Slums of Beverly Hills

The Slums of Beverly Hills

Slums of Beverly Hills DVD cover
Directed by Tamara Jenkins
Produced by Michael Nozik
Stan Wlodkowski
Written by Tamara Jenkins
Starring Natasha Lyonne
Marisa Tomei
Alan Arkin
Mena Suvari
David Krumholtz
Editing by Robert Duffy
Distributed by Fox Searchlight Pictures
Release date(s) 21 May 1998
Running time 91 minutes
Budget ~ US$5,000,000

The Slums of Beverly Hills is a 1998 motion picture, written and directed by Tamara Jenkins. Its hero is a teenage girl struggling to grow up in a lower-middle-class family that moves every few months in the late 1970s.

The film stars Natasha Lyonne, Alan Arkin, Marisa Tomei, David Krumholtz, Kevin Corrigan, Jessica Walter, and Carl Reiner.

The film barely earned its budget, and thus is not considered a box-office success. It received mixed to positive reviews. It gradually became a cult classic.[1]

Contents

Plot

Vivian Abromowitz's family are penniless nomads, moving from one cheap apartment to another in Beverly Hills, so that Vivian and her brothers can attend the city's prestigious schools. The family father is Murray, a divorced 65-year-old who refuses to retire, working as an unsuccessful Oldsmobile salesman at a time when sales of small foreign cars such as Hondas and Toyotas are booming while those of large American vehicles are flat or falling.

Vivian's wealthy Uncle Mickey regularly sends the family money to help them survive. When Mickey's 29-year-old daughter Rita runs away from a rehab facility, Murray offers her shelter if Mickey will pay for a plush apartment. Vivian must babysit her adult cousin, making sure she gets to nursing school and avoids pills and booze. But Vivian has her own problems: she's curious about sex, likes an older neighbor kid (Eliot), has inherited her mother's ample breasts, and wants a family that doesn't embarrass her.

Vivian's older brother Ben aspires to a show business career, while her dad aspires to feminine companionship but won't give in to a wealthy lady-friend's desire that he send his kids back East to live with his estranged wife. Vivian's younger brother Rickey simply aspires to get attention.

Vivian and Rita become close and speak sometimes in an invented language which sounds like gibberish. Vivian learns that Rita has no desire to go to nursing school and also has no clue as to what to do with her life. Murray attempts to cover up Rita's lack of progress at nursing school, when Mickey asks for progress reports. Eventually, Mickey, frustrated at having to support his brother's family and also learning of their deception concerning his daughter, explodes during a meeting between the two families, telling Murray he's tired of sending them money. Depressed and dejected, Murray once again packs the kids into his car and they take off. In an attempt to cheer her father up, Vivian suggests that the family stop for steak for breakfast—a ritual regularly shared by the family as a means of cheering themselves up.

Cast

Box office

Box office

According to Box Office Mojo, Slums of Beverly Hills earned a total of $5,502,773 in the domestic box office. On its opening weekend it garnered $125,561.

Critical Reception

The movie received positive to mixed reviews from critics. The design of the seventies, the humor and the acting have been described as "dead-on."

Accolades

Nominations

Soundtrack

External links

References