MICKEY is pretty predictable from start to finish and I even though some of the 74-minute running time dragged in spots. Still, it's easy to see that everything going on was just done so that Normand could shine and I think she does just that. There's no question that it's Normand who makes the film worth seeing due to her very strong performance. She's pleasant no matter what situation is in front of her. It could be the early tomboy stuff in the mines, the scenes where she's trying to figure out you don't sweep dirt under a rug or the scenes where she must make decisions for the rest of her life. Mabel is clearly the star of this picture and without her the bland story would have killed any shot at an entertaining movie.

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    Related interests

    Leslie Nielsen in The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! (1988)
    Slapstick
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The highest grossing film of 1918, with a worldwide gross of $8 million on a budget of $250,000.
    • Goofs
      Palm trees and industrial bridges at the railroad station at Great Neck, Long Island, New York.
    • Quotes

      Herbert Thornhill: She's wonderful, Tom! I never expected to see her again - and now I've proposed to Elsie Drake. I'm in the devil of a mess!

      Tom Rawlings: Cheer up old man, you haven't actually been sentenced yet!

    • Alternate versions
      The April 17, 1920 issue of Ciné Pour Tous claims the version released in France was shortened.

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 1918 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • None
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Micky
    • Filming locations
      • 24th Street, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Mabel Normand Feature Film Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $125,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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