Ruthless People

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Ruthless People

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Jim Abrahams
David Zucker
Jerry Zucker
Produced by Michael Peyser
Written by Dale Launer
Starring Danny DeVito
Bette Midler
Judge Reinhold
Helen Slater
Music by Michel Colombier
Cinematography Jan de Bont
Editing by Gib Jaffe
Arthur Schmidt
Studio Touchstone Films
Silver Screen Partners II
Distributed by Buena Vista Distribution
Release dates June 27, 1986 (1986-06-27)
Running time 93 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $9 million[1]
Box office $71,233,101

Ruthless People is a 1986 black comedy film written by Dale Launer, directed by David Zucker, Jim Abrahams, and Jerry Zucker, and starring Danny DeVito, Bette Midler, Judge Reinhold, and Helen Slater, with Bill Pullman in a supporting role in his film debut.

It is the story of a couple who kidnap their ex-boss's wife to get revenge and extort money from him. They soon realize he does not want her back and was planning to kill her himself. Meanwhile the boss's mistress plans a blackmail attempt on him which also does not go as planned.

Plot

Millionaire Sam Stone (DeVito) intends to murder his hated wife Barbara (Midler) to gain control of her $15 million family fortune and run off with his mistress Carol (Anita Morris). However, he is pre-empted by a phone call from an anonymous man announcing that Barbara has been kidnapped and that Sam must pay a ransom of $500,000 or she will be killed.

Overjoyed, Sam deliberately disobeys all of the kidnapper's demands (e.g., not paying the ransom, contacting the press and the police), believing this will ensure his wife's death. He is happy that she will die and he won't be legally implicated in her death.

The kidnappers are Ken (Reinhold) and Sandy Kessler (Slater), who want revenge on Sam for stealing Sandy's fashion design, along with the Kesslers' life savings. Barbara is imprisoned in the Kesslers' basement, where she proves a handful to the amateur kidnappers. When Sam doesn't show up with the ransom on several occasions, even when the price is dropped, it becomes obvious that Sam doesn't want his wife back, and would rather she were dead.

Carol, having learned of Sam's plan to kill Barbara, secretly intends to blackmail Sam, with the help of her handsome but dim-witted boyfriend Earl (Pullman). Knowing Sam plans to dump his wife's body in the Hollywood Hills at night, Carol has Earl lie in wait with a video camera. He mistakenly films a rendezvous between a prostitute and her client performing noisy sex in the front seat of a car. Earl, hearing the woman's screams, thinks the murder is happening right in front of him.

Without watching the tape, Carol sends an anonymous copy to Sam, who sees the sex act and thinks Carol has sent it to him as a tittilating birthday present. He tells Carol he will do the same thing to her, causing her to think he plans to kill her. Carol sends another anonymous copy to police chief Henry Benton (Schilling) who happens to be the prostitute's client. Benton, thinking that he is being blackmailed, asks for the demands. Carol tells him to arrest Sam Stone for murdering his wife.

Benton orders a search of Sam's house, planning to plant evidence, but real evidence turns up—a bottle of chloroform Sam intended to use to sedate his wife. There also are pictures of Sam with Carol. The kidnapping investigation, which has led to Ken by now, is immediately called off, and Sam is arrested. Sam now faces the unhappy prospect of having to get his wife back in order to prove his innocence.

Taking up exercise to relieve her boredom, Barbara loses twenty pounds. Unexpectedly, she bonds with Sandy, who lets Barbara wear some of her dress designs to show off her new figure. Barbara loves them, and offers to go into business with Sandy. Permitted to leave, Barbara comes right back as soon as she finds out from the newspaper about Sam's mistress; she realizes he wanted her dead. Barbara is confronted in the Kessler home by a notorious local serial killer, The Bedroom Killer, who tries to attack Ken but instead falls down the basement steps and dies.

Barbara, Ken and Sandy plot revenge on Sam. Now desperate to prove his wife is alive, Sam offers to pay the ransom the moment Ken calls him again. Armed with Barbara's inside knowledge, they have increased the ransom to equal Sam's entire net worth: over $2 million. Sam is outraged, but has no choice. He withdraws the cash, but begs the police to watch the drop site. Carol finally views the videotape in a video store where the Police Chief is recognized by his wife. She realizes now Barbara really was kidnapped. Carol learns the time and place of the ransom drop.

