I liked him as Johnny Czar.
Zombie Mickey Rooney is a redundancy.
I saw Mickey Rooney perform live in person in Grants Pass, Oregon when I was in middle school or early high school. He was funny. I think he sang a bit too. I remember thinking how cool it was to see such an ancient relic still wandering aimlessly around the country to little BFE towns like mine entertaining people.
Now I know he was really just out devouring souls. And wow, he’s still alive today.
[singing]
It’s a great big universe
and we’re all really puny
We’re just tiny little specks
about the size of Mickey Rooney [/singing]
Warning! Clicking on that link may disturb sensitive viewers.
Have you seen The Black Stallion? Because he is brilliant in that movie–no quirks, no hamming it up, just a soft, muted, deeply compassionate and marvelous performance.
He was capable of toning down the exuberance and has enough films under his belt where he wasn’t always “On”. But I’ll admit that in his younger films, he’s more of an acquired taste.
I remember him as being great as a middle aged retarded man in Bill.
You mean Keith Richards hasn’t been dead since the late '80s?
I can’t fathom it either. Even considering the era, I can’t believe that the idea of having Rooney mock the Japanese people by donning fake buck teeth and yammering in an almost incomprehensible “Oriental” (pardon the expression) accent passed muster at casting time.
Though even that’s not as bad as when Holly says “Stop the cab!” and proceeds to open the door and kick Cat out into the driving rain. Earlier in the film, too, she throws the cat against the wall with such force it’s a wonder the animal survived. I can’t abide that sort of thing.
That film gives me the heebie jeebies on many levels.
Well, well. Allmovie.com has become Allrovi.com, and now they don’t seem to like Rooney’s performance as Puck nearly as much as they used to.
The link doesn’t take you to the specific review anymore; you have to search for it.
Works for me.
I was highly amused when a fellow Doper pointed out that he lived one year longer than Jack LaLanne. (sp?)