Pocketful of Miracles

You have to see it to belove it!

7.3
19612h 16m

A New York gangster and his girlfriend attempt to turn street beggar Apple Annie into a society lady when the peddler learns her daughter is marrying royalty.

Production

Logo for United Artists

Available For Free On

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Pocketful of Miracles (1961) clip - on BFI Blu-ray from 21 September 2020 | BFI

Pocketful of Miracles (1961) clip - on BFI Blu-ray from 21 September 2020 | BFI

Thumbnail for video: Pocketful of Miracles (1961) ORIGINAL TRAILER

Pocketful of Miracles (1961) ORIGINAL TRAILER

Cast

Photo of Glenn Ford

Glenn Ford

Dave 'The Dude' Conway

Photo of Bette Davis

Bette Davis

Apple Annie

Photo of Hope Lange

Hope Lange

Elizabeth 'Queenie' Martin

Photo of Arthur O'Connell

Arthur O'Connell

Count Alfonso Romero

Photo of Peter Falk

Peter Falk

Joy Boy

Photo of Thomas Mitchell

Thomas Mitchell

Judge Henry G. Blake

Photo of David Brian

David Brian

Governor

Photo of Sheldon Leonard

Sheldon Leonard

Steve Darcey

Photo of Peter Mann

Peter Mann

Carlos Romero

Photo of Barton MacLane

Barton MacLane

Police Commissioner

Photo of John Litel

John Litel

Police Inspector McCrary

Photo of Frank Ferguson

Frank Ferguson

Newspaper Editor

Photo of Willis Bouchey

Willis Bouchey

Newspaper Editor

Photo of Ellen Corby

Ellen Corby

Soho Sal

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

The start of this film reminded me of the lady who sold bird seed in "Mary Poppins" - the down-at-heel but kind hearted "Annie" (Bette Davis) who scrapes a living together thanks largely to the generosity of local gangster "Dude" (Glenn Ford). What nobody else knows, however, is that she secretly has a daughter living in Spain who thinks her mother is wealthy, living in a suite at a fancy hotel. When "Louise" (Ann-Margret) writes to say that she will soon visit with her fiancée - A Spanish aristocrat; this throws quite a spanner in the works for "Annie". Luckily, "Dude" is determined to rope in his contacts to try to help her impersonate the grand role she has represented herself as having - despite trying to get a the biggest deal of his own over the line. This causes no end of chagrin for the undoubted star of the picture - Peter Falk. He is the right hand man who gradually watches the planning and organising of this charade subsume everything else, and it's slowly driving him nuts. To be honest, the central portion of this comedy also drove me a bit nuts too. It borders too closely on the farcical, with Ford trying far too hard and seeing only fleeting appearances from the increasingly sidelined Davis. It steadies itself better for the last twenty minutes or so, but is really just too long with the joke too thinly spread and the slapstick humour all a bit too in-your-face for me. The writing is generally good, though, with some fine quips - especially from Falk, and the film looks great whilst taking a gentle swing at the political class as they all flock to the side of this minor Count from Spain. I did quite enjoy it, but sadly it isn't one of Frank Capra's more focussed efforts, nor is it one of his more poignant or amusing stories.

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