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The Alibi

  • 2006
  • R
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
6.5K
YOUR RATING
Rebecca Romijn and Steve Coogan in The Alibi (2006)
ComedyDramaRomance

A man who runs an alibi service for adulterous husbands gets into a jam with a new client. In trying to remedy the situation, he must rely on an alluring woman who gets his heart racing.A man who runs an alibi service for adulterous husbands gets into a jam with a new client. In trying to remedy the situation, he must rely on an alluring woman who gets his heart racing.A man who runs an alibi service for adulterous husbands gets into a jam with a new client. In trying to remedy the situation, he must rely on an alluring woman who gets his heart racing.

  • Directors
    • Matt Checkowski
    • Kurt Mattila
  • Writer
    • Noah Hawley
  • Stars
    • Jerry O'Connell
    • Jon Polito
    • Deborah Kara Unger
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    6.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Matt Checkowski
      • Kurt Mattila
    • Writer
      • Noah Hawley
    • Stars
      • Jerry O'Connell
      • Jon Polito
      • Deborah Kara Unger
    • 25User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Lies and Alibis
    Trailer 2:13
    Lies and Alibis

    Photos13

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    Top cast41

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    Jerry O'Connell
    Jerry O'Connell
    • Businessman
    Jon Polito
    Jon Polito
    • Jimmy the Photographer
    Deborah Kara Unger
    Deborah Kara Unger
    • Dorothy
    Steve Coogan
    Steve Coogan
    • Ray Elliott
    Ken Kerman
    • Vic
    Aimee Garcia
    Aimee Garcia
    • Operator #1
    Yasmine Delawari
    Yasmine Delawari
    • Operator #2
    Mary Pat Gleason
    Mary Pat Gleason
    • Operator #3
    Rebecca Romijn
    Rebecca Romijn
    • Lola
    Henry Rollins
    Henry Rollins
    • Putty
    Sergio Bruna
    Sergio Bruna
    • Waiter - Italian Restaurant
    Selma Blair
    Selma Blair
    • Adelle
    Jim Cody Williams
    Jim Cody Williams
    • BoBo
    Sam Elliott
    Sam Elliott
    • The Mormon
    James Brolin
    James Brolin
    • Robert Hatch
    Sharon Lawrence
    Sharon Lawrence
    • Judith Hatch
    John Leguizamo
    John Leguizamo
    • Hannibal
    James Marsden
    James Marsden
    • Wendell Hatch
    • Directors
      • Matt Checkowski
      • Kurt Mattila
    • Writer
      • Noah Hawley
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    6.36.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7dima-12

    This is how I imagine Frank Tashlin does neo-noir

    THE ALIBI is a smooth, elegant, neo-noir expertly shot by guys who did pre-cog scenes in MINORITY REPORT. It is very reminiscent of Frank Tashlin's work. Tashlin was the Warner Bros. cartoonist who ended up doing vehicles for Jerry Lewis and Doris Day. While his cartoons were strongly influenced by live action cinema, his live action features had a distinctive cartoonish element.

    Te same can be said for THE ALIBI which works as a very tightly knit yarn and feels as precise as a special effects sequence. This precision makes the film flow smoothly and the directors deliver Hollywood entertainment at its best.

    The cast is top-notch and the attached talent is the major asset of this production.

    The only major shortcoming of this feature is the complete absence of emotions and character depth. The only character fully developed is the main character and it is a shame because other characters are too flat so the story fails to emotionally resonate. The screenplay feels like the first draft and it seems that it was just a couple rewrites away from being fully developed.

    This is why THE ALIBI is just a well made programmer while it seems that deep inside it possessed a much bigger potential.
    7blanche-2

    clever and entertaining

    "Lies & Alibis" is a 2006 film starring Steve Coogan, Rebecca Romijn, James Brolin, Sam Elliott, James Marsden, and John Leguizamo.

