Free Enterprise (film)

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Free Enterprise
Directed by Robert Meyer Burnett
Produced by Mark A. Altman
Dan Bates
Allan Kaufman
Written by Mark A. Altman
Robert Meyer Burnett
Starring Eric McCormack
Rafer Weigel
Audie England
William Shatner
Phil LaMarr
Music by Scott Spock
Distributed by Anchor Bay Entertainment
Release date(s) April 4, 1997
Running time 113 min.
121 min. (extended version)
Language English
IMDb profile

Free Enterprise is a 1998 comedy/romance movie featuring William Shatner, directed by Robert Meyer Burnett and written by Mark A. Altman and Robert Meyer Burnett. The film deals with the mid-life crises of its two main protagonists, Mark and Robert, fictionalized versions of the film's director and producer/writer played by Eric McCormack (of Will & Grace fame) and Rafer Wiegel. The two friends struggle with adult career and relationship problems, all the while defiantly clinging to the geeky science fiction pop culture of their youth and seeking advice from their greatest hero, William Shatner.

Shatner plays a campy caricature of himself as he works on a one-man musical version of Julius Caesar in hopes of finally being taken seriously as an artist. Hip-hop artist "The Rated R", joined by Shatner, provides the concluding musical number, Julius Caesar, a pastiche of famous lines from the play set to a rap rhythm. The film's score was produced by Scott Spock.

The film is laced with highly esoteric references to past and contemporary science-fiction films and television shows. Most prominent is the original Star Trek, which is treated by the protagonists as a source of inspiration and moral guidance. Free Enterprise explores the dating scene for late gen-x Hollywood singles from a decidedly sardonic perspective.

Won 4 awards including the 2000 Saturn Award for Best Home Video Release. A new 2-disc DVD special edition Free Enterprise: Extended "Five Year Mission" Edition was released on March 7 2006.

A sequel, Free Enterprise 2 (2006)[1] is currently in pre-production.

[edit] Highlights

Robert and his beautiful Trekkie girlfriend, Claire, are having a fight. Claire thinks Robert should get a steady job and generally start behaving more responsibly.
Robert (disgustedly): Whatever. (gets up)
Claire: Where are you going?
Robert: It seems I'm going nowhere.
Claire: Don't you quote Star Wars at me!


Mark dreams on the eve of his thirtieth birthday that he is in the world of 'Logan's Run'. It is Lastday and he is being chased by Sandmen. One of the Sandmen is his friend Robert, who is a six months younger than he is.
Robert (aiming a blaster, grinning mockingly and mimicking Michael York): Rrrrun, runnah!


Mark (outside the studio): What are we doing here at Full Eclipse? A remake of Freaks?
(Mark and Robert's friends start the "One of Us" chant from the film.)
Robert: Ah ta ta ta ta ta ta! (shushing them)

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