Trailer for Nandor Fodor & The Talking Mongoose
Here's the trailer for Simon Pegg's new film, Nandor Fodor & The Talking Mongoose.
The comic actor adopts an American accent for this story of a real-life story of a psychoanalyst investigating claims of a talking mongoose.
Nandor Fodor was a Hungarian-American investigator of paranormal phenomena who, in 1935, was called to the Isle of Man to investigate claims by the Irving family that they had found a talking mongoose named Gef on their farm.
Minnie Driver plays Anne, his assistant, in a cast that also includes Tim Downie, Paul Kaye, Ruth Connell, Gary Beadle and Drew Moerlin.
According to the Irvings, they found Gef – pronounced ‘Jeff’ – after investigating noises coming from behind their farmhouse's wooden wall panels. The creature introduced itself and told them it was a mongoose born in New Delhi, India, in 1852.
The family claimed he said: ‘I am a freak. I have hands and I have feet, and if you saw me you'd faint, you'd be petrified, mummified, turned into stone or a pillar of salt.’
At one point he described himself as ’an extra, extra clever mongoose’ – and at another time added: ‘I’ll split the atom! I am the fifth dimension! I am the eighth wonder of the world!’
The Irvings told stories of Gef eating bacon and sausages, turning off the stove at night, and even riding the bus and bringing back gossip about the neighbours.
The case drew much tabloid attention at the time, although it was widely suspected that the family’s 13-year-old daughter, Voirrey, had used ventriloquism tricks to affect the hoax.
Among those who covered the story was Richard Lambert, editor of The Listener. When Sir Cecil Levita, a former chairman of the London County Council, suggested Lambert’s interest in the case meant he was ‘off his head’ and unfit to be on the board of the British Film Institute, the journalist sued for slander, receiving £7,600 in damages, more than £500,000 in today’s money....
Published: 20 Jul 2023