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Panic sur Florida Beach

Original title: Matinee
  • 1993
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
13K
YOUR RATING
John Goodman in Panic sur Florida Beach (1993)
text os
Play trailer1:53
3 Videos
99+ Photos
ParodyQuirky ComedyComedyDrama

The teenage son of a navy sailor newly stationed in Key West gets some excitement with his friends when a small-time film producer comes to town to premiere a kitschy horror film during the ... Read allThe teenage son of a navy sailor newly stationed in Key West gets some excitement with his friends when a small-time film producer comes to town to premiere a kitschy horror film during the Cuban Missile Crisis.The teenage son of a navy sailor newly stationed in Key West gets some excitement with his friends when a small-time film producer comes to town to premiere a kitschy horror film during the Cuban Missile Crisis.

  • Director
    • Joe Dante
  • Writers
    • Charles S. Haas
    • Jerico Stone
  • Stars
    • John Goodman
    • Cathy Moriarty
    • Simon Fenton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    13K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joe Dante
    • Writers
      • Charles S. Haas
      • Jerico Stone
    • Stars
      • John Goodman
      • Cathy Moriarty
      • Simon Fenton
    • 92User reviews
    • 85Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos3

    Matinee
    Trailer 1:53
    Matinee
    Matinee
    Trailer 0:31
    Matinee
    Matinee
    Trailer 0:31
    Matinee
    Matinee: Going Nowhere
    Clip 2:20
    Matinee: Going Nowhere

    Photos187

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    Top cast74

    Edit
    John Goodman
    John Goodman
    • Lawrence Woolsey
    Cathy Moriarty
    Cathy Moriarty
    • Ruth Corday…
    Simon Fenton
    Simon Fenton
    • Gene Loomis
    Omri Katz
    Omri Katz
    • Stan
    Lisa Jakub
    Lisa Jakub
    • Sandra
    Kellie Martin
    Kellie Martin
    • Sherry
    Jesse Lee Soffer
    Jesse Lee Soffer
    • Dennis Loomis
    • (as Jesse Lee)
    Lucinda Jenney
    Lucinda Jenney
    • Anne Loomis
    James Villemaire
    James Villemaire
    • Harvey Starkweather
    Robert Picardo
    Robert Picardo
    • Howard - Theater Manager
    Jesse White
    Jesse White
    • Mr. Spector
    Dick Miller
    Dick Miller
    • Herb Denning
    John Sayles
    John Sayles
    • Bob
    David Clennon
    David Clennon
    • Jack - Sandra's Father
    Lucy Butler
    Lucy Butler
    • Rhonda - Sandra's Mother
    Georgie Cranford
    • Dwight - Sherry's Brother
    Nick Bronson
    • Andy
    Cory Barlog
    Cory Barlog
    • Stan's Friend
    • Director
      • Joe Dante
    • Writers
      • Charles S. Haas
      • Jerico Stone
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews92

    6.913.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8a-j-zak

    An under-rated gem

    One of those films that deserved to reach a huge audience but somehow slipped away, Joe Dante's affectionate homage to creature features and B-movie king William Castle is a joy from start to finish. This is due to both Dante's direction - and obvious love of the script - and John Goodman's delightful performance (what was he doing in crap like "Coyote Ugly?"). Even the movie-within-a-movie - "Mant!" ("half man, half ant - all terror!") is fun. The only downside is that this rarely turns up on TV and hasn't been released on DVD in the UK. A scratchy vhs is better than nothing I suppose...
    8Coventry

    Half Man ... Half Ant ... All Terror! Joe Dante's simply delicious B-movie tribute!

