Nothing to Lose | |
---|---|
Directed by | Steve Oedekerk |
Written by | Steve Oedekerk |
Produced by | Martin Bregman Dan Jinks Michael Bregman |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Donald E. Thorin |
Edited by | Malcolm Campbell |
Music by | Robert Folk |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Buena Vista Pictures Distribution |
Release date |
|
Running time | 98 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $25 million [1] |
Box office | $44.5 million [1] |
Nothing to Lose is a 1997 American buddy action comedy film starring Tim Robbins and Martin Lawrence. The film was written and directed by Steve Oedekerk, who also made a cameo appearance as a lip-synching security guard in the film.
The film was released in July 1997 and went on to gross over US$40 million at the box office. The theme song was "If I Had No Loot" by Tony! Toni! Toné!, but it was a remixed version of the song "Not Tonight"—performed by Lil' Kim and featuring Da Brat, Left Eye, Angie Martinez, and Missy Elliott—that garnered the most attention from the soundtrack as it gained much airplay on television and radio and reached the top ten on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.
The film was shot at various locations in California and New Jersey. The main California locations were Los Angeles—including the U.S. Bank Tower for Nick's office—and Monrovia. The main location in New Jersey was Bloomfield.
Advertising executive Nick Beam thinks his life is going very well, until he returns home from work and finds his wife Ann apparently having an affair with another man. He deduces that the man is his boss, Philip Barrow, after finding a pair of Philip's cufflinks in the kitchen. On the edge of a nervous breakdown, Nick drives around the city until carjacker Terrence Paul "T-Paul" Davidson jumps into his car and attempts to rob him. Nick manages to turn the tables on his mugger, kidnapping T-Paul and later drives him to a diner in an Arizona desert. After T-Paul robs a gas station, Nick and T-Paul decide to team up to rob Philip in revenge for the affair. Nick knows the combination to a safe in Philip's office containing a large amount of cash, as well as the best time to enter, and where not to venture in the building while T-Paul knows the weaknesses of the security system, how to avoid the cameras, and how to get through any electronic locks that they might encounter.
Another criminal duo, Davis "Rig" Lanlow and Charles "Charlie" Dunt, get blamed for the gas station robbery. When they find Nick and T-Paul, the duo ram Nick's truck off the road and hold the pair at gunpoint. After a brief confrontation, T-Paul manages to disarm them, but accidentally shoots Nick in the arm. They make their escape as Rig and Charlie follow them back to Los Angeles. Meanwhile, T-Paul takes Nick to his apartment so they can rest and his wife can bandage Nick's arm; while at the apartment, Nick sees T-Paul's electrical engineering certification and a stack of rejection letters from prospective employers. The next night, the pair execute their plan. During the robbery, Nick damages Philip's prize fertility statue and reveals himself to the security camera, taunting his boss about getting revenge. The pair then hide from a security guard, who lip-synches to music for over an hour. The guard soon leaves and they leave the office unseen and they settle at a hotel for the night. It becomes bad when Rig and Charlie, who stole Nick's business card and followed them from the office to the hotel, show up at their room, take T-Paul hostage and steal the money. Meanwhile, Nick has gone to the bar to have a drink, where he meets Danielle, a flower shop woman he met earlier. When Danielle takes him up to her room to have sex with him, Nick is about to sleep with her until he refuses and leaves.
Nick calls Ann to confront her about the affair, but she explains that he was wrong. Nick actually caught Ann's sister and her fiancee in bed when they came into town earlier than expected; having never seen her sister before, Nick mistook her for Ann. He also learns that Philip's cufflinks were left behind at a past Christmas party and Ann left them out for Nick to return them to Philip and that Ann still loves him. Overcome with remorse over his actions, Nick returns to the room and saves T-Paul from a trap that Rig and Charlie placed him in. They catch up to Rig and Charlie and chase them into an alley. Nick shoots the gun out of Rig's hand and the pair get back the money as they leave Rig and Charlie tied up for the police to find them. As they are driving away, Nick insists on returning the money back to the office, but T-Paul, who had planned on using the money to move his family out of their troubled neighborhood, refuses to take it back and they get into a fight. After they stop fighting, Nick assures T-Paul that nobody will bother to look at the security tapes unless something is missing or damaged and that he can still make things right. T-Paul decides to give the money to Nick and walks back home to his family, while Nick drives back home and reunites with Ann.
Returning to his job, Nick is told that Philip is reviewing the security tapes to investigate a burglar who vandalized his statue. Nick races to his boss's office but is too late to stop them, only to discover that the tape was recorded over right before the "burglar" removed his mask, and that a man identifying himself as an electrician was allowed into the building earlier in the day. Knowing that T-Paul is the one who recorded over the tape, Nick goes to see him to show his gratitude for saving him from losing his job. In return, Nick offers T-Paul a job as an electrician and a security expert to work on a new security system for his company, which he happily accepts.
In the post-credit scene, a mailman shows up at the gas station in Arizona and returns the money that T-Paul stole.
Nothing to Lose was met with negative reviews from professional critics. On Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes 31% of the critics have given the film a positive review based on 26 reviews with an average rating of 5.3/10. [2] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave it 2 out of 4 stars. Ebert criticized the plot "in which everything depends on a crucial but unconvincing misunderstanding that needs to be laboriously contrived". [3] Phil Villarreal of the Arizona Daily Star gave the film a positive review and stated, "Tim Robbins' understated depression and Martin Lawrence's hyperactive ranting are the perfectly hilarious foil for one another."[ citation needed ]
Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale. [4] [ better source needed ]
The film made its debut at #4 at the North American box office, and made $11,617,767 on its opening weekend in 1,862 theaters. Its widest release was 1,888 theaters. During its run, the film made a domestic total of $44,480,039. Its production budget was $25 million. [1]
A soundtrack containing hip hop and R&B music was released on July 1, 1997 by Tommy Boy Records. It peaked at #12 on the Billboard 200 and #5 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and was certified gold on September 3, 1997.
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