Three Fugitives

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Three Fugitives
Directed by Francis Veber
Produced by Lauren Shuler Donner
Written by Francis Veber
Starring Nick Nolte
Martin Short
Sarah Rowland Doroff
James Earl Jones
Distributed by Touchstone Pictures
Release date(s) 27 January 1989 (USA)
Running time 96 min
Language English
Budget $15,000,000
IMDb profile

Three Fugitives is a 1989 comedy film starring Nick Nolte, Martin Short and James Earl Jones and directed by Francis Veber. It is a remake of Les Fugitifs, a 1986 French comedy starring Gerard Depardieu and Pierre Richard and also directed by Francis Veber. Nolte plays the lead role of Lucas, a man recently released from prision for armed robbery who, on the day he is released, gets taken hostage by Ned Perry (Short), an incompetent novice bank robber who robs the bank (to get money for treatment for his daughter) Lucas just happens to be in. The film is rated PG-13.

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Detective Duggan (Earl Jones) assumes they must be in it together and sets about tracking them down. Several chases, an accidental shooting, treatment from a crazy vet and other capers then follow, all the while Lucas trying to ditch his idiotic companion he nicknames 'asshole' and prove his innocence.

Whilst avoiding the law the two form an unlikely partnership to help cure the silent daughter and make good their escape. Before this they rescue the daughter from the care home she is in (with Perry predictably nearly ruining the whole affair with his clubfootedness) and run for Canada, pretending to be a married couple with a son. All appears well in the end, though the closing scene sees Short's character head into a Canadian bank to change some currency only to find himself kidnapped in the same the same manner he originally kidnapped Notle's character. This prevents the sad ending where Lucas has to leave the daughter with whom he since formed quite a bond.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Reaction

The film was given mixed reviews but was generally considered to be a mildly amusing film which worked quite well given the predictable nature of the plot. There is a fair amount of profanity in the film.

[edit] External links

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