    This isn't such a very well known film (at least I never heard of it before I watched it) and actually that is a god-awful shame, as "Matinee" is a joyously vivid, versatile and refreshingly imaginative little comedy. "Matinee" is director Joe Dante's ultimate tribute to typically 50's Sci-Fi B-movies and massively promoted gimmick-laden low-budget flicks; particularly the repertoire of the legendary William Castle. In one of his most glorious roles to date, John Goodman depicts the unscrupulous and sleazy horror movie producer Lawrence Woolsey, who is practically the reincarnation of William Castle, what with his sly and shameless salesmanship techniques and continuous wide-mouthed smile. At the highpoint of the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, Woolsey jaunts out to Key West – where the Navy and population hectically prepares for a bomb attack – in order to proudly present his newest and supposedly most shocking motion picture named "Mant". "Mant" is a silly shock feature about a man slowly mutating into a gigantic ant after being exposed to nuclear radiation, and for the big premiere Woolsey stuffed the film theater with horrid decorations and gimmicks to raise extra fear in the audience. With the threat of actual bombing attack going on outside the theater, Woolsey bumps into a lot of protest and resistance from the adult population in Key West, but luckily the younger and horror-crazed generation are wildly enthusiast about the upcoming matinée preview. With "Matinee", the still incredibly underrated director Joe Dante delivered another delicious and charming movie. The extended bits and clips from the fictional movie "Mant" masterfully capture the essence of 1950's B-movie cinema, with grotesque ideas and effects, cheesy nonsensical dialogs and wooden acting performances. The real William Castle actually never made such a type of monster movie, but the gimmicks and promotional stunts (like buzzers underneath the seats and guys in rubber suits running around) are right up his delightful alley! But "Matinee" is a terrifically clever movie on other levels as well. Apart from a wonderful homage to horror cinema, it also contains an admirable "coming of age" sub plot and it effectively parodies the mass hysteria going on around the time of the Cold War. Whilst the adult population of Key West practices their duck & cover bomb alarms and prepare their shelters, the teenagers are more concerned about finding a date to go see "Mant" on Saturday. The acting performances are fantastic (like his monster "Mant", John Goodman himself is larger than life!), the decors and atmosphere of the early 60's are marvelously re-enacted and – in good old Joe Dante tradition – there are multiple cameos of horror veterans, like Dick Miller, Kevin McCarthy and Robert Cornthwaite. This is truly a film meant for genuine horror movie buffs, but nevertheless a stupendously enjoyable comedy for all type of audiences.
    7AlsExGal

    Tribute to those old horror films of the 50's and 60's

    I felt that the advertising for this movie was somewhat misleading. I expected to see a film about John Goodman portraying a loose characterization of showman William Castle. Instead, the main focus of the film is a young boy, Gene Loomis, whose father is a soldier who is dispatched to active duty during the Cuban missile crisis, which is the time period in which this film is set. You have your typical coming-of-age themes revolving around Gene and his friends as they discover their own emerging adolescence, and this consists largely of tired material that has been done to death.

    Somewhat in the background we have John Goodman as old-fashioned showman Lawrence Woolsey, a vaudevillian stuck in the age of cinema who wants to put the show back in picture shows. He is tied into the film because Gene enjoys Woolsey's showmanship as a way to forget about the world around him which seems to be on the brink of self-destruction. Woolsey pulls such stunts as having his girlfriend (Cathy Moriarty) dress a a nurse and ask patrons to sign a waiver releasing Goodman's character from liability in case they die of fright during the movie. This is based on a similar stunt by William Castle and his movie "Macabre". Woolsey also wires the seats to produce a mild electric shock during a key moment in a film, which he labels "Atomo-Vision." That antic is based on what William Castle did during the showing of "The Tingler". Then he rigs still another device to shake things up as buildings on the screen are tumbling and calls it "Rumble-Rama." Again, these are all very similar to the showman-like stunts of William Castle during the 50's and 60's.

    The best part of the movie is when Woolsey comes up with an atomic-age monster movie entitled "Mant" that is a composite of cheesy 50's horror films such as "The Fly," and "Them!". "Mant" is about a mutant that is half-man and half-ant and is a total riot. Woolsey's schlock merchant displays just the right mix of con-man materialism and childlike glee at his own bogus movie magic. It's too bad that Goodman's character and his showmanship weren't the main focus of the movie - Goodman was truly born to play the part of Lawrence Woolsey.

