The Dream Team (film)
The Dream Team | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Howard Zieff |
Produced by | Christopher W. Knight |
Written by |
Jon Connolly David Loucka |
Starring | |
Music by | David McHugh |
Cinematography | Adam Holender |
Edited by | Carroll Timothy O'Meara |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 113 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $15 million |
Box office | $28,890,240 (USA) |
The Dream Team is a 1989 comedy film directed by Howard Zieff and produced by Christopher W. Knight for Imagine Entertainment and Universal Pictures. It stars Michael Keaton, Christopher Lloyd, Peter Boyle and Stephen Furst as mental-hospital inpatients who are left unsupervised in New York City during a field trip gone awry. Jon Connolly and David Loucka wrote the screenplay.
Plot
Dr. Jeff Weitzman (Dennis Boutsikaris) is a psychologist working in a sanitarium in New Jersey. His primary patients are Billy, Henry, Jack and Albert. Billy (Keaton) is the most normal of the group and their unofficial leader, though he is a pathological liar with delusions of grandeur and violent tendencies. Henry (Lloyd) is obsessive/compulsive and he has deluded himself into thinking he is one of the doctors at the hospital, often walking around with a clipboard, lab coat and stethoscope. Jack (Boyle) is a former advertising executive who believes he is Jesus Christ. Finally, Albert (Furst) is a man-child who only says things he hears during baseball games, particularly from former ball player and commentator Phil Rizzuto.
Convinced that his patients need some fresh air and some time away from the sanitarium, Dr. Weitzman persuades the administration to allow him to take them to a baseball game at Yankee Stadium. Unfortunately, he accidentally encounters two crooked cops just as they murder another officer. The doctor then gets knocked unconscious trying to get away and is put in the hospital. The group is now stranded in New York City, forced to cope with a place which is often more bizarre than their sanitarium. One of the both comic and serious plot twists is that the inmates have to listen to Albert's baseball jargon in order to get clues as to what happened to Dr. Weitzman, because he is the only one who witnessed it (he is just afraid to say it because of his catatonic condition). Two other running gags throughout the film are: Henry's threats to report psychologically disturbing behavior of the other patients (never realizing his own problems until near the end); and Billy's violent, unpredictable but ultimately harmless behavior in several different scenarios. A lesser gag is Jack, in his persona as Jesus Christ, causing a rousing sermon at a black church, only for the parishioners to come to their senses and expel him (without any clothes), and the other three patients get Jack new (albeit garish) clothes from an army surplus store.
After Dr. Weitzman's beating and coma, it is up to the patients to save their doctor from being murdered by the crooked cops. They end up having to both use and overcome their delusions and disorders in order to save the only man who ever tried to help them, with both the police and the killers looking for them. Three revisit scenes from their pasts: Billy (former girlfriend Riley, played by Lorraine Bracco), Henry (his wife & daughter), and Jack (his former employer). As each patient does so individually, they each behave in a sane, clear manner, Henry genuinely missing his family, Billy wishing to pursue a stronger relationship, and Jack appealing to his boss that he and his friends are in trouble (but the boss reports Jack to the police).
Throughout the film there are minor scenes showing the interaction between the two crooked police officers (Philip Bosco and James Remar) and what their plans are in framing the patients for the murder of Officer Alvarez earlier in the film.
Cast
- Michael Keaton as Billy Caufield
- Christopher Lloyd as Henry Sikorsky
- Peter Boyle as Jack McDermott
- Stephen Furst as Albert Ianuzzi
- Dennis Boutsikaris as Dr. Jeff Weitzman
- Lorraine Bracco as Riley
- Milo O'Shea as Dr. Newald
- Philip Bosco as O'Malley
- James Remar as Gianelli
- Michael Lembeck as Ed, Riley's ex-boyfriend
- Jack Duffy as Bernie
- Larry Pine as Canning
- Ted Simonett as a yuppie
- John Stocker as Murray
- Lizbeth MacKay as Henry's wife
- Olivia Horton as Henry's daughter
- Ron James as Dwight
- Freda Foh Shen as a TV newscaster
- Dennis Parlato as TV newscaster
- Donna Hanover as a field reporter
- Jihmi Kennedy as the tow truck driver
- Guglielmo Goffi opening scene accordion musician
Reception
The movie had a mixed reception, with Vincent Canby stating that "there's nothing dreadfully wrong with The Dream Team, Howard Zieff's new comedy, except that it's not funny too much of the time. On those occasions when it is funny, the humor less often prompts laughter than mute appreciation of the talents of the principal performers - Michael Keaton, Christopher Lloyd and Peter Boyle."[1] Michael Wilmington noted that "[the film] is so clearly derived from the movie "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" that you might begin to wonder when Jack Nicholson will show up. [...which] may suggest that "Dream Team" is a weak, derivative, somehow disreputable movie, which is somewhat true. If you compare it to its obvious source, it has a coy, flip attitude toward illness, skating over the surface of tragedy, dementia and pain without breaking the ice. The union of four oddballs--rebel-writer, obsessive noodge, religious fanatic and couch potato--is almost too schematic, as if the writers were somehow trying to define '80s dissidence. But even though you can predict virtually everything that happens from the first five minutes on, the director and actors manage to hook you in."[2] It currently holds a 53% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
Box office
The Dream Team debuted at No. 2 at the American box office, where it made $5.7 million at 1,316 theaters, averaging US$4,335 per screen. It opened only one number shy of a competing Paramount film, Major League.[3] It went down from that position in subsequent weeks.
References
- ↑ "Review/Film; Out of the Asylum, Into Manhattan". The New York Times. Retrieved 2012-05-15.
- ↑ "Movie Reviews : 'Dream Team' Wakes Up to an Old Running Gag". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-05-14.
- ↑ "WEEKEND BOX OFFICE : 'Major League' Wins Season Opener". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-05-14.
External links
- The Dream Team at the Internet Movie Database
- The Dream Team at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Dream Team at AllMovie
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