Life Stinks
Life Stinks | |
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Theatrical poster | |
Directed by | Mel Brooks |
Produced by | Mel Brooks |
Written by |
Mel Brooks Ron Clark Rudy De Luca Steve Haberman |
Starring |
Mel Brooks Lesley Ann Warren Jeffrey Tambor |
Music by | John Morris |
Cinematography | Steven B. Poster |
Editing by |
Michael Mulconery David Rawlins Anthony Redman |
Studio | Brooks Films |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release dates |
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Running time | 92 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | Spanish, English |
Budget | $13,000,000 |
Box office | $4,102,526 |
Life Stinks is a 1991 comedy-drama directed by and starring Mel Brooks. It is one of the few Mel Brooks comedies that is not a parody, nor at any time does the film break the fourth wall. It co-stars Lesley Ann Warren, Howard Morris and Jeffrey Tambor. The original music score was composed by John Morris.
Plot
Goddard Bolt (Mel Brooks) is the callous CEO of Bolt Enterprises. Bolt shows little regard for other people's property or environmentalism, and has his eye on the slum of Los Angeles so he can tear it down. Bolt makes a bet with his biggest rival, Vance Crasswell (Jeffrey Tambor), who also has an interest in the property, that he can survive on those streets for 30 days. Should Bolt lose, Craswell owns the property, but should Bolt win, Crasswell will sell it for practically nothing.
There are three conditions: #1) Bolt will be completely penniless; #2) He must wear an electronic anklet that will activate if he leaves the boundaries, forfeiting the bet if he exceeds 30 seconds out of bounds; #3) At no time can he reveal to any of the slum area residents that he is Goddard Bolt. To add to the look, Bolt has his mustache shaved off, then Crasswell consfiscates his toupee.
Crasswell schemes to make Bolt's stay on the streets as bad as can be. Bolt, homeless, hungry and filthy, is befriended by skid-row inhabitants like Sailor (Howard Morris) and Fumes (Theodore Wilson) and given the nickname "Pepto" after falling asleep in a crate with a Pepto-Bismol logo on its side. In the process, he also falls in love with Molly (Lesley Ann Warren), a homeless woman who used to be a dancer on Broadway. During a scuffle with two muggers, Bolt is pushed out of bounds. To prevent his anklet from activating, he charges back in towards the thugs, which impresses Molly with his supposed bravery.
Bolt learns important life lessons during his 'adventure', namely that life is not about accomplishments or material success but rather the integrity of the human spirit. However, Bolt is unaware that the unscrupulous Crasswell has no intention of honoring their bet. When Crasswell realizes Bolt is honoring the bet fair and square, Crasswell bribes Bolt's lawyers into fabricating the story that Bolt had lost his mind and has his property seized. Forced to live on the streets for good and remanded to a free clinic by mistake, a drugged Bolt murmurs that "life stinks", but Molly implores him to remember small things such as the two of them waltzing that make life livable. Crasswell, meanwhile has his own plans for the slum area, planning to tear it down as well. Bolt incites Fumes and the other slum residents to stage a mock battle on the ceremony while it is televised. Crasswell attempts to stop Bolt with a steam shovel, to which Bolt fights Crasswell in another steam shovel akin to "dinosaur fights". When Bolt's shovel has plucked Crasswell and has him hanging by his jacket, the scene is freeze-framed into a news report saying that Crasswell, in a court case, was forced to admit he made a bet with Bolt in order to get him to understand the slum conditions, then reneged on the terms. Bolt, now in control of the area, has plans to renovate it into the "Bolt Center" which will give the slum residents employment and the children a private school financed entirely out of pocket by Goddard Bolt. The news report ends by saying Bolt has married Molly and the press are expecting an extravagant CEO-type event, only to then be shown Goddard and Molly taking their wedding vows in a simple chapel in the slum area, then driving off in a limousine with a vanity plate "PEPTO".
Cast
- Mel Brooks as Goddard Bolt
- Lesley Ann Warren as Molly
- Jeffrey Tambor as Vance Crasswell
- Stuart Pankin as Pritchard
- Howard Morris as Sailor
- Rudy De Luca as J. Paul Getty
- Theodore Wilson as Fumes
- Carmen Filpi as Pops (eleven's up)
- Michael Ensign as Knowles
- Matthew Faison as Stevens
- Billy Barty as Willy
- Brian Thompson as Mean Victor
- Raymond O'Connor as Yo
- Carmine Caridi as Flophouse Owner
- Sammy Shore as Reverend at Wedding
- Frank Roman as Spanish Interpreter
- Christopher Birt as Paramedic
- Robert Ridgely as Craswell's Attorney
Whoopi Goldberg was initially considered for Lesley Ann Warren's role; however, Brooks was uncertain whether he could convincingly play her love interest.
Reception
The film was screened out of competition at the 1991 Cannes Film Festival.[1]
In a rare turn of events for a Mel Brooks film, it was both a critical and commercial failure. Rotten Tomatoes reported that 20% of critics gave positive reviews based on 16 reviews. Praise did come from the fact that Brooks attempted a different type of satire rather than rehashing spoofs.[2] The film underperformed at the box office grossing $4,102,526 domestically, under its $13 million budget.[3] It has since gained a cult following for being an experimental film by Brooks, as opposed to his usual parodies.[citation needed]
References
- ↑ "Festival de Cannes: Life Stinks". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-08-12.
- ↑ "Life Stinks Movie Reviews, Pictures". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2008-12-05.
- ↑ "Life Stinks (1991)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-12-05.
External links
- Life Stinks at the Internet Movie Database
- Life Stinks at allmovie
- Life Stinks at Rotten Tomatoes
- Movie stills
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