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Daniel Mann (1) (1912–1991)

Author of Our Man Flint [1966 film]

For other authors named Daniel Mann, see the disambiguation page.

17+ Works 261 Members 11 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Daniel Mann (1)

Works by Daniel Mann

Our Man Flint [1966 film] (1966) — Director — 66 copies, 1 review
BUtterfield 8 [1960 film] (1960) — Director — 52 copies, 2 reviews
The Teahouse of the August Moon [1956 film] (1956) — Director — 24 copies
The Rose Tattoo [1955 film] (2004) — Director — 21 copies
Come Back, Little Sheba [1952 film] (1952) — Director — 17 copies, 1 review
For Love of Ivy [1968 film] (1968) 15 copies
Playing for Time [1980 TV movie] (1980) — Director — 12 copies, 3 reviews
Willard [1971 film] (1971) — Director — 9 copies, 1 review
Judith [1966 film] 3 copies, 3 reviews
The Sidney Poitier DVD Collection (2006) — Director — 2 copies
The Revengers [1972 film] — Director — 1 copy
Journey Into Fear [1975 film] — Director — 1 copy

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Mann, Daniel
Legal name
Chugerman, Daniel
Birthdate
1912-08-08
Date of death
1991-11-21
Gender
male
Occupations
film director
Relationships
Ramis, Harold (son-in-law)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Place of death
Los Angeles, California, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

13 reviews
"Willard" is an interesting horror thriller that is part animal attack film and in part a study of the travails of a disenfranchised loner. That loner is Willard Stiles (Bruce Davison) who's stuck at home with domineering mother Henrietta (Elsa Lanchester) and is bullied at work by the devious Al Martin (Ernest Borgnine). Willard eventually befriends co-worker Joan (Sondra Locke), but more importantly he befriends a pair of intelligent rats that he names Socrates and Ben. Soon Willard, show more Socrates and Ben have gathered all the neighbourhood rats and being training them to take revenge on those who Willard believes have wronged him. Written by Gilbert A. Ralston (from a novel by Stephen Gilbert) and directed by Daniel Mann, who cleverly frames the people (with the exception of Willard) as the dirty, disgusting animals and the rats as the helpful, sincere and friendly ones. Mann gives the film an odd and eccentric tone, spiced with a layer of dark humour. This approach is mirrored in the individual characters, all of whom carry a certain degree of eccentricity. The film doesn't have any real blood or gore and avoids normal horror conventions, instead building everything around the strange characters inhabiting the story. Bruce Davison is sympathetic as the socially inept Willard while Elsa Lanchester provides a clever characterisation of corrupted love as Willard's cloying, selfish mother. Ernest Borgnine is perfectly bluff and rough as the Willard's bully boss, who is doing his best to rob Willard of everything he owns. The rats are well-handled and look impressive - even if you virtually see the wranglers throwing them into shot at times. Despite "Willard" becoming overshadowed by its superior sequel "Ben", it is still a good, enjoyable creature-feature and despite being bloodless it is still a thoughtful little revenge drama. show less
This is the most enjoyable of spy movie spoofs. To spoof a self-satirizing genre, the already over-the-top James Bond films, "Our Man Flint" blows the roof off in an always smart way. Have fun!
Caveat: This 1966 film is outrageously sexist.
½
Avventuroso Mélo ambientato nel 1948 in un Kibbutz del neonato stato di Israele, dove ferve il lavoro degli attivisti, ma anche la seria attività per garantire a tutti gli abitanti una estrema sicurezza dal terrorismo Islamico Palestinese. Sophia Loren è l'ebrea Austriaca Judith, a suo tempo scampata al lager di Dachau. Stein, comandante dei servizi segreti Israeliani, nonché cacciatore di nazisti, la incarica di indagare sul suo ex compagno, un criminale nazista che la aveva salvata dal show more lager con finte intenzioni amorevoli, ed ora riciclatosi nelle dittature arabe ostili allo stato Ebraico, armando queste ultime nelle prime guerre contro gli ebrei. show less
2023 movie #166. 1952. Shirley Booth won a Best Actress Oscar for her portrayal of an unhappy housewife married to an alcoholic (Lancaster), who takes on a college coed as a border. Sheba, BTW, was her little lost dog. The border (Moore) was nominated for best supporting actress. The 9th highest grossing movie in 1952.

Awards

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Associated Authors

Hal Fimberg Screenwriter
John Hayes Writer
John Patrick Screenwriter
Ketti Frings Screenwriter
Helen Deutsch Screenwriter
Jay Richard Kennedy Screenwriter
Gilbert Ralston Screenwriter
Don Medford Director
Ralph Nelson Director
Wallace Trevor Screenplay

Statistics

Works
17
Also by
1
Members
261
Popularity
#88,098
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
11
ISBNs
31
Languages
2

Charts & Graphs