Zwei Betrüger versuchen, ihre Rivalität auszuräumen, indem sie darauf wetten, wer eine junge amerikanische Erbin als Erster um fünfzigtausend Dollar erleichtern.Zwei Betrüger versuchen, ihre Rivalität auszuräumen, indem sie darauf wetten, wer eine junge amerikanische Erbin als Erster um fünfzigtausend Dollar erleichtern.Zwei Betrüger versuchen, ihre Rivalität auszuräumen, indem sie darauf wetten, wer eine junge amerikanische Erbin als Erster um fünfzigtausend Dollar erleichtern.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 Gewinn & 1 Nominierung insgesamt
- Miss Krista Knudsen
- (as Aina Wallé)
- English Sailor #1
- (as Rupert Holliday Evans)
- Waiter on the Train
- (as Andre Penvern)
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It's a great sequence, and is featured on the DVD with its own commentary from director Frank Oz (when has that ever happened before?) but a little misleading. Actually, while both men are scoundrels, neither is quite that vile. Caine's Lawrence Jamieson is actually a bit of an altruist, as we find out, with a code of only taking in people who can afford to be taken, and finding ways of spending the money that are not entirely self-serving. Martin's Freddy Benson is less disciplined and more small-time in his cons; he'll steal candy from a baby and tell you it's for his poor sick Gram-Gram if caught, but he is likeable, too, an underdog with little idea how the game is played at the highest levels, but eager to learn.
The fact you can like these characters is a compliment to Martin and Caine, as well as director Oz and the team of writers. Tone is everything with a film like this, and as Oz says in his commentary, so important in making the comedy work. He notes he was going for a 1950s feel in the picture, I'm guessing with Hitchcock's "To Catch A Thief" in mind. The great score by Miles Goodman is solid enough to deserve its own CD reissue, with an air of light sophistication that buoys the proceedings on screen. Most importantly, since much of the comedy involves people taking advantage of one another, having everything put forward in such a gossamer manner helps you digest the story without leaving a bad taste.
Martin shines in many scenes, especially when playing Ruprecht the idiot man-child and when stuck in jail trying to remember the name of the only man he thinks can bail him out ("James Lawrenceton...no, wait, James Jesterton....no, no, it's definitely, um...") I knew Martin could be funny, and with the exception of "All Of Me" this is probably his best comedic performance, but Caine is a revelation. A straight man, yes, but with delicate timing and some clever characterizations that he pulls out of a bag, like an Germanic psychiatrist with some unusual ideas about curing lameness. You forget how good Caine is in comedy, despite his performances in films like this, "Blame It On Rio," and "Without A Clue." Glenne Headly is a revelation as the woman caught in the middle of Jamieson and Benson's scheming, every bit as good as her male counterparts, but say no more.
Great actors, great tone, but the plot is the best thing this film has. It's a remake of a 1964 film "Bedtime Story," which teamed Marlon Brando and David Niven for what should have been a dream team but went flat instead. This time, the script is helped by actors who can not only deliver funny lines but make them funnier, and by an ending (according to Oz in his commentary, one worked out over several long dinner meetings with Martin) that is simply perfect.
Finally, Oz needs to be recognized. He was only making his second non-Muppet film here, but the result in my view is one of the best comedies anyone has ever done. He manages to get the best from everyone, including the actors and cinematographer Michael Ballhaus (some amazing night shots of the French Rivera waterfront you never tire of looking at), and delivers a rare jewel of a film, a laugh-out-loud comedy that leaves you with a warm feeling inside.
Ian McDairmid plays Arthur the butler in this, teaming him with Oz yet again. Almost titled this review "Yoda And Palpatine On The French Riviera;" it's interesting McDairmid plays the one guy in "Scoundrels" who's really on the level.
It's a sort of Martin and Lewis pairing, and, although the comedy is derivative, it's by no means boring or stale, likely due to the talent of the two marvelous leads.
Wonderful European landscapes are a bonus.
Well worth watching.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe teaser trailer features a sequence which does not appear in the final movie. Freddy Benson and Lawrence Jamieson walk along a boardwalk, politely moving out of the way of other people with a voiceover saying: "There are numerous distinguished gentlemen in the world; refined, cultured gentlemen; nice men; but nice men finish last." As the last few lines are spoken, Freddy pushes an old lady into the water, and Lawrence shoves a child's face into his cotton candy. Director Frank Oz has said that audiences were very surprised to learn that the scene was not part of the finished movie.
- PatzerFreddy passes himself off as a paralyzed naval officer but is wearing the blue dress uniform of a US Army enlisted man with the rank of corporal. The sailors that help Freddy would have picked up on that.
The two sailors are not American, so it is possible that they are not familiar with the uniforms of foreign services.
- Zitate
Freddy Benson: I didn't steal any money from her! She gave it to me.
Inspector Andre: But, she filed this complaint against you.
Freddy Benson: She caught me with another woman. C'mon. You're French, you understand that!
Inspector Andre: To be with another woman, that is French. To be caught, that is American.
- Crazy CreditsWhile the names of Stanley Shapiro and Paul Henning appear in the credits as two of this film's three writers, they are actually there just to credit their script for Zwei erfolgreiche Verführer (1964), of which this is a remake.
- VerbindungenEdited into Alias: Die Agentin: The Enemy Walks In (2002)
- SoundtracksPuttin' On the Ritz
Written by Irving Berlin
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Dos pícaros sinvergüenzas
- Drehorte
- Villa Hier, Cap d'Antibes, Antibes, Alpes-Maritimes, Frankreich(Lawrence Jamieson's luxurious digs)
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 42.039.085 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 3.840.498 $
- 18. Dez. 1988
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 42.039.085 $