The Small World of Sammy Lee

1963

Drama

The compère of a seedy strip club struggles to keep one step ahead of the bookies to whom he owes money.

"Soho... Where Love Comes Cheap... Money Comes Hard...And Life is a Girl With a Suitcase a Thousand Miles From Home."

Rating

6.1
17 votes

Popularity

0.5769

Origin & Countries

GB | en | United Kingdom

Production

Elgin Films

Runtime

107 min.

Status

Released

Release: 4/20/1963

Credits

The Small World of Sammy Lee

Ken HughesDirector

The Small World of Sammy Lee

Anthony NewleySammy 'Lee' Leeman

The Small World of Sammy Lee

Julia FosterPatsy

The Small World of Sammy Lee

Robert StephensGerry Sullivan

The Small World of Sammy Lee

Wilfrid BrambellHarry

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Reviews

CinemaSerf

2/2/2024

7 / 10

Anthony Newley is at the top of his game here as the eponymous nightclub host who is way past his best. His lame one-liners have long since stopped engaging his dwindling number of punters who now only show up for a cheap drink and a eyeful. His on stage failures are not his only worries. He couldn't pick a winner in an one-horse race and is in hock to his bookie for money he can never hope to raise, and they are not about to let him off. He is also in love - but even that's complicated with "Patsy" (Julia Foster) being embroiled in the business he shares with the odious and sleazy "Gerry" (Robert Stephens). There's a who's who of solid supporting British characters here that help depict a Soho, now long gone, that did deserve it's nickname as a square mile of vice and depravity. Wilfred Brambles, Warren Mitchell and Roy Kinnear all add a gritty richness to the poignant adaptation of his BBC play by auteur Ken Hughes and it's clear from early on that an happy ending - for anyone - is most unlikely. Hughes conveys the seediness and the ghastliness cleverly. There's virtually nothing graphic, or even especially violent - here. That's all left to our imagination and to the gradually increasing sense that "Sammy Lee" has seen his finest hour. He just has to hope it's not soon to be his last. I didn't always like the Newley brand of Londoner, but in this he delivers engagingly and I almost felt sorry for him at times!

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