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      Matilda

      G 1978 1h 45m Comedy List
      Reviews 53% 100+ Ratings Audience Score A sportswriter (Robert Mitchum) sees a story in a small-time promoter (Elliott Gould) and his boxing kangaroo. Read More Read Less

      Audience Reviews

      View All (4) audience reviews
      Audience Member A real kangaroo probably could not have been trained for the role, and despite what others said, I didn't think the kangaroo costume was so bad. It did look reasonably realistic, certainly compared to most other animal costumes in movies. That said, the problem with the movie was that the story was actually long and boring, and Matilda did not have much to do. It was basically intrigues among the human cast, and was hardly funny or exciting. Even the presence of mobsters was hardly enough to provide even minimal tension. The only tension was in the end where the human boxing audience was starting to dislike Matilda for beating humans in boxing, and in the end he had to stop his career. Overall rather boring, and the kangaroo was not to blame. Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 02/22/23 Full Review Audience Member its soo soo soo good Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/25/23 Full Review Audience Member In the tradition of ROCKY and REQUIEM FOR A HEAVYWEIGHT comes MATILDA (1978), the inspiring story of a pugilistic marsupial from Down Under who's granted one last shot at redemption by stepping into the ring and going a few rounds with the World Heavyweight Boxing Champion ( Larry Pennell ). Old pros Gould and Mitchum add class and a gritty urgency to this rousing, one-of-a-kind experience, so much so that MATILDA remains one of the greatest, most enduring boxing films ever made. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 02/27/23 Full Review Audience Member (This is an old review, but I'm going to start transcribing stuff from the website I was doing reviews for five years ago. It's just to keep them in one place. Consider this "Paul Classic" or something.) [b][color=#ffffff] Kid’s movies can generally get weird enough so that it’s not that hard to see how Matilda got made. I mean, [i]The Garbage Pail Kids Movie[/i] got made. [i]Kazaam[/i] got made. The Mexican [i]Santa Claus[/i] flick got made. So it’s not completely inconceivable that someone just walked into a producer’s office, said “I want to make a G-rated movie with Elliott Gould and a boxing kangaroo,” and the producer, so high on coke that he was having visions of Gould right then and there, agreed to it.[/color][/b] [b][color=#ffffff] Hence, [i]Matilda[/i]. As far as I know, the first and only movie in which a mob boss hires an assassin to take out a kangaroo’s tail. Thank God.[/color][/b][b][color=#ffffff][/color][/b] [b][color=#ffffff] Now there are certain casting errors in movies that clearly make no sense and you wonder how the hell they got into the final cut of the picture without anyone getting up and saying, “You know, guys, this is a really terrible idea.” Charleton Heston playing a Mexican in [i]Touch of Evil[/i]. Mickey Rooney’s “Miss Go-wightwy!” screeching in [i]Breakfast at Tiffany’s[/i]. Keanu Reeves as a nuclear physicist in [i]Chain Reaction[/i]. Christopher Walken playing a human being.[/color][/b][b][color=#ffffff][/color][/b] [b][color=#ffffff] On top of all of these, more than John Wayne as Genghis Kahn or the illiterate Demi Moore as Hester Pym, is one little bit of casting in [i]Matilda[/i]. You see, Matilda is a kangaroo. And yet, Matilda is not played by a kangaroo. Matilda is played by a man in a kangaroo suit.[/color][/b][b][color=#ffffff][/color][/b] [b][color=#ffffff] Okay, so the casting of humans in animal suits isn’t really all that new or shocking. After all, most gorillas in movies were played by humans before they were replaced by computers. But [i]Matilda[/i]’s kangaroo suit is unusual in one respect. It is, clearly and simply, the most unconvincing, unbelievable animal suit ever made for a major motion picture.[/color][/b][b][color=#ffffff][/color][/b] [b][color=#ffffff] The plot is crap, of course. A washed-up Irish boxer (Clive Revill) with a pet kangaroo (some guy) meet up with talent agent Elliott Gould. Gould needs a hit, and gets the idea to turn Matilda into a boxing champ. Due to some Gouldian trickery, Matilda quickly makes his way up to being a champion, and the flick climaxes with a battle for the Heavyweight championship of the world. Meanwhile, bad guy mobster Uncle Nono (Harry Guardino) wants a piece of the action, and a sports columnist (Robert Mitchum, looking terribly embarrassed) investigates.[/color][/b][b][color=#ffffff][/color][/b] [b][color=#ffffff] It’s the usual barrage of dumb gags (“He’s herbivorous!” “I don’t care where he comes from!” Ha. Ha. Hah.) and Gould trying to be cute, and it wouldn’t have been any good even if there was a real ‘roo behind the punches. But the suit sinks it to Ed Wood levels of ineptitude. Just watching the boxing sequences, with the human combatants dully flying out of the way of the roo’s punches, the furry fighter’s dead, black eyes and forced, awkward hops around the ring getting cheered on by audiences… this is cinema at its’ purest.[/color][/b][b][color=#ffffff][/color][/b] [b][color=#ffffff] It’s clear that the makers of this film knew how unconvincing the whole thing is, simply because no character brings attention to the fact that Matilda looks more like a guy in a brown rabbit suit than an Australian hopper. In normal animals-play-sports flicks, there’s at least some character that theorizes that it’s a guy in a costume. Not here. Everyone’s completely convinced. That is, except the audience.[/color][/b][b][color=#ffffff][/color][/b] [b][color=#ffffff] To be fair, the costume does allow for some movement, and the phony pouch-packer can blink and move its’ ears. But the fur looks like it was stripped from a cheap rug, and the eyes... oh, those haunting, creepy, cold eyes. Words don’t do them justice.[/color][/b][b][color=#ffffff][/color][/b] [b][color=#ffffff] As a special bonus, you also get “Hee-Haw”’s Bob Clark as the state boxing commissioner. At the end of the film, Revill tells the audience what’s happened to all the characters and presents Gould (and his family) was a li’l baby kangaroo. It is played by a real kangaroo. So the film does, in fact, feature a real-life kanga. But it sure as hell isn’t Matilda.[/color][/b][b][color=#ffffff][/color][/b] [b][color=#ffffff] It's no wonder that this was one of the movies that killed American International Pictures, already nearing their casket in 1978, and only managing to churn out a couple more pics before becoming the similarly-doomed Orion.[/color][/b][b][color=#ffffff][/color][/b] [b][color=#ffffff] (If you need another reason to run screaming from [i]Matilda[/i], here it is: The theme song is by Pat and Debby Boone. You have been warned.)[/color][/b] Rated 1 out of 5 stars 01/25/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Movie Info

      Synopsis A sportswriter (Robert Mitchum) sees a story in a small-time promoter (Elliott Gould) and his boxing kangaroo.
      Director
      Daniel Mann
      Producer
      Melvin Simon, Richard R. St. Johns
      Screenwriter
      Timothy Galfas, Albert S. Ruddy
      Production Co
      American International Pictures (AIP)
      Rating
      G
      Genre
      Comedy
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Aug 30, 2017
      Runtime
      1h 45m