    Steve Coogan plays Ray Elliot, whose former partner Jack has a $5 million contract on his life, so everybody wants to find him. Elliot runs a risk management firm on the face of it. In reality it is probably based on the real-life Alibi Network - like the real thing, Elliot's company helps wayward husbands cheat by giving them alibis, intercepting calls to the hotel where they're supposed to be staying, etc.

    There are several subplots going on but the main one is that Ray helps out a client's (Brolin) son Wendell (Marsden) by allowing him to cheat on his fiancé. Wendell is supposed to be at a conference in San Francisco; instead, with faked identity showing he is Ray Elliot, he's living in up in Santa Barbara with a hot woman. Ray, as Wendall, is in San Francisco. Unfortunately, Wendell's girl is into kinky sex and, during one session, winds up dead. The cops want to speak to Ray.

    I found this a funny, clever film, with the beautiful Romijn playing a new and valuable assistant of Ray's, Sam Elliot as a hit man with several wives who is after Ray's old partner, and James Brolin as a cheating husband. Leguizamo is a riot as the dead woman's boyfriend.

    Lots of twists. This makes a good rental.
    Chrysanthepop

    A Decent Neo-Noir-Type Comedy Thriller

    'The Alibi' provides enough twists and turns to make it likable and somewhat enjoyable. However, I thought it could have used a little more slickness which could have made it a real film-watching treat. Director duo Matt Checkowski and Kurt Mattila do a decent job but at times the pace really slows down and then suddenly picks up at a drastic level where it even reaches a point that the leaves the viewer confused concerning certain plot points. But just bear with it as there is some good writing, the main plot is unusual and has a neo-noir feel to it and in the end it feels entertaining. The huge impressive ensemble cast that comprises of an unusual combination of actors is fun to watch. Steve Coogan at times looks uncomfortable in his part but does an adequate job overall. Rebecca Romijn is smoking hot and easily pulls off the smart babe. Selma Blair pulls off the cute seductress. James Brolin, Sam Elliot and James Marsden are fun to watch. Deborah Kara Unger and John Leguizamo make their presence felt in briefer roles. Perhaps some of the characters could have used more development which would have given the actors more scope to bring them out. The humour is very situational and a few of the comedy are dry and just fail to trigger laughter. The film itself is very short. The makers wanted to give it a 60's feel but at the same time apply that to todays world and I think it fell somewhere in between. As I said earlier, 'The Alibi' could have done with more slickness and style, used more character development, and more comedy but overall it isn't a bad film and can be quite enjoyable on a windy day.
    8gradyharp

    "The one thing I never do is to provide alibis to cover crime"

    So states the risk management owner of a service that creates 'cover lies' for adulterous affairs. And up to a point that statement makes Ray Elliott (Steve Coogan) seem like an honest if distorted service provider, covering the tracks with high technology so that cheating husbands can have affairs without the danger of their wives' discovery.

    Smartly written by Noah Hawley and directed with style by Matt Checkowski and Kurt Mattila, LIES & ALIBIS delivers a new twist to suspense films laced with comedy yet filled with tension, murder, and all manner of underground derring-do. Ray Elliott is a smooth talker who manages to discreetly provide protection for business men who cheat on their wives using photographers to set up situations, falsifying credit cards and names and hotel room reservations, staging gifts for suspicious wives to stave off their concerns, etc. All proceeds well until Ray's primary client Robert Hatch (James Brolin) hires Ray to cover his son Wendell's (James Marsden) Santa Barbara bed and breakfast, pre-wedding escapade with a S&M girlfriend of one Hannibal (John Leguizamo) - a spree that carries out a bit too far in that the girl is dead by Wendell's inadvertent orders during the 'game'. Sam takes on the voluptuous Lola (Rebecca Romijn) as his new assistant and discovers she is as brainy as she is beautiful. He employs her to help his cover of the murder (Ray had switched IDs with Wendell in a planned alibi cover for the fling), breaking his own rules, and Lola ends up saving the day through a manner of crosses and double crosses that fling off the screen so fast that it takes powerful concentration to keep the story progress straight - just the way coordinated crime behaves! The manner in which this spree takes place involves a large cast including Jon Polito, Deborah Kara Unger, Selma Blair, Sam Elliott and a fine crew of bit players. Steve Coogan and Rebecca Romijn make the whole caper tick like a time bomb, giving the film elegance and just the right balance of noir and romance. The rapid-fire cinematography is by Enrique Chediak and the always dependable Alexandre Desplat provides the musical score (with a heavy nod to Offenbach's Barcarolle from 'Tales of Hoffman'). For an evening of fast-paced intrigue, romance, tension, and creative writing and acting, LIES & ALIBIS is a sure bet. Grady Harp
    7DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: The Alibi