Sam waits with his life savings in cash in a briefcase. Ken arrives in disguise to get the money, but then scores of hidden police suddenly appear. Sam gives the briefcase to Ken, but Earl arrives with a gun, intent on robbing Sam. He instead tries to rob Ken (who is holding the briefcase). In the ensuing confusion, Earl is captured.

Ken takes the briefcase and drives towards the coast, with many police cars following him. He drives onto—and eventually off of—the end of Santa Monica Pier with the ransom cash inside. The police search the water and bring up the car, with the body of the Bedroom Killer inside (dressed in Ken's clothes and disguise). Only a few thousand dollars of money are recovered from the ocean.

Although he has lost all his money, Sam holds out hope that Barbara will now definitely be killed—because (according to the kidnappers) if anything went wrong, they'd kill her, and he'd inherit her $15 million fortune. But Barbara shows up and lies to the police that her kidnapper (the serial killer) was schizophrenic, believing himself to have an accomplice, and so she was able to escape as soon as he left. The police walk away in satisfaction.

Sam, meanwhile, is taken aback by how thin Barbara is. As they embrace, she beats him up, tells him that she wants a divorce and pushes him into the water. On a nearby beach, Ken emerges from the water in scuba gear, carrying the briefcase with the ransom cash. Sandy runs to embrace him. They are joined by Barbara, walking along the beach happily together.


A note: In the movie, Ken Kessler works in a hi-fi store which in itself is a funny reference to long-time audio writer Ken Kessler, one of the most influential audio journalists in the last thirty years.

Cast

Reception

"This film takes a good, simple idea--the kidnapping of a nagging wife whose husband doesn't want her back--and adds some charismatic casting--Danny DeVito and Bette Midler. One of the delights of the movie is that its script dares to complicate what could have been a much more straightforward yarn. Danny DeVito's character of Sam Stone, a vulgar, wealthy, Bel Air dress manufacturer, is a hard-nosed classic, admitting in the film's opening sequence that he married his wife because she was very, very rich and her wealthy father was very, very sick. "Ruthless People" contains some of the biggest laughs of 1986."

Gene Siskel, Chicago Tribune[2]

The movie was a smash hit grossing $71,600,000 in box office receipts. Ruthless People received mostly positive reviews from critics and currently holds a 94% rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes based on 33 reviews. The consensus on the site reads: "It's sometimes crude and tasteless, but Ruthless People wrings acid-soaked laughs out of its dark premise and gleefully misanthropic characters." Roger Ebert particularly made it clear that the film "is made out of good performances, a script of diabolical ingenuity and a whole lot of silliness."[3] Conversely, the Los Angeles Times' review was negative, stating that "the characters here aren't just bad; most of them are truly vile -- human slime. And the film makers chew them up (especially two nefarious bonbons played by Danny DeVito and Bette Midler) with the toothsome glee of jolly cannibals."[4]

Soundtrack

Ruthless People
Soundtrack album by Various Artists
Released 1986 (1986)
Recorded 1986
Genre Soundtrack
Label Epic

The album's soundtrack was released on Epic Records.

Track list

  1. "Ruthless People" - Mick Jagger
  2. "Give Me the Reason" - Luther Vandross
  3. "Modern Woman" - Billy Joel
  4. "Wherever I Lay My Hat (That's My Home)" - Paul Young
  5. "No Say In It" - Machinations
  6. "Waiting to See You" - Dan Hartman
  7. "Dance Champion" - Kool and The Gang
  8. "Neighborhood Watch" - Michel Colombier
  9. "Stand On It" - Bruce Springsteen
  10. "Don't You Want My Love" - Nicole McCloud

References

  1. Box Office Information for Ruthless People. The Wrap. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
  2. Siskel, Gene (August 08, 1986). "Flick Of Week: `Vagabond` One Of Finest Films In Years". Chicago Tribune. 
  3. "RUTHLESS PEOPLE". Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved 2012-06-07. 
  4. "Movie Review : Going Full Bore In 'Ruthless'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-06-07. 

External links

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