Weekend at Bernie's
Weekend at Bernie's | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Ted Kotcheff |
Produced by | Victor Drai |
Written by | Robert Klane |
Starring |
Andrew McCarthy Jonathan Silverman Catherine Mary Stewart Terry Kiser |
Music by | Andy Summers |
Cinematography | François Protat |
Editing by | Joan E. Chapman |
Studio | Gladden Entertainment |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release dates |
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Running time | 97 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $15 million[1] |
Box office | $30,218,387 |
Weekend at Bernie's is a 1989 dark comedy film directed by Ted Kotcheff and starring Andrew McCarthy and Jonathan Silverman as a couple of young insurance corporation employees who discover their boss is deceased. Believing that they are responsible for his death and that a hitman will not kill them if Bernie is around, they attempt to convince people that he is still alive.
Plot
Larry Wilson (Andrew McCarthy) and Richard Parker (Jonathan Silverman) are two low-level employees at an insurance corporation in New York City. Larry is laid-back, while Richard struggles to be at ease with women. While going over actuarial reports, the earnest Richard discovers mismatched payments. Richard and Larry take their findings to their boss Bernie Lomax (Terry Kiser), who commends them for discovering insurance fraud and invites them to his Hampton Island beach house for the weekend. Unbeknownst to Larry and Richard, Bernie is behind the fraud and nervously arranges with his mob partners to have them both killed that weekend and arrange it as a murder-suicide. However, the gangsters double cross Bernie and decide to have him killed instead, citing his reckless greed and his affair with the mob boss Vito's girlfriend as the motivation.
Bernie arrives at the island before Larry and Richard and speaks to the appointed hitman Paulie (Don Calfa) on the phone, to plan out the murders and establish an alibi, unaware that the conversation is being recorded on Bernie's answering machine, as he picked up the phone haphazardly. Bernie then writes a confession and plants cash implicating Larry and Richard in the insurance fraud. Paulie arrives, kills Bernie by injecting poison in his buttocks, then planting heroin on him to make it appear as a drug overdose. When Larry and Richard arrive at the beach house, they find their boss dead. Before they can call the police, however, guests arrive for a party that passes through Bernie's house every weekend. To Larry and Richard's amazement, the vast majority of people are too engrossed in their own partying to notice that their host is deceased, with Bernie's dark sunglasses and dopey grin from the fatal injection concealing his lifeless state.
Fearing they will be implicated in their boss's death, Larry proposes that he and Richard maintain the facade, a notion that Richard finds absurd. Only the arrival of Richard's office crush, Gwen Saunders (Catherine Mary Stewart), convinces him to postpone notifying the police. After the party, Richard manages to take Gwen out on a romantic walk on the beach, but Bernie's body ends up being carried out by the tide and washes up next to them, prompting Richard to go back to the house and conscript Larry into retrieving the corpse.
Vito's girlfriend Tina arrives at the house, convinced that Bernie has been cheating on her. She threatens Larry and Richard with a knife and they direct her to the bedroom, but she also fails to realize that he is dead. At that moment, another man from Vito's gang witnesses the two of them supposedly making love. Fooled into thinking that Bernie's assassination failed, he notifies Vito, who orders Paulie back to finish the job.
The next morning, Richard is appalled to discover that Larry is maintaining the illusion that Bernie is alive by manipulating his corpse. The two bicker about alerting the police until Richard attempts to call the police himself but instead accidentally activates the phone message detailing the plot against them. They then realize that alerting the police will implicate them. Unaware of the circumstances of Bernie's death, they mistakenly believe that they are still the targets of a mob hit, they decide to use Bernie's corpse as a prop for protection. Paulie, in the meantime, has returned to the island and strangles Bernie's corpse.
The two make various attempts to leave the island, but Bernie's body becomes repeatedly misplaced and recovered in the process. They attempt to board the mainland ferry with Bernie in tow, but are too late to board; Paulie, unfortunately, sees them and assumes that Bernie has somehow survived.
Next, they try Bernie's speedboat and cause all kinds of chaos from Larry pulling away without untying it, Richard falling overboard and a tied-up Bernie falling out the back and smashing into buoys as he is dragged along the water. Finally, the boat runs out of fuel and Larry and Richard are forced to float back to shore on Bernie's body. Gwen sees them return and angrily decides to confront Richard for his bizarre behavior. Paulie, unhinged at the inexplicable "immortality" of Bernie, returns to the island.
At the house, Gwen confronts Larry and Richard, who reveal that they had found Bernie dead right from the start. At that moment, Paulie returns and empties a pistol into Bernie's chest immediately after entering the house. Once he realizes that the three are witnesses, he chases them through the house. Larry takes advantage and clumsily subdues him with a phone cord and a punch.
The police eventually arrive to place Paulie under arrest for first degree murder, carting him off in a strait-jacket as he continues to insist Bernie is still alive. The film ends with Bernie being loaded into an ambulance. However, his gurney rolls away and topples off the boardwalk, dumping him onto the beach right behind Richard, Larry and Gwen who run off after noticing him. Eventually, a young boy comes along and starts to play by scooping buckets of sand over his body (he did this earlier).
Main cast
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Reception
Though the film was not a critical success, holding only a 50% rating on Rotten Tomatoes,[2] it was still a cultural icon as well as a financial success, grossing $30 million at the box office, and was profitable on home video.[3][4]
Sequel
The film's commercial success spawned a 1993 sequel, Weekend at Bernie's II.
References
- ↑ Box Office Information for Weekend at Bernie's. The Wrap. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
- ↑ Weekend at Bernie's at Rotten Tomatoes
- ↑ Johnson, Steve (Jul 13, 1993). 'S+II'+FEELS+MORE+LIKE+A+MONTH "Resurrection 'Weekend at Bernie'S II' Feels More Like a Month". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2009-09-01.
- ↑ "Familiarity Breeds Film Hits". Daily News of Los Angeles. Jul 13, 1993. Retrieved 2009-09-01.
External links
- Weekend at Bernie's at the Internet Movie Database
- Weekend at Bernie's at the TCM Movie Database
- Weekend at Bernie's at allmovie
- Weekend at Bernie's at Box Office Mojo
- Weekend at Bernie's at Rotten Tomatoes
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