Mouse Heaven

January. 01,2004      
Rating:
6.2
Trailer Synopsis Cast

A short film featuring various vintage Mickey Mouse toys.

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Reviews

Lawbolisted
2004/01/01

Powerful

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Matialth
2004/01/02

Good concept, poorly executed.

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KnotStronger
2004/01/03

This is a must-see and one of the best documentaries - and films - of this year.

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Abbigail Bush
2004/01/04

what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.

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Horst in Translation ([email protected])
2004/01/05

Dr. Kenneth Anger meets Mickey Mouse. Can you think of a more random and awkward encounter? I don't think I can. This is an 11-minute short film from over 10 years ago and Anger was already in his late 70s when he made this one. The good thing about it is that we see how Anger managed something that so so many other experimental filmmakers did not manage. Keep their material fresh and adjust to new approaches to film. I am not sure what this was. it was not funny, it was not dramatically relevant, it was not scary. But it sure was so weird that it was difficult to watch away on some occasions. And it definitely is a nice tribute to world's most famous cartoon character. I enjoyed the watch and it shows that Anger still got it, at least back then when he made this short film. I recommend the watch. Thumbs up.

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sandover
2004/01/06

Saw it again the other day for the fourth time with years interspersed in between, and again the exuberance was there: tell me, how Kenneth Anger does it? Something of the effortlessness of a great master is here; being in his late seventies when he made this, it is a lesson in casualness and one hell of a crisp build-up this viewer has ever witnessed: In retrospect, one can sense some structure into this: divided in four sections, this can be read like the introduction to cinema, then the talkies, then shift to its creepy, glorious, puppet cultural stature, which comes in full gears in the last part:when the Jeff Koons-like mirrored Mickeys appear on screen accompanied by The Proclaimers' great "Joyful Kilmarnock Blues", this transcends memorabilia, nostalgia, jots of creepiness and mock atmosphere, the collecting thrust and becomes a display of verve that is unfair to appropriate as retro. This is what movies are for, and Kenneth Anger knows it and plays with it in this great ten minutes pop poem of his.Thank you.

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Quag7
2004/01/07

I guess I can't blame Kenneth Anger fans for looking for something weird and menacing in here, or looking for a statement on consumerism or something like that, but aside from some disturbing old footage of what appears to be a merry go round out of control, this is more cute than anything else. Seriously, you can watch it with your kids. They'll love it.Toy Mickey Mouses come walking across the screen, wink at the camera, and so on, while popular music through the ages plays. People are always looking for evil in Mickey Mouse, and I'm as sensitive to consumerism and jingoism and corporate excess as anyone else and try as I might, I simply cannot find anything *evil* about Mickey Mouse or any kind of statement in this film. I tried, I really did. I've seen Invocation of My Demon Brother. I've *seen* Lucifer Rising and I just can't connect that sensibility here. There are some things identifiably Kenneth Anger here - something about the way things are filmed that I can't put my finger on, as well as the music choices (which made me recall Rabbit's Moon for some reason). But nothing immediately psychedelic or, you know, um, Thelemic.As far as I can tell, this is a filmmaker having a bit of fun with an icon familiar to just about everyone.It's Mickey! Lots of them! In many forms! Dancing, singing, and so on. And that's about it. I liked the film, frankly. It was whimsical and fun. I guess if you have it in you to really hate Mickey Mouse, you'll see something else here. But man I just don't have any room left in my heart to hate Mickey. Or plastic representations of Mickey.

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