The story of two guys and two girls who meet and fall in love in an amusement park on the last day of summer. All the while outwitting three moronic would-be jewel thieves.The story of two guys and two girls who meet and fall in love in an amusement park on the last day of summer. All the while outwitting three moronic would-be jewel thieves.The story of two guys and two girls who meet and fall in love in an amusement park on the last day of summer. All the while outwitting three moronic would-be jewel thieves.
Beverly Murray
- Debbie's Mother
- (as Eve Napier)
Jérôme Tiberghien
- David's Father
- (as Jerome Tiberghien)
Suzanne DeLaurentiis
- Cindy
- (as Suzanne De Laurentis)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaDebbie is 16 years old.
- GoofsIn several scenes Carolyn Dunn's hair changes from spiked to frizzy and then back to spiked.
- Crazy creditsThis can be seen as the stunt credits are rolling: Stunt Baby Zoe Partheniou
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Creeps (1997)
- SoundtracksMannish Boy
(onscreen as "Manish Boy")
by Melvin London (as Melvyn London), Bo Diddley (as Ellas McDaniel) and Muddy Waters (as McKinley Morganfield)
Performed by Muddy Waters
Courtesy of Columbia Records
Featured review
The events of "Breaking All The Rules" almost all take place at a place called Fun Park, but there is absolutely no fun to be found in this dismal Canadian comedy. I was able to forgive the movie for its unanswered questions like why a valuable gem is being exhibited in a third rate amusement park, but not for much else. There are plenty of attempts at humor, and while some are *almost* funny (such as the scene taking place in the bus), in the end *none* of the attempts at humor actually work. The cast seems to know they are in an utter bomb, because their performances come across as labored and with no sense of having any fun. In fact, the director seems to be feeling the same way as his poor actors, because the energy level is woefully low and there is absolutely no feeling of enthusiasm or passion. The icing on the cake is the cheap feeling of the entire enterprise, from the shabby production values to the grating songs on the soundtrack. The Canadian government actually provided funding for this movie, and while I normally like it when the government takes a break from funding boring and pretentious art films as it usually does for something more commercial, in the end this so-called commercial film is almost as tough to sit through as those painful art films.
- How long is Breaking All the Rules?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $2,032,000 (estimated)
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was Breaking All the Rules (1985) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer