IMDb RATING
5.2/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
A trio of rum-runners during prohibition in the 1930s engage in a menage-a-trois after business hours.A trio of rum-runners during prohibition in the 1930s engage in a menage-a-trois after business hours.A trio of rum-runners during prohibition in the 1930s engage in a menage-a-trois after business hours.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
James Brodhead
- Telegraph Operator
- (as James E. Broadhead)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
Burt, Liza and Gene as a trio of rum runners during prohibition in the 1930's who have a menage-a-trois! Liza sings!
Favorite Line: "You ever get tired of having yourself around?" - Claire (Liza Minnelli) (to Kibby) (Gene Hackman)
Stanley Donen directed, he had a very hard time filming on the ocean, and the three main cast members all recall it being one of the hardest films they ever made.
The title refers to the name of the yacht they use to run rum, but I suppose it could apply to Claire who has two men in her life at once!
Another "flop" at the time, but I liked seeing these three interact together on screen, and the movie is good too. Nice to see Burt's frequent costars John Hillerman, Geoffrey Lewis and Robby Benson with him here again.
Favorite Line: "You ever get tired of having yourself around?" - Claire (Liza Minnelli) (to Kibby) (Gene Hackman)
Stanley Donen directed, he had a very hard time filming on the ocean, and the three main cast members all recall it being one of the hardest films they ever made.
The title refers to the name of the yacht they use to run rum, but I suppose it could apply to Claire who has two men in her life at once!
Another "flop" at the time, but I liked seeing these three interact together on screen, and the movie is good too. Nice to see Burt's frequent costars John Hillerman, Geoffrey Lewis and Robby Benson with him here again.
Interesting little comedy featuring 3 down on their luck folks who, during the depression, formed a coalition to run booze past the coast guard. Turns out the CG is the least of their woes as a psychotic rumrunner decides to take over the entire area and rub out any who stand in his path. Good shootout as a finale with a multitude of boats gunning it out in a Pacific cove. Good one.
Liza Minnelli plays such a selfish harpy in "Lucky Lady" that it's easy to see why this film won her no new admirers. Fans of 1972's "Cabaret" were already softened to love Minnelli no matter what, but here director Stanley Donen seems intent on making Liza's character Claire as brittle and abrasive as possible. The lumbering plot, about a trio of rum-runners in the 1930s who outsmart the competition and fall into an oddly casual three-way love affair, isn't worked out cohesively in terms of the narrative (and the overlapping scenes of raunch, comedy, and mobster melodrama eventually cause impatience and resentment). At first it's a bit shocking to see Liza in bed between Gene Hackman and Burt Reynolds, however the movie isn't all about after-hours fun under-the-sheets; Donen turns the third act into a violent extravaganza (with a slapstick bent), including boats blowing up, guns going off, and dead bodies everywhere. The picture walks a shaky line between nostalgia and bloodshed, with echoes of "Bonnie & Clyde"'s jangly tone. Little of it jells, though the attempt is certainly a curious one. **1/2 from ****
I saw this many moons ago as a kid on a late night show fell in love with it then and still love it now.
It is a strange mix with some great comedy and then some downright mean moments of violence, but that was one of the films nice little quirks.
Minelli's Fish Fart line has stuck with me for years, and recently the film made it to cable where I was able to get a copy.
With all the dross being rereleased onto DVD it's well overdue a release.
One of those guilty little pleasures we all have.
It is a strange mix with some great comedy and then some downright mean moments of violence, but that was one of the films nice little quirks.
Minelli's Fish Fart line has stuck with me for years, and recently the film made it to cable where I was able to get a copy.
With all the dross being rereleased onto DVD it's well overdue a release.
One of those guilty little pleasures we all have.
I've always had a soft spot for this overly maligned production, the "Ishtar" of its day. It's an oft-kilter mix, to be sure, with some great low comedy bits jarringly interrupted by graphic violence. But it's always fun, and the star trio (especially Reynolds, in a very overlooked performance) seem to be having a ball. Liza Minnelli's production number, "Get While The Gettin' Is Good", is absolutely terrific; she is at her wittiest. Stanley Donen just a few years ago proclaimed he was proud of "Lucky Lady", and I'm hoping eventually this movie will find some type of audience other than Liza Minnelli completists. Hey, Fox, put it on video!
Did you know
- TriviaReportedly, Gene Hackman's salary for this movie has been estimated at being between 1.25 and 1.5 million dollars. According to Mark Litwak's 1986 book, "Reel Power: The Struggle for Influence and Success in the New Hollywood", talent agent Sue Mengers said that "it was almost obscene for him not to do the film" with the amount of money he was being offered.
- Alternate versionsThe UK DVD is cut by 11 secs to edit a cockfight scene.
- ConnectionsFeatured in TUGS: A Bigg Retrospective (2023)
- How long is Lucky Lady?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $13,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $24,441,725
- Gross worldwide
- $24,441,725
- Runtime1 hour 58 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Les aventuriers du Lucky Lady (1975) officially released in India in English?
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