
Can Heironymus Merkin Ever Forget Mercy Humppe and Find True Happiness?
- Heironymus Merkin, the most talented movie star who ever sang, danced and loved girls, girls, girls.
- 1969-03-19
- Comedy, Music
- Margaret Nolan, Rosalind Knight, Eve Pearce, Joan Collins, Milton Berle, Louis Negin, Tom Stern, Robert Hutton, Victor Spinetti, Stubby Kaye, George Jessel, Ronald Radd, Anthony Newley, Bruce Boa, Yolanda, Patricia Hayes, Judy Cornwell, Ronald Rubin, Connie Kreski, Julian Orchard, Sally Douglas, Lynda Baron, Joyce Blair, Desmond Walter-Ellis, Bruce Forsyth, Laurie Leigh, Aleta Morrison, Roy Desmond, Bernard Stone, Berry Cornish, Muriel Young, Alexander Newley, Tara Newley
- Mike Higgins
- $500,000
- $2,100,000
- 1 h. 47 min.
- 4.6/10
- 8
- United Kingdom
- Universal Pictures, J. Arthur Rank Film Distributors
Overview:
Heironymus Merkin is an internationally successful singer approaching middle age who retells his life story in a series of production numbers on a seashore in front of his two toddlers and aged mother. Merkin's promiscuous relationships with women are explored, particularly Polyester Poontang and the adolescent Mercy Humppe. Merkin is constantly surrounded by a Satan-like procurer, Goodtime Eddie Filth, and an angelic 'Presence' who interrupts Merkin's biography with cryptic Borscht Belt-level jokes to denote births and deaths in Merkin's life. Newley periodically steps out of character to complain about his 'Merkin' role with an unseen director, two screenwriters, the film's producers and a trio of blasé movie critics who are turned off by the story's eroticism and lack of plot.