Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA con man, seeking to gain the affections of a woman he saw entering an office building, acquires a job in the same building working for an executive who has plans to use his skills for more... Alles lesenA con man, seeking to gain the affections of a woman he saw entering an office building, acquires a job in the same building working for an executive who has plans to use his skills for more than just the workplace.A con man, seeking to gain the affections of a woman he saw entering an office building, acquires a job in the same building working for an executive who has plans to use his skills for more than just the workplace.
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 wins total
- Tom Dilton
- (as Harry J. Lennix)
- Rock
- (as Garfield)
- Ted Forrest
- (as Dick Butler)
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When Damon Wayans said, "Mo' Money, Mo' Money, Mo' Money," the world stopped turning; if only for a brief moment. All was good in the world, and life itself seemed brighter than ever.
If there was ever a second coming of Christ, Damon Wayans was his name. Thank you, Damon. You will always been my love.
It's surely related to everything this movie made, and me. Actually "me" just hated the mean personality of this movie sometimes with all the free sarcasm of the fat women, the neurologically-sick people; namely the old employee of the company with the trembling nick, and the mentally-handicapped people as well which is the ugliest bottom this movie hit.
The rest of the 2 lead's stuff wasn't funny either. There was a complete nut job evil guy, too exaggerated action scenes where Damon Wayans transforms into Batman!, let alone some things that bothered my stomach to the max; such as (Marlon Wayans) and (Almayvonne).
So, what's here to be loved? It's easy: Somehow the plot. And (Damon Wayans)'s performance. Generally, (Mo' Money) isn't a bad movie. It's just offensive at some places, unfunny at many, and have-not when it comes to any excellent factor. Still the good parts make it something to watch. But not to laugh with!
Wayans' script is really not that good, stumbling when it comes to its crime and thriller aspects (although director Peter Macdonald ("Rambo III") delivers decent action sequences). But its comedy content is often very funny, and very un-p.c. At times. The movie works best as a vehicle for its talented stars. Wayans shows some real charm, Dash is appealing, Harry J. Lennix ('The Blacklist') is a hoot as her stuck-up boyfriend, Marlon W. Has a lot of comic energy, and Diehl is an extremely fun, very overconfident bad guy. Joe Santos ('The Rockford Files') is solid as an investigating detective who's been trying to look out for the irresponsible Johnny for years. A couple of familiar faces have small roles: Mark Beltzman ("Billy Madison"), Larry Brandenburg ("The Shawshank Redemption"), Matt Doherty (the "Mighty Ducks" movies), Richard Hamilton ("Men in Black"), Salli Richardson-Whitfield ("Black Dynamite"), and Irma P. Hall ("A Family Thing"). Keep your eyes peeled for Bernie Mac ("Bad Santa") as a club doorman.
One undeniable, hilarious highlight: Gordon McClure as "The Reverend Pimp Daddy", an utter shambles of a defense attorney. And an actress named Almayvonne is priceless as a gal who ends up with designs on both Johnny and Seymour.
Basically, it's the cast that makes this one worth seeing.
Seven out of 10.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesKadeem Hardison was the original choice to play Seymour Stewart. Damon Wayans revealed on The Arsenio Hall Show (1989) that his mother told him to cast his younger brother Marlon Wayans.
- PatzerWhen Johnny ( Damon Wayans ) takes the job memo off the locked bulletin board, you can see some spelling errors. The line "Positions Available" has a error. The word is spelled "Availble". The 2nd error is under the "Building Engineer" position. The word maintenance is misspelled. It is spelled "Maintaince". The 3rd and final one is under the "Data Processing" title."Programing" should have 2 "M's". After all the movie was done before spell check was invented.
- Zitate
Seymour Stewart: What do you want with a job that ain't nothing but work.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Gefangen in der Traumfabrik (1995)
- SoundtracksMoney Can't Buy You Love
Written by Jimmy Jam (as James Harris III) and Terry Lewis
Rap written and performed by Ralph E. Tresvant (as Ralph Tresvant)
Produced by Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis
Performed by Ralph E. Tresvant (as Ralph Tresvant)
Courtesy of MCA Records
Top-Auswahl
- How long is Mo' Money?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box Office
- Budget
- 10.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 40.227.006 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 12.385.415 $
- 26. Juli 1992
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 40.227.006 $