Mick Travis trilogy

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The Mick Travis films are three films directed by British film director Lindsay Anderson and written by David Sherwin, featuring English actor Malcolm McDowell as Mick Travis, in which Travis features not so much as a single character with a character arc, as an everyman character whose role changes according to the needs of the storyteller.

In if...., his first appearance (and McDowell's film debut), Travis first appears as a disaffected public school boy whose anti-establishment attitude and experiences lead to armed insurrection at a public school. The film was made at Cheltenham College, Lindsay Anderson's old school, and many of the scenes drew heavily on his experience in the Officers Training Corps at Cheltenham, which he had joined in May 1937.

In O Lucky Man!, cowritten by Sherwin and McDowell, Travis becomes a picaresque character, often compared to Voltaire's ingenu character Candide, in a satirical drama that starts with Travis's first job as a mobile coffee salesman and, after many adventures involving arms-sale scandals, experiments in human-animal genetics by the mad scientist Doctor Millar (played with relish by Graham Crowden), and a sojourn with the musician Alan Price, ends in his rebirth as a film star, thanks to a slap by a film director played in a cameo by Anderson--the scene was a depiction of McDowell's first audition in which McDowell was slapped (according to script, which he had not read) by an actress.

In Britannia Hospital, written by Sherwin, Travis is a reporter attempting to make an investigative documentary about a hospital where Doctor Millar, the mad geneticist from O Lucky Man! is continuing his unspeakable experiments.

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