Delirious (film)

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Delirious

The movie cover for Delirious.
Directed by Tom Mankiewicz
Produced by Larry Cohen
Fred Freeman
Doug Claybourne
Written by Fred Freeman
Lawrence J. Cohen
Starring John Candy
Music by Cliff Eidelman
Distributed by MGM Pictures
Release date(s) August 9, 1991
Running time 96 min.
Language English
IMDb profile

Delirious is a romantic comedy film starring John Candy. It was released in 1991, but it did not achieve commercial success at the box offices. Some speculate that John Candy was better suited to pure comedy roles rather than ones within the realm of the romantic comedy genre.[citation needed]

Despite these issues with the film, it has a cult following, as a sleeper comedy classic.[citation needed]

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The film opens in a lush 1970's soap opera, complete with all the characters you'd expect to find, in a small town of immense wealth and ludicrous backstabbing... which breaks and we see that it is of course an acting set.

John Candy plays Jack Gable, a nearly out-of-work soap opera writer, whose product, like him, is now dated. His situation is only worsened by his despicable work associates who would sooner show him the door than work with him. With his audience becoming jaded, Gable decides - or is rather strongly encouraged - to take a cross-country road trip. While stowing his belongings in the trunk of his car, the trunk lid suddenly pops open and strikes Gable on the chin, knocking him unconscious. When he comes back around, he proceeds on his trip, only to be involved in a car accident.

Upon waking from the crash, Gable finds himself in Ashford Falls Community Hospital - the same hospital in which his soap opera takes place! Thinking himself the victim of a prank by the actors, Gable goes to the window to confirm his suspicions, only to find the view beyond the glass is entirely of his own creation. Incredulous, Gable checks out of the hospital and makes his way to a motel, where he looks into getting his car repaired. When a conversation with the local auto mechanic (one of the characters from his show) goes nowhere, he types in his typewriter as a joke, "My car will be fixed tomorrow morning", only to have the words magically disappear from the page. A few seconds later, the phone rings...Suddenly, his car is fixed! At this point he begins to explore the town, and in doing so he discovers the truth. He is living within his own soap opera, a world in which he and his typewriter are in total control!

Hilarious events ensue, in which Gable experiences the height of the high life, the lowest of the low, the full gamut of experiences, including a wild party which he wrote while drunk, featuring a fish on legs...and the immortal line, "I must have been really drunk when I wrote this..." The film ends with that most impossible of resolutions - the gift of happy conclusions to the character's feuding lives, with Jack as the fairy godfather to his creations.

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