    A dream service for those adulterous men and women out there. A service which takes your calls, handles all potentially tense situations of private eyes and that suspecting spouse, essentially taking care of you on the side while you bang. Sounds good? I think so too, at least in a business sense.

    Ray Elliot (Steve Coogan) runs such a service. It's a money spinner, based on statistics that one in 4 men stray, and one in 10 women cheat. He advertises his risk management career through word of mouth, and takes pride in his job in bailing clients out of seemingly explosive marital situations. The pre-requisites? A calm cool mind that can spin out stories and tell them with a straight face.

    Lola Davis (the hot Rebecca Romijn) is his new management recruit, and without much orientation, plunges into the job head on. Initially you might think the movie will develop on the above company politics scenario, and have the two leads get involved with each other romantically. But no, before you can get to see the next fling, the movie heads on to classic crime noir territory.

    On his last field job, Ray's client accidentally kills his mistress in a bout of S&M, and it's up to Ray to clear the mess up, violating one of his principles that his company doesn't provide alibis for crime. However his reputation and integrity is on the line, and he has no choice but to cover it all up.

    And you'll probably wince at the amount of challenges Ray goes through in having this done, and having a price put out on his head. It's essentially one heck of a caper, as we witness how Ray Elliot schemes and plot to get his rear out of situations that's seemingly impossible, and incredibly lucky to get out of. It's full of crossings and double-crossings, and while you might be lost at certain plot points, just hang in there as all will converge for the finale, leaving you with a smirk, quite satisfied with the outcome.

    What's fun in this movie is the huge ensemble cast that play the many characters on screen. Another X-Men franchise regular, James Marsden (Cyclops) is here as the inept himbo Wendell Hatch, Ray Elliot's last client, and we have a myriad of characters like hit men, gangsters, cops, an unsatisfied wife, etc from a cast of Selma Blair, James Brolin, Sam Elliot, Jaime King, John Leguizamo, Deborah Kara Unger, and the likes.

    One thing's for sure, having a huge network of those whom you have deposited emotional or material help with, certainly will help bucket-loads when the time comes. If you're up for a caper, then I'd recommend The Alibi, for its fun.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This film's screenplay was the very first produced script writer-director Noah Hawley has ever written.
    • Goofs
      When Ray clandestinely takes a photograph of Detective Bryce with his cell phone when she is leaving on the elevator, the resulting photograph does not match the position she was standing. The photograph has her facing slightly to her left, when her actual position was facing slightly to her right.
    • Quotes

      The Mormon: Are you married?

      Ray Elliott: No. No. I guess I just haven't met the right women.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Dinner for Five: Episode #4.7 (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Belle nuit, o nuit d'amour
      from "Tales of Hoffman"

      Written by Jacques Offenbach

      Performed by Orchestr Národního divadla v Praze (as The Prague National Theatre Orchestra) featuring Milada Subrtová

      Courtesy of 5 Alarm Music & Promusic, Inc.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 12, 2006 (South Korea)
    • Countries of origin
      • Netherlands
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Lies & Alibis
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Alibi
      • Endgame Entertainment
      • Summit Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $138,704
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 30 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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