{{short description|1974 film}} {{Use dmy dates|date=November 2018}} {{Infobox film | name = Little Malcolm | caption = DVD cover | image = Little Malcolm FilmPoster.jpeg | director = Stuart Cooper | producer = Gavrik Losey | writer = David Halliwell (''play'')<br>Derek Woodward | starring = John Hurt | music = Stanley Myers | cinematography = John Alcott | editing = Ray Lovejoy | distributor = Apple Films | released = {{film date|df=yes|1974}} | runtime = 109 minutes | country = United Kingdom | language = English }}

'''''Little Malcolm''''' is a 1974 British comedy drama film directed by Stuart Cooper and starring John Hurt. It is based on David Halliwell's stage play ''Little Malcolm and His Struggle Against the Eunuchs''.<ref name="Clayson p 370">Clayson, p. 370.</ref> The play's full name is used as the film title on the BFI Flipside 2011 DVD release.<ref name="Simmons/Mojo" />

==Plot== Malcolm Scrawdyke, a fascist political figure, plots revenge against the college that expelled him by forming the Party of Dynamic Erection, a right-wing political movement, with three acolytes.

==Cast== * Rosalind Ayres as Ann Gedge * John Hurt as Malcolm Scrawdyke * John McEnery as Wick Blagdon * Raymond Platt as Irwin Ingham * David Warner as Dennis Charles Nipple

==Production== ===Background=== An Apple Films project, ''Little Malcolm'' was the first feature film executive produced by former Beatle George Harrison.<ref name="Clayson p 370" />

Like many of Apple's film and recording projects, production on ''Little Malcolm'' was then jeopardised by lawsuits pertaining to Harrison, John Lennon and Ringo Starr's severing of ties with manager Allen Klein.<ref>Doggett, pp. 204–06.</ref><ref>Woffinden, pp. 74–75.</ref> Speaking in 2011, Cooper said that Harrison "fought for a very long time to extract ''Little Malcolm'' from the official receivers", adding that its entry in the Berlin festival was only possible because the festival was an artistic forum and not finance-related.<ref name="Simmons/Mojo" />

===Shooting=== The film was shot primarily in Lancashire, in the north of England, during February and March 1973.<ref>Badman, p. 90.</ref>

===Soundtrack=== Harrison supplied incidental music for the soundtrack<ref name="Simmons/Mojo">Michael Simmons, "Cry for a Shadow", ''Mojo'', November 2011, p. 85.</ref> and, after being introduced to the duo Splinter by their manager Mal Evans, produced their song "Lonely Man" for inclusion in a pivotal scene.<ref>Clayson, p. 346.</ref><ref name="Badman p 129">Badman, p. 129.</ref> The soundtrack also featured the band Harpoon singing "Not With You".<ref>Pop Music in British Cinema: A Chronicle - Page 77 Kevin Donnelly - 2002 Little Malcolm and His Struggle Against the Eunuchs (1974 Stuart Cooper) Subafilms/Apple Films. P - Gavrik Losey. Exec P - George Harrison. M - Stanley Myers. Song - Harpoon - Not With You. Students set up a terrorist group, semi-comedy.</ref>

==Release== Once the Beatles' partnership had been formally dissolved, in January 1975, the film received a brief run in London's West End.<ref>Badman, pp. 149, 150.</ref> In February 1983, Harrison donated his personal copy of ''Little Malcolm'' to a New York-based company for screening at a local film festival.<ref>Badman, p. 314.</ref>

===Accolades=== After what Cooper described as an "incredible" reception at Berlin for "this very British film",<ref name="Simmons/Mojo" /> ''Little Malcolm'' won a gold medal at the Atlanta Film Festival in August 1974.<ref name="Badman p 129" /> It was entered into the 24th Berlin International Film Festival, where it won the Silver Bear.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.berlinale.de/de/archiv/jahresarchive/1974/03_preistr_ger_1974/03_Preistraeger_1974.html|title=Berlinale Archiv Jahresarchive 1974 Preisträger|access-date=19 November 2010}}</ref>

===Home media=== In 2011, the British Film Institute released the film on DVD as part of their flipside strand.

==References== {{reflist}}

==Sources== {{refbegin}} * Keith Badman, ''The Beatles Diary Volume 2: After the Break-Up 1970–2001'', Omnibus Press (London, 2001; {{ISBN|0-7119-8307-0}}). * Alan Clayson, ''George Harrison'', Sanctuary (London, 2003; {{ISBN|1-86074-489-3}}). * Peter Doggett, ''You Never Give Me Your Money: The Beatles After the Breakup'', It Books (New York, NY, 2011; {{ISBN|978-0-06-177418-8}}). * Bob Woffinden, ''The Beatles Apart'', Proteus (London, 1981; {{ISBN|0-906071-89-5}}). {{refend}}

==External links== *{{IMDb title|id=0071760|title=Little Malcolm}}

{{Stuart Cooper}} {{George Harrison}}

Category:1974 films Category:1974 comedy-drama films Category:1974 independent films Category:British films based on plays Category:British comedy-drama films Category:Films directed by Stuart Cooper Category:Films scored by Stanley Myers Category:British independent films Category:Apple Films films Category:Films shot in Greater Manchester Category:1974 English-language films Category:1974 British films Category:English-language comedy-drama films Category:English-language independent films