Joe Versus the Volcano
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Joe Versus the Volcano | |
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Joe Versus The Volcano Poster |
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Directed by | John Patrick Shanley |
Produced by | Steven Spielberg Frank Marshall Kathleen Kennedy |
Written by | John Patrick Shanley |
Starring | Tom Hanks Meg Ryan |
Release date(s) | 1990 |
Running time | 102 min. |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
Joe Versus the Volcano is a 1990 comedy film starring Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan and was the first film directed by screenwriter John Patrick Shanley. It was the first of three films starring Hanks and Ryan together. Though it was praised by notable reviewers such as Roger Ebert at the time of its release in 1990, Joe Versus the Volcano was considered a box office flop, and one of Tom Hanks' minor films. Since then, it has accumulated a cult following.
[edit] Plot
Joe Banks (Tom Hanks) is a downtrodden everyman, working in a factory for a pointy haired boss, Frank Waturi (Dan Hedaya). Banks is chronically ill, and finds no joy in his existence. One day, he visits a doctor (Robert Stack) who finds a fatal brain cloud, apparently an inoperable tumor. Ironically, it didn't cause his poor health. Those symptoms were psychosomatic — he was just imagining them. The doctor suggests, "you have some time left to you, Mr. Banks, live it well." Joe promptly quits his job, tells his boss off, and asks former co-worker DeDe (Meg Ryan in the first of three parts that she plays) out on a date. It goes well, but when he tells her he's dying, she becomes upset and leaves.
The next day, Joe is visited by wealthy industrialist Samuel Graynamore (Lloyd Bridges), who has a proposition for him. There is a small island in the Pacific called Waponi Wu. It has deposits of a mineral that Graynamore wants to mine, but the native Waponis won't let him, unless he can solve a problem for them. They believe that the volcano on their island must be appeased with a voluntary human sacrifice once every century, but none of the Waponis is willing to volunteer this time. If he can provide a willing victim, Graynamore can have the mineral. Having heard of Joe's situation, the businessman offers him the opportunity to "live like a king, die like a man." Graynamore will pay for whatever Joe wants, as long as he throws himself into the volcano afterwards. With nothing to lose, Joe agrees.
Joe spends a day and night on the town in New York, where he solicits advice on style and life from wise chauffeur Marshall (Ossie Davis). Joe purchases an Armani tuxedo and, from a fanatically dedicated luggage salesman (Barry McGovern), four top-of-the-line, hand-crafted, waterproof steamer trunks. For his valued assistance, Marshall also gets a tuxedo.
Joe then flies to Los Angeles, where he is met by one of Graynamore's daughters, Angelica (also played by Meg Ryan), who cautions him not to tell her anything, as she cannot keep a secret ("Daddy says I'm a flibbertigibbet!"). She takes him to a yacht, captained by her half-sister, Patricia (Meg Ryan again).
The ocean voyage starts out well; Joe and Patricia are attracted to each other. But then they run into a typhoon. Lightning strikes the yacht and it sinks. Joe rescues Patricia and fashions a raft by lashing his steamer trunks together. She does not regain consciousness for several days. Joe saves a small supply of fresh water only for her, while he gradually becomes delirious from thirst. When Patricia awakens, they find they have fortuitously drifted to their destination.
The Waponis treat them to a grand feast. Their chief (Abe Vigoda) asks one last time if anyone else will volunteer, but there are no takers and Joe heads for the volcano, to the great relief of the natives. Patricia tries to stop him, declaring her love for him. He admits he loves her as well, "but the timing stinks."
Patricia gets the chief to marry them, which the chief does with comic haste. Patricia decides to join Joe in his jump, and when they jump in together, the two are blown out into the ocean when the volcano erupts. The island sinks, but Joe and Patricia find their trusty steamer trunks again, and are saved. Upon discussion, Patricia deduces that the doctor who diagnosed Joe was her father's crony and had lied to him. Joe isn't dying and they can live happily ever after.
[edit] Trivia
- There is a running gag throughout the film where Joe remarks to each of Meg Ryan's characters (DeDe, Angelica, and Patricia) that when he first saw them, he felt he had seen them somewhere before. Joe was a former fireman who once rescued three children in a fire. It is possible that this is meant to suggest that DeDe, Angelica, and Patricia were those three children.
- A recurring image of a jagged thunderbolt plays a part in the movie. It is part of the company logo, it is the shape of the pathway leading up to Joe's workplace, it is seen in the plaster damage in Joe's apartment, in the lightning bolt that destroys Patricia's boat, and in the path to the volcano. Other recurring images include ducks, the façade of the factory, dogs, and the moon.
- Carol Kane, Amanda Plummer and Nathan Lane make cameo appearances in this film.
- The fictitious Waponi culture was created 1800 years ago when a Roman galley, crewed by Jewish and Druid slaves, was caught in a storm off the coast of Carthage. They were swept around the horn of Africa and, thinking that they were heading back to Rome, settled on a sparsly populated island in the Pacific. The Waponi tribe is a bizarre cultural mix of Polynesian, Hebrew, Latin, and Celtic influences. They are also major fans of "Jump Soda," an orange drink, and known throughout Polynesia for having no sense of direction.
- The name Waponi Wu means little island with a big volcano. The volcano is called the Big Wu.
- According to people close to Shanley at the time, the story is based on a near death experience Shanley had and is his attempt to describe and explain the altered outlook on life he adopted as a result.
- The original screenplay had a somewhat different ending, with the doctor and the industrialist getting their comeuppance.
- Shanley wrote two songs for the movie, "Marooned Without You" and "The Cowboy Song," the latter performed by Tom Hanks.
[edit] External links
- Joe versus the Volcano fan site the most comprehensive on the web