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IMDbPro

Checking Out

  • 1988
  • R
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
533
YOUR RATING
Jeff Daniels in Checking Out (1988)
Trailer for Checking Out
Play trailer1:34
1 Video
17 Photos
Comedy

A successful family man who works for an airline becomes consumed by fear of death after his colleague and best friend dies in front of him from a heart attack while telling the setup for th... Read allA successful family man who works for an airline becomes consumed by fear of death after his colleague and best friend dies in front of him from a heart attack while telling the setup for the joke: "Why don't Italians like barbecues?"A successful family man who works for an airline becomes consumed by fear of death after his colleague and best friend dies in front of him from a heart attack while telling the setup for the joke: "Why don't Italians like barbecues?"

  • Director
    • David Leland
  • Writer
    • Joe Eszterhas
  • Stars
    • Jeff Daniels
    • Melanie Mayron
    • Michael Tucker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    533
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Leland
    • Writer
      • Joe Eszterhas
    • Stars
      • Jeff Daniels
      • Melanie Mayron
      • Michael Tucker
    • 9User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Checking Out
    Trailer 1:34
    Checking Out

    Photos17

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Jeff Daniels
    Jeff Daniels
    • Ray Macklin
    Melanie Mayron
    Melanie Mayron
    • Jenny Macklin
    Michael Tucker
    Michael Tucker
    • Harry Lardner
    Kathleen York
    Kathleen York
    • Diana
    Ann Magnuson
    Ann Magnuson
    • Connie Hagen
    Allan Havey
    Allan Havey
    • Pat Hagen
    Jo Harvey Allen
    Jo Harvey Allen
    • Barbara
    Ian Wolfe
    Ian Wolfe
    • Mr. D'Amato
    Billy Beck
    Billy Beck
    • Father Carmody
    Trudy Dochterman
    • Val
    • (as Trudi Dochtermann)
    John Durbin
    John Durbin
    • Spencer Gillinger
    Adelle Lutz
    Adelle Lutz
    • Dr. Helmsley
    Felton Perry
    Felton Perry
    • Dr. Duffin
    Allan Rich
    Allan Rich
    • Dr. Haskell
    Danton Stone
    Danton Stone
    • Dr. Wolfe
    Stephen Tobolowsky
    Stephen Tobolowsky
    • Pharmacist
    Matthew Hurley
    • Joey Macklin
    Courtney Brooke Sonne
    • Mo Macklin
    • (as Courtney Sonne)
    • Director
      • David Leland
    • Writer
      • Joe Eszterhas
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    4.7533
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7johnnyx_xcat

    One terrific scene

    This movie had one of the most funny moments I have ever seen. I have rarely laughed so hard. It was purely situational and lacked a punchline. It takes place when Daniels meets that fellow hypochondriac that is a multi-millionaire. He places so much faith in this guy and his so called health secrets. The fact is the rich health nut is a total hypocrite. He's a complete slob as depicted when he throws down his food wrappers. For a guy so concerned with his own health he ruins the very environment with which he occupies. The culmination of this reality hits Daniles like a mack truck when he sneaks into the limo of the "afluent health guru"-ha ha. The place is an utter pig sty. The limo is filled with rotting food and trash. Even funnier is all the books and health gear that is rat packed into this limo. It is at this moment that Daniels realizes he has been duped by his own madness. He realizes his misplaced faith in such a moron. Giddy with excitement from his moment of epiphany he starts laughing hysterically and starts trashing the contents of the limo. It's so funny because moments ago he thought this guy was all put together. Quite literally he can throw everything and anything around and this health nut wouldn't know the difference.

    Other than that the movie is just OK. If that scene fails to impress you so be it.
    9lefko-2

    One of my most favorite movies

    There are many many scenes in this movie that are just hilarious. The characters are just great. From this movie I became an Alex Havey fan, as well as the guy who sells him the medical equipment. Whenever I see him in a movie now I always think back to the great scene in this movie when father and son are bonding over hypochondria.

    My favorite scene is right in the beginning when Melonie Mayron says "We won't do it again," to the security guards after they set off their house alarm. The movie is over the top, but it just keeps coming, The funny thing about the no punchlines comment mentioned above is that the whole movie the Jeff Daniels character is trying to find out the punchline of the joke his friend the Alex Havey character was telling when he dies. The movie is riddled with stupid punchlines.

    You also may want to know that the backers of this movie include David Byrne and George Harrison.

