![]() |
Index | A-Z Listings | Directors | Actors | Film Genres | Film Studios | Forum | Features | Links | Shop | Users Top 100 | History | Feedback |
Morgan: A Suitable Case for Treatment |
![]() |
Morgan: A Suitable Case for Treatment - 1966 | 97mins | Fantasy, Comedy | ColourThe Production TeamDirector: Karel
Reisz. Producer: Leon Clore. Script: David Mercer. Cinematography: Larry Pizer. Film Editing: Tom Priestley and Victor Procter. Art Direction: Philip Harrison. Costume Design: Jocelyn Rickards. Original Music: John Dankworth. |
|
The CastDavid Warner
- Morgan Delt Vanessa Redgrave - Leonie Delt Robert Stephens - Charles Napier Irene Handl - Mrs. Delt Bernard Bresslaw - Policeman Arthur Mullard - Wally |
Plot SynopsisA dreadfully dated cult classic from the 1960s directed
by Czech born filmmaker Karel Reisz and adapted from David Mercer's
now lost BBC television play. Cut with dream sequences from King Kong
and Tarzan films, Morgan’s depiction of surreal madness and dark
humour made it the Swinging Sixties wildest, funniest and most provocative
comedy. David Warner produces a blissfully deranged breakthrough performance
and Vanessa Redgrave earned a Best Actress Oscar nomination for her
role.
Anarchic Londoner Morgan Delt (David Warner), a working class artist with a gorilla-fixation tries to regain the affections of his upper-class divorced wife Leonie (Vanessa Redgrave). Leonie rejects Morgan’s attempts at reconciliation and when she informs him of her plans to marry stuffy art dealer Robert Stephens (Charles Napier), Morgan slips off the mental deep end into a vivid fantasy life. Morgan enacts a series of bizarre gags and stunts in an often hilarious campaign to win Leonie back, including putting a skeleton in her bed, blasting animal noises throughout her house, kidnapping her and attempting to blow up her future mother-law. On the day of Leonie and Robert’s wedding, Morgan gatecrashes the reception dressed in a gorilla costume. His antics eventually lead to Morgan’s arrest and sectioning in a psychiatric asylum, where he embraces his Stalinist mother's (Irene Handl) ardent communist beliefs. |
|