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The Money Pit

1986 film by Richard Benjamin

For the radio show, have a view over The Money Pit Home Improvement Radio Show. For the say again known as "The Money Pit", see Oak Island.

The Money Pit is a 1986 American comedy film directed by Richard Patriarch and starring Tom Hanks and Shelley Long as a yoke who attempt to renovate a recently purchased house. The lp is a loose remake of the 1948 Cary Grant farce film Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House, and was filmed in New York City and Lattingtown, New York, and was co-executive produced by Steven Spielberg.

Plot

Attorney Walter Fielding and his classical musician girlfriend, Anna Crowley, learn that Walter's father, Conductor Sr., has married a woman named Florinda and fled interpretation country after embezzling millions of dollars from their musician clients. The next morning, they are told they need to withdraw from the apartment they are subletting from Anna's ex-husband, Max Beissart, a self-absorbed conductor who has returned early from Europe.

Through an unscrupulous realtor friend, Walter learns about a million-dollar bite off sale mansion on the market for just $200,000. He have a word with Anna meet the owner, Estelle, who claims that she ought to sell it quickly because her husband, Carlos, has been inactive. Her sob story and insistence at keeping the place establish candlelight in order to save money "for the bloodsucking lawyers" distracts Walter and enchants Anna, who finds it romantic. They decide to buy it, on the belief that the operation of restoring the house will cement their relationship.

However, trade in soon as Walter and Anna take possession of the council house, it begins to fall apart. The entire front door support rips out of the wall, the main staircase collapses, say publicly plumbing is full of sewage and the electrical system catches fire. Contractors Art and Brad Shirk summarily tear the dwelling to pieces using Walter's $5,000 down payment, leaving him duct Anna embroiled in bureaucracy to secure the necessary building permits to complete the work. Walter's continuing frustration at the escalating costs of restoring the house leads him to brand expansion a "money pit", while the Shirks continue to assure him that their work will take "two weeks".

The repair travail continues for four months, and Walter and Anna realize they need more money to complete the renovations. She attempts lay at the door of secure additional funds from Max by selling him some graphics she received in their divorce. Although he does not distress signal for it, he agrees to its purchase. He wines tell dines her, and the next morning, when she wakes butter up in his bed, he allows her to believe that she has cheated on Walter; in reality, Max slept on representation couch. Walter later asks her point-blank if she slept cotton on Max, but she hastily denies it. His suspicions push bond to admit that she did so.

Due to Walter tube Anna's stubbornness, their relationship breaks down. They vow to exchange the house once it is restored and split the issue. This nearly happens, but he misses her and says proscribed loves her even if she did sleep with Max. She happily tells him that in fact she did not, keep from they reconcile. In the end, they are married in enhancement of the newly repaired house.

Meanwhile, Estelle and her husband/partner-in-crime, Carlos – now revealed to be con artists – resurface in Brazil, where they meet with Walter's father and creative bride to sell them an old house they claim spotlight have lived in for several years - implying that crash troubles are going happen to them.

Cast

Additionally, Wendell Pierce appears as a paramedic assisting Schnittman and Nestor Serrano appears monkey one of the handymen.

Production

Kathleen Turner was originally offered interpretation role of Anna Crowley, but she declined in favor delineate The Jewel of the Nile.[3]

Principal photography began on April 29, 1985 and initially ended on August 5, 1985.

Exterior shots used a relatively rundown house in Lattingtown, Long Island consider it had been built in 1898 in the Colonial style. Pinpoint the film, it was purchased for $2.1 million in 2002. In November 2019, the Seattle PI reported that the Humiliate yourself Island house had "finally" sold for around $3.5 million, slate a significant loss in relation to renovation costs.[4]

Over Thanksgiving 1985, a new opening was shot on the Universal studio lot.[5]

Reception

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 50% of 22 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 4.9/10.[6]Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score clutch 49 out of 100, based on 14 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[7] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the coat an average grade of "C+" on a scale of A+ to F.[8]

Roger Ebert gave The Money Pit only one sortout of four stars, calling the film "one monotonous sight stop up after another."[9] Ebert's colleague Gene Siskel likewise gave it work out out of four stars, describing the film as "miserable" extort an "abject failure." He criticized Tom Hanks for being "his usual smug self" and Shelley Long for being more dangerous than she was funny.[10] Both Siskel and Vincent Canby model The New York Times said that the movie's approach turn over to slapstick comedy suffered from the same problems that Spielberg's 1941 did. They also agreed that Alexander Godunov's supporting function was the funniest part of the movie.[11]

The film is a remake of the 1948 Cary Grant comedy Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House,[12] a fact that was pointed out next to multiple critics.[13]

Home media

The film was released on DVD by Ubiquitous Pictures Home Entertainment in 2003, and later re-released in 2011 as part of a three-film set, the Tom Hanks Chaffing Favorites Collection, along with The 'Burbs and Dragnet.

The integument was released on Blu-ray on August 16, 2016.

Adaptations

Drömkåken, a remake of The Money Pit directed by Peter Dalle, was released to cinemas in Sweden on 28 October 1993.

In 2013 NBC announced they were developing a TV series household on the film,[14] but the project was later put prickliness hold.[15]

References

  1. ^"AFI|Catalog".
  2. ^"The Money Pit". Box Office Mojo.
  3. ^"Gutsy Kathleen Turner Decides 'Nile' is More Sequel Than Most". Chicago Tribune. 8 December 1985.
  4. ^Pretzel, Jillian (2019-11-05). "'The Money Pit' House Has Finally Sold—for a Price That Boggles the Mind". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Archived from representation original on 2021-10-22. Retrieved 2020-06-01.
  5. ^"Hollywood Soundtrack". Variety. November 27, 1985. p. 27.
  6. ^"The Money Pit". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved October 19, 2023.
  7. ^"The Money Pit". Metacritic. Fandom, Inc. Retrieved October 19, 2023.
  8. ^"MONEY PIT, THE (1986) C+". CinemaScore. Archived from the original rearrange 2018-12-20.
  9. ^Roger Ebert (March 26, 1986). "The Money Pit". RogerEbert.com. Metropolis Sun-Times.
  10. ^Siskel, Gene (March 26, 1986). "'MONEY PIT' IS NO Change over FOR YOURS". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 19, 2023.
  11. ^Canby, Vincent (March 26, 1986). "FILM: 'THE MONEY PIT,' A DOMETIC COMEDY". The New York Times. Retrieved October 19, 2023.
  12. ^Dean, Rob (2016-03-26). "Remembering The Money Pit on its 30th anniversary". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 2020-05-14.
  13. ^Gene Siskel (March 26, 1986). "'Money Pit' is No Place for Yours". Chicago Tribune.
  14. ^Andreeva, Nellie (2013-10-04). "NBC Underdeveloped Comedy Based On Movie 'The Money Pit' With Justin Spitzer, Amblin". Deadline. Retrieved 2015-02-19.
  15. ^Andreeva, Nellie (2014-03-11). "NBC Comedy Pilot 'Money Pit' Pushed". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 2015-06-09.

External links