    I have to say that this is the first time I reviewed a movie here. This is the one that made me want to do it.
    9Binkles

    A Great Movie

    I reckon this is a great movie! Jeff Daniels is so good in it! I think the jokes are funny! him being a Hypocondriact is funny... but also as you watch you can see how hurt he is inside and you feel sorry for him. Jeff looks quite cute in this. It's got a bit of Monty python style humour in it. which is very good and enjoyable. Awesome soundtrack! containing The Traveling Wilburys and Roy Orbison, etc. and was even made by George Harrison's company "Handmade films" This movie makes you appreciate the fact that you have good health. and that you shouldn't spend your life worrying about things, when you could be living you life to the fullest. A great movie indeed! :)
    Sortyxt

    Not Funny

    Although many "comedies" turn out to not be so funny, this one never even tries! There are no jokes or humorous situations to be found anywhere in this film. If I didn't know better I'd say Checking Out was written as a drama then re-edited into a comedy.

    This movie really could have been funny if it had been better written.
    3StevePulaski

    Leave against medical advice

    When a film's sole positive rating on Rotten Tomatoes states little other praise outside of the film being "constantly watchable," you know you have something on your hands. David Leland's Checking Out is a tiresome drag of a film, one with little comedy but a whole lot of strange, over-the-top circumstances that result in little else besides mounting annoyance and tedium. Unless you ever wanted to see the most annoying party-guest or your most insufferable acquaintance personified in film, there is little here for you to see.

    The film stars Jeff Daniels as Ray Macklin, who always seemingly been obsessed with his own mortality, believing at times he'll never die and continue to live on in life. What a desirable bout of optimism this guy has. Anyway, when his close friend suddenly drops dead of a heart attack at a friendly barbecue, Ray is certain that every ache, pain, or feeling of discomfort that he experiences from there on out is a lethal sign that his demise is coming. Ray becomes an oppressive hypochondriac, fretting over small little instances and alienating everyone around him.

    Does this sound like the kind of person you want to watch for ninety-one minutes? Would you want to live with this very same person? If you said no, then why would you want to endure a film with him in it? It is worth noting that Checking Out did have some potential for observations on existential and mortality dilemmas, but found ways to squander them in unfortunately lame attempts to brew humor out of one of the most irritating characters in recent memory. Daniels can be very funny, and when put alongside somebody (most notably Jim Carrey in Dumb and Dumber), uses verbal banter and conversational wit to even out some of the less funny physical/sight gags thrown in the mix. With Checking Out, there's no verbal banter nor conversational wit. There's simply situational humor that is forgotten as quickly as it was introduced.

    Consider the scene where Ray wakes up, bathed in sweat and is so paranoid about dying he leaps out the window on to his family station wagon. This activates a blaring car alarm and causes the attention of his neighbors, who have to hear him panic and scream about him in the process of dying. Spare me, spare him, spare us.

    The running gag in Checking Out is that Ray's friend, whose death started all this madness, died in the middle of telling a joke, with the punchline remaining a mystery. Ray's friend asks Ray and a crowded group of people, "why don't Italians like barbeques," before croaking on the spot. Ray can't get this out of his head, and resorts to asking people and reading several Italian joke books in order to find the punchline to this rather stale joke, the way I see it. If anything, Checking Out provides a solid case study on how difficult it was to obtain information, such as punchlines, before the creation and the rise of the internet. Things like that only help an old movie the more they age.

    Checking Out, in short, is tedious and shockingly unfunny, given its talented director David Leland and its more-than-capable leading man Jeff Daniels. With Blu-Ray commanding more and more of the market for home media, Checking Out among other comedies from yesteryear such as Used Cars and Wild at Heart, have been getting releases on the platform in order to find ways to resurface back in the public or simply stay up-to-date with the changing home media platforms. Even with the most basic justification for releasing old, forgotten films on Blu-Ray, Checking Out is lucky it got its treatment.

    Starring: Jeff Daniels, Melanie Mayron, and Michael Tucker. Directed by: David Leland.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Before the film was shot, director David Leland assured Joe Eszterhas that he would not change Eszterhas' script in any way. When Eszterhas saw a rough cut of the film, he was angry to discover that new subplots and characters not in the original script had been introduced. Eszterhas initially demanded that his name be taken off the film, but when Leland removed most of what Eszterhas was objecting to, the screenwriter allowed his name to be put back on.
    • Quotes

      Pat Hagen: I feel great! Like a jackrabbit.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: See You in the Morning/Disorganized Crime/Speed Zone/Checking Out/Little Vera (1989)
    • Soundtracks
      End of the Line
      Composed and Performed by The Traveling Wilburys

      Published by Ganga Publishing B.V.

      Courtesy of Warner Bros. Records Inc.

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Checking Out?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 2, 1989 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Handmade Films website
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Lebensmüde leben länger
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production company
      • HandMade Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $6,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $30,877
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $12,730
      • Apr 23, 1989
    • Gross worldwide
      • $30,877
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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