Free 14-day trial, then just £6.99 per month.
Please enter a valid email address
By entering your email address you are indicating that you have read and agree to the terms of use and privacy policy.
Free 14-day trial, then just £6.99 per month.
A deranged writer resorts to the gin bottle in John P Mitchell's beserk comedy film from 1960
This weird comedy from John P Mitchell, features a demented writer trying to connect his typewriter to an electric current. After his first attempts produce only sparks, the experimenter swigs from a handy bottle of gin. The typewriter continues to spark so the writer decides to empty the bottle. This is shown using stop-motion animation. The inevitable result is that the professor is seen dancing and singing to himself and using a morse-key to produce text.
Filmmaker, John Mitchell, was a member of the Brighton & Hove Photographic Club and made numerous film portraits of Brighton, Hove and Sussex in the 1960s. His work primarily focussed on visitor attractions like the Palace Pier, fairground rides, the Volk's Electric Railway, and the London to Brighton Veteran Car Rally. He also made entertainments, like The Drunken Writer and films recording events or activities in the area like an Armistice Day ceremony, fishermen at work at Shoreham Harbour, and delegates gathering at a Labour Party Conference.