    Watching this movie really made me happy that some of William Castle's films have finally been coming out on DVD in the last couple of years, through both traditional DVD releases and through the Warner Archive manufacture on demand program. At any rate, enjoy.
    sawyertom

    A Very Good Parody and Dedication of Great B Movie Memories

    I had just recently watched Matinee for the first time in a few years. I forgot how much fun and how very funny a film it was. Having grown up watching some of William Castle's and Roger Corman's hokey but very entertaining early horror films it was like a stroll down memory lane on my Saturday's. Goodman captured the essence of a movie showman who always had or wanted to have a gimmick to go with his B movie pictures. Cathy Moriarty is excellent as his favorite leading lady. I must be showing my age because I still remember the duck and cover and other little things associated with everyday life and times during the late 1950's and early 1960's that were in the movie. The movie was entertaining and a very nice parody, if not dedication to the men who made B movies as part of our culture. I have to believe this dedication to men like Corman and Castle would have to be a bit of a tongue in cheek parody for it to be a very sincere dedication. The movie does an excellent job of bring back the life and times and the performances as pretty good. Aaaahhhh the memories. The cold war and much simpler times and classic B movies. It don't get any better than this.
    lar3ry-imdb

    Memorable and funny

    This movie explores the marketing and the premier of a B-movie horror flick by a virtual one-man studio (remember American International?) in, of all places Key West during the Cuban Missile Crisis.

    I think this was intended to be a vehicle for John Goodman as the B-movie "impresario" Lawrence Woolsey (great casting!), with Cathy Moriarty also excellently cast as the jaded B-movie starlet and Woolsey's companion. Simon Fenton plays a young, wide-eyed, horror movie addict who is also a military kid, whose father has just been assigned to the naval blockade around Cuba. The cast also includes Dick Miller from the Gremlin series, and many other B-movies since the 1950's including the original Shop of Horrors.

    Matinee is quirky, and the "movie within a movie," called "Mant" (half man, half ant), is about a silly accidental "mutation" of a man into a rather large insect The movie contains a good sampling of all the plot devices (on screen and off screen) used in these sorts of movies. The now-hilarious atomic horrors depicted in "Mant" are juxtaposed against the real-life horrors of the nuclear missile crisis, with interesting effect.

    Matinee also offers a lot of not-so-subtle counterpoints between the atmosphere and common wisdom of the era (anybody remember Civil Defense drills? Bomb shelters? The "four" basic food groups?), and its stark comparison to what we know/think today. When this movie was made, the cold war was just over, and a look back to the pervasive feel throughout the 50's and 60's and its worrying about the "bomb" and anti-commie lingo makes the people of this era look supremely paranoid and silly, until one thinks about how even this has changed since the movie was made (think post 9-11: who's silly and paranoid now?).

    The movie is enjoyable on many levels, although I feel the comparisons between the 60's and "today" could have been made a bit more subtle. As a counterpoint, my wife, who was never a fan of the horror movie genre, dislikes this movie--she also disliked "Ed Wood" for the same reason.

    All in all, it's a wonderful movie that I'm glad to have in my VHS collection.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      For "Mant", the movie-within-the-movie, Joe Dante cast actors who had appeared in 1950s-era science fiction movies. These included Kevin McCarthy, Robert Cornthwaite, and William Schallert.
    • Goofs
      The Aurora model kit of "The Mummy" seen in Gene and Dennis' room was manufactured in 1963, one year after the movie takes place.
    • Quotes

      Gene Loomis: Y'know, it's hard to believe you're a grown-up.

      Ruth Corday: No kidding.

      Lawrence Woolsey: You think grown-ups know what they're doing? That's just a hustle, kid. Grown-ups are making it up as they go along, just like you. You remember that, and you'll do fine.

    • Crazy credits
      After the credits are complete, there is a quick snippet from "MANT" with the Cathy Moriarty character pining, "Oh, Bill".
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Matinee/Alive/Body of Evidence/Sniper (1993)
    • Soundtracks
      The Lion Sleeps Tonight
      Written by Hugo Peretti, Albert Stanton, George David Weiss & Luigi Creatore

      (based on a song by Solomon Linda and Paul Campbell)

      Performed by The Tokens

      Courtesy of the RCA Records label of BMG Music

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 28, 1993 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Matinee
    • Filming locations
      • Key West, Florida Keys, Florida, USA
    • Production companies
      • Universal Pictures
      • Renfield Productions
      • Falcon Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $13,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $9,532,895
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $3,601,015
      • Jan 31, 1993
    • Gross worldwide
      • $9,532,895
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 39 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby SR
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1(original & negative ratio)

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