Brewster's Millions | |
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Directed by | Walter Hill |
Written by | |
Based on | Brewster's Millions by George Barr McCutcheon |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Ric Waite |
Edited by |
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Music by | Ry Cooder |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 101 minutes [1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $15 million [1] |
Box office | $45.8 million |
Brewster's Millions is a 1985 American comedy film directed by Walter Hill. The film stars Richard Pryor, John Candy, Lonette McKee, Stephen Collins, and Hume Cronyn. The screenplay by Herschel Weingrod and Timothy Harris was based on the 1902 novel of the same name by George Barr McCutcheon. It is the seventh film based on the story, and focusing on a Minor League Baseball pitcher who accepts a challenge to spend $30 million in 30 days in order to inherit $300 million from his great-uncle.
The film was met with negative reviews. A sequel titled Brewster's Millions: Christmas set for December 5, 2024 release.
This is the story of Montgomery Brewster, a relief pitcher in the minor leagues of life, who got handed the American Dream...on a very hot plate.
— The opening text at the beginning of the movie.
Montgomery Brewster is a Minor League Baseball pitcher with the Hackensack Bulls. He and his best friend Spike Nolan, the Bulls' catcher, are arrested after a post-game bar fight. A man named J. B. Donaldo offers to post their bail if they plead guilty. Donaldo takes them to New York City with him. At the Manhattan law office of Granville & Baxter where Donaldo works, Brewster is told by executor Edward Roundfield that his recently deceased great-uncle Rupert Horn, whom he has never met, has left him his entire $300 million fortune with several stipulations:
If he fails to meet all terms, he forfeits any remaining balance and inherits nothing. Brewster decides to take the $30 million challenge, and Angela Drake, a paralegal from the law firm, is assigned to accompany him and keep track of his spending.
Brewster, who has never earned more than $11,000 a year, rents an expensive suite at the Plaza Hotel, hires personal staff on exorbitant salaries, and places bad gambling bets. However, Spike (who is unaware of the rules of the challenge) makes good investments, earning Brewster money. Realizing that he is making no headway, Brewster decides to run for mayor of New York City and throws most of his money at a protest campaign urging a vote for "none of the above." Major candidates Heller and Salvino threaten to sue Brewster for his confrontational rhetoric, but they settle out of court for several million dollars.
Brewster then hires the New York Yankees for a three-inning exhibition against the Bulls, with himself as the pitcher. He even mails a postcard to Granville and Baxter with a very expensive stamp, the postmark erasing its value without damaging it. He is forced to end his protest campaign when he learns that he is leading in the polls as a write-in candidate; the job carries an annual salary of $60,000, which is considered an asset under the terms of the will. Spending his last $38,000 on a party after the game, Brewster becomes fed up with money and is heartbroken that Spike, Angela, and others around him do not understand his actions that he is prohibited from explaining.
On the final day, he finds that the sycophantic treatment he received from his entourage is gone. With him and Spike having gone their separate ways, Brewster makes his way to Granville & Baxter law firm. Having withdrawn from the election, he learns that the city voted "None of the Above," forcing another election in which neither Heller or Salvino are running.
Warren Cox, a junior lawyer from the law firm and Angela's fiancé, has been bribed by Granville and Baxter to ensure that Brewster fails to spend the entire $30 million. Moments before time expires, Cox hands Brewster some money previously thought to have been spent and informs him he is not broke. Shortly before Brewster signs, Angela learns of the plot and reveals it to him. Brewster punches Cox, who threatens to sue and declines Brewster's offer of the money as compensation. Realizing that he will need a lawyer, Brewster pays the money to Angela as a retainer. With the transaction completed and all of the money now gone, Brewster fulfills the terms of the will and inherits the entire $300 million. Roundfield tells Cox, Granville, and Baxter that he will open an investigation into their actions as Brewster and Angela leave together.
In 1982, the screen rights to the novel were acquired by Lawrence Gordon Productions. [1] Peter Bogdanovich was the original director of the adaptation and had planned to include it among the six independent pictures he scheduled for 1983. His version was reported as being most similar to Allan Dwan's 1945 adaptation. [1]
The project remained in development limbo for nearly two years until Frank Price, the new president at Universal, greenlit it to be the first production under his guidance. [2] By then, Bogdanovich was no longer involved and Walter Hill was chosen to direct. [1] He had never made a comedy before, but had made the successful 48 Hrs. which featured comic scenes and a comic lead, Eddie Murphy. The script was by the writers of Murphy's Trading Places . [3]
"I'm always making westerns," Hill said. "Whether it's a movie that takes place in the future... or an action- adventure like 48 Hrs., what I'm really doing is making cowboy movies.... I like westerns because everything is very clear in them. 'I like movies in which the story line is simple and straightforward and the characters are confronted with issues of life and death. But Hollywood has decided that people don't like westerns anymore, so I have to make these other movies and pretend they're not westerns... My idea of a good movie is to take very clearly defined characters and put them in the highest possible jeopardy and then see what happens," Hill said. [4]
Hill said Richard Pryor "didn't believe that he was funny unless he took drugs, and he believed that if he took drugs he would die. Also, he had money problems, of course, so he had to work and take jobs and make lots of money. So it was difficult, but I liked Richard very much." [5]
The film was shot on location in New York. The fictional baseball park, which was said to be in Hackensack, New Jersey, was actually the re-used set from the short-lived TV series, Bay City Blues . It was situated within the 153-acre LADWP Valley Generating Station in Sun Valley, California. [6] The set was demolished in 1989 when the LADWP redeveloped the site. [7] The UK's Princess Anne visited the set during filming as part of a U.S. tour. [8]
Walter Hill later said he purposefully made the film "to improve his bank account and success quotient". [9]
The film made $9,858,905 on its opening weekend of May 24, 1985, coming in third behind the concurrent openings of Rambo: First Blood Part II and A View to a Kill respectively. It ultimately grossed $40,833,132 domestically in addition to another $5,000,000 on the international market against a budget of $30,000,000. [10] [11]
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 38% based on 24 reviews, with an average score of 5/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "With Richard Pryor's trademark ribald humor tamped down, Brewster's Millions feels like a missed opportunity to update a classic story." [12] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 37 based on 13 reviews, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews". [13]
The staff review in Variety said bluntly: "It's hard to believe a comedy starring Richard Pryor and John Candy is no funnier than this". [14] Janet Maslin, in her review for The New York Times , called the film "a screwball comedy minus the screws" which "does nothing to accommodate Mr. Pryor's singular comic talents". Director Walter Hill, she said, did not understand "the advantages of screwball timing," and the film's slow pace and lack of style gives it "a fatuous artificiality". She went on to praise the film's supporting cast, including John Candy, but said that the "flat" screenplay forces Candy to repeat himself. [15]
Walter Hill later called the movie "an aberration in the career line" being his only flat-out comedy. [16] He added that "whatever [the film's] deficiencies, I think the wistful quality was there. I was happy about that. The picture did well and made money." [17]
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