In this outlandish, sidesplitting tale of the fortunes of the
Duchy of Grand Fenwick, a mythical land on the verge of
bankruptcy because its one export, a fine wine, has been undercut
by a US company. Grand Fenwick's prime minister (Peter Sellers)
and female monarch (Sellers again) cook up a schemeto solve the
problem: they will declare war on the States.
From .co.uk
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The Mouse That Roared, originally released in 1959, is mostly
remembered as a tour-de-force from peerless comic actor Peter
Sellers, playing all three of the principal roles. It's worth
seeing for that alone, but the film is also one of the most
memorable satires of nuclear geopolitics produced during the Cold
War and, along with another Sellers vehicle, Dr Strangelove,
provides an unbeatable illustration of the paranoia and
helplessness engendered by that period.
The Mouse That Roared tells the story of the fictional European
principality of Grand Fenwick. Finding itself on the wrong end of
a trade dispute with the United States, and noting America's
generosity in rebuilding the countries it had fought in World War
II, Grand Fenwick's rulers hit upon the idea of declaring war on
the US, losing, and then reaping a Marshall Plan-style hand-out.
The plan, proposed by Grand Fenwick's prime minister (played by
Peter Sellers), is approved by the monarch (also played by Peter
Sellers), who dispatches an invasion force of chain mail-clad
archers under the command of Grand Fenwick's hess Field
Marshal (also played by Peter Sellers). Due to a series of
happenstances and misunderstandings, Grand Fenwick's plan goes
terribly wrong, and they inflict a surprising defeat on America,
with curious consequences.
On the DVD: The Mouse That Roared is presented in 1.85:1
widescreen; sound is mono. Soundtracks are available in English,
French, German, Italian and Spanish, and subtitles in all those
as well as most other major European languages, Hebrew and
Arabic. Special features include a scene selector, and three
theatrical trailers: one for this film (English audiences will
get a kick out of the 1950s American announcer raving about "an
hilarious new personality, Peter Sellers"), one for Sellers' much
bleaker (and much funnier) Cold War satire Dr Strangelove, and
one for his slight horror spoof Murder By Death. --Andrew Mueller
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From the Back Cover
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In this classic satire, the Duchess (Peter Sellers - Dr
Strangelove, The Pink Panther) and the Prime Minister (Peter
Sellers) of the tiny Duchy of Grand Fenwick have come up with a
brilliant plan to keep their country from going broke make war
on the United States, lose, then collect lots of American
post-war aid. Their only mistake is not telling their invasion
force leader (Sellers again, in chain mail!) that hes supposed
to lose. Sellers lands in New York City during an air raid drill
and finds the streets empty. He then proceeds to capture a
brilliant scientist (David Kossoff - Summer Holiday), his
assistant (Jean Seberg - Airport) and his awesome new weapon. The
U.S is forced to surrender! Grand Fenwick then forms the League
of Little Nations which presents the big nations with its terms
Peace Forever.
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