moviebox header nav
moviebox search icon
muted

Poor Cow

1968

R

1 h 41 m

Britania Raya

Kejahatan

Drama

Percintaan

A young woman lives a life full of bad choices. At a young age she has a baby by an abusive thief who quickly lands in prison. When her son goes missing, she gets to grips with what is most important to her.
More

6.8 /10

2244 people rated

Tonton online

Tonton di app

Episode

Pemeran Terbaik

Ulasan Pengguna

Episode
Pemeran Terbaik
Ulasan Pengguna

Episode

film
lklk
Netflix
Plex
Pemeran Utama(15)
starring avatar
Terence Stamp
David 'Dave' Fuller
starring avatar
Carol White
Joy
starring avatar
John Bindon
Tom
default avatar
Queenie Watts
Aunt Emm
starring avatar
Kate Williams
Beryl
starring avatar
James Beckett
Tom's Mate
default avatar
Ray Barron
Customer in Pub
default avatar
Hilda Barry
Customer in Pub
starring avatar
Ken Campbell
Mr. Jacks
default avatar
Ellis Dale
Solicitor
default avatar
Gladys Dawson
Bet
default avatar
Terry Duggan
2nd Prisoner
default avatar
Winnie Holman
Woman in Park
default avatar
Rose Hiller
Customer in Hairdresser's
default avatar
John Halstead
Photographer

Ulasan Pengguna

author avatar

audreytedji

29/05/2023 19:02
source: Poor Cow
author avatar

الفنان نور الزين

16/11/2022 11:09
Poor Cow
author avatar

Kinaatress ❤️

16/11/2022 02:48
This was a disappointing Ken Loach film and the worst of his that I have seen. The story, I felt, was dull. A woman with no prospects takes up with various criminals in order live a bit of a 'fancy' lifestyle. She still lives in squalor but now and again she gets a nice necklace. The thing with Loach is, his films are usually so wonderfully shot and acted in a way that makes them incredibly realistic and almost a documentary that they are compulsive viewing, even when the story is less interesting. But with Poor Cow the acting felt more theatrical and less realistic (particularly Terence Stamp) and as a document of our history I didn't feel it anywhere near as interesting, important or intriguing as Kes, Riff Raff, Raining Stones, Cathy Come Home or even Looks and Smiles.
author avatar

Monther

16/11/2022 02:48
It is worth noting that The Limey (1999) is a follow up to Poor Cow. The writer of the later film has stated that the similarities between these two films is incidental. However, Steven Soderbergh (the director of The Limey) has said that he specifically intended for his movie to be a sequel to Poor Cow. If you liked Poor Cow you might also want to see The Limey.
author avatar

Radhiyyah Lala

16/11/2022 02:48
Recently released on British DVD, this is a good movie (as long as you have an attention span and IQ of more than a fruit fly). Not as depressing as it could have been, this is kitchen-sink at its most dirty. Terrance Stamp is great in it, the music is sweet, Carol White is very believeable as the single mum tart who can't stop loving criminals. My favourite scene is where Carol and her friend who works in the pub with her (the one with the enormous beehive hairdo which comes down over one eye) sit outisde and gossip about all the men who walk past. The only thing that marred this was the shakey acting of Carol's first husband, but if you can get past that, you're OK. And Donovan provides some of the most languid, mellow, bittersweet lyrics to come out of the 60s.
author avatar

Joseph Attieh

16/11/2022 02:48
Not a film of entertainment, but of real lives & limited ambition for the working class in 60's. Enjoyable because of my upbringing, not sure it'd work for most people. Typical Loach. Full of TV actors/actresses of 70's/80's/90's.
author avatar

Ajishir♥️

16/11/2022 02:48
Ken Loach showed the world the down-and-out flip side of Swinging London with "Poor Cow", about London woman Joy (Carol White) hooking up with a thief and having a son with him, only to see the man end up in the slammer. While his friend (Terence Stamp) manages to help her out some, he proves to be little better in what a loser he is. It soon becomes clear to Joy that she's going to have to make a serious decision about where she's going in her life. One thing that I determined - I don't know whether or not this is accurate - was a use of irony in the movie. Her name is Joy, but she experiences no joy in her life. Even if that wasn't intended, it's still a movie that I recommend to everyone. Featuring songs by Donovan (one of which - "Colors" - appeared in another Terence Stamp movie: "The Limey" (which, incidentally, came out in 1999, when I was as old as my parents were when "Poor Cow" came out)).
author avatar

𝓢𝓸𝓯𝓲𝓪 🌿

16/11/2022 02:48
Back in the 60's, this grim study of Joy, a young proletarian wife, was the introduction to the career of Ken Loach, who became one of the most distinguished and respected British filmmakers of all time. By then I knew very little about Brecht, politics or the reality of the under-privileged, and I was quite impressed by the aesthetics of the film, its free style, its austere color cinematography, and Joy's monologues in front of the camera. I was also much surprised to find that Terence Stamp (who had become a celebrity, thanks to "Billy Budd", "The Collector" and "Modesty Blaise") had so little screen time. Although 20th Century Fox distributed "Poor Cow" in Panama, Loach did not join mainstream cinema (which this film hardly is) and I lost contact with his films. I just heard of his successes, "Kes", "Family Life", "Black Jack". until I caught up in the 80's. The beautiful title song by Donovan, by the way, is available in his anthology "Troubadour".
Disclaimer: All videos and pictures on MovieBox are from the Internet, and their copyrights belong to the original creators. We only provide webpage services and do not store, record, or upload any content.