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Johnny Dangerously

 
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Johnny Dangerously

  • Director: Amy Heckerling
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Crime Comedy, Parody/Spoof
  • Themes: Sibling Relationships, Criminal's Revenge, Rise To Power
  • Main Cast: Michael Keaton, Joe Piscopo, Marilu Henner, Maureen Stapleton, Peter Boyle
  • Release Year: 1984
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 90 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

This spoof of the 1930s and '40s crime stories ranges from the ridiculous to the sublime as it tells the story of Johnny Dangerously (Byron Thames as the young Johnny, Michael Keaton as the older), a devoted son to his ailing mother (Maureen Stapleton), so ill that she needs money for several operations. Johnny has nowhere to turn, and because gangsters tend to flourish in his neighborhood he goes to work for Dundee, a benevolent godfather-gangster type, in order to cover his mother's medical bills. Johnny hides his association with Dundee from his younger brother Tommy (Griffin Dunne) and goes so far as to pay for Tommy's law school fees -- supporting him until Tommy joins the staff of the local (and corrupt) district attorney's office for Burr (Danny DeVito). When Johnny starts working for Dundee, he clashes with the evil Vermin (Joe Piscopo) right from the beginning, but things only get worse. After Dundee decides to retire, Johnny ascends to the helm, and it does not look like Vermin is going to take that sitting down. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

Review

Following up her surprise hit debut Fast Times at Ridgemont High, director Amy Heckerling does her best Jim Abrahams-Jerry Zucker imitation with the gag-heavy Johnny Dangerously. The first gangster send-up in the new golden era of parodies, the film floats along on spitfire performances from Michael Keaton, Marilu Henner, and Joe Piscopo, as well as a high-energy period soundtrack. It has more than its share of misses, but the hits are memorable and quote-worthy. Says Piscopo's Vermin, "You shouldn't hang me on a hook, Johnny. My mother hung me on a hook once...once." It's the delivery more than the line that's so great, as, for the only time outside of Saturday Night Live, Piscopo's sneering tough guy personality is put to good comic use. Keaton has a winking charm, and Henner adds spice to what is already a pretty ribald comedy. It's no classic, but Johnny Dangerously has enough warmth and comedic zip to please fans of the parody genre. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Cast

Griffin Dunne - Tommy; Richard Dimitri - Maroni; Glynnis O'Connor - Sally; Byron Thames - Young Johnny; Danny DeVito - Burr; Dom DeLuise - The Pope; Ray Walston - Vendor; Elizabeth Arlen - Girl on Steps; Mike Bacarella - Vito; Sudie Bond - Cleaning Lady; Dick Butkus - Arthur; Ron Carey - Pat; Mike Finneran - Prisoner; Hank Garrett - Mayor; Chuck Hicks - Governor; Katie La Bourdette - Blond Girl; Trisha Long - Female Butler; Dean Miller - Photographer; Jack Nance - Priest; Harvey Parry - Policeman; Paul B. Price - Prisoner; Hal Riddle - Warden; Will Seltzer - Prisoner; Troy W. Slaten - Young Tommy; Cynthia Szigeti - Mrs. Capone; Leonard Termo - Tony Scarano; Scott Thomson - Charley; Richard Warwick - Prisoner; Gary Watkins - Manny; Jeffrey Weissman - T-Shirt Vendor; Bob Eubanks - M.C.; Carl Gottlieb - Dr. Magnus; Alan Hale, Jr. - Desk Sergeant; Neal Israel - Dr. Zillman; Rick Rosenthal - Judge; Richard A. Roth - Prisoner Rabbi; Norman Steinberg - Reporter Duffy; Dick Balduzzi - Prisoner; Georg Olden - Young Vermin; Shelley Pogoda - Woman; Frank Slaten - Henchman; Mike Fenton; Jane Feinberg; Russell Forte - Hood; Joy Michael - Chorus Girl; Jerome Michaels - Reporter Diering; Edward Short - Porter; Gordon Zimmerman

Credit

Neil Machlis - Associate Producer, Pat Norris - Associate Producer, Marci Liroff - Casting, Mike Fenton - Casting, Jane Feinberg - Casting, Timothy R. Sexton - Consultant/advisor, Pat Norris - Costume Designer, Amy Heckerling - Director, Pem Herring - Editor, Harry Colomby - Executive Producer, Bud Austin - Executive Producer, John Morris - Composer (Music Score), Jerry Jost - Musical Direction/Supervision, Weird Al Yankovic - Songwriter, Norman Gimbel - Songwriter, Joseph Jennings - Production Designer, David M. Walsh - Cinematographer, Michael Hertzberg - Producer, Bud Austin - Producer, Rick Simpson - Set Designer, Jerry Jost - Sound/Sound Designer, Jesse Wayne - Stunts, Harry Colomby - Screenwriter, Lorenzo Semple, Jr. - Screenwriter, Norman Steinberg - Screenwriter

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Bugsy Malone; City Heat; Cookie; Married to the Mob; My Blue Heaven; Oscar; Mafia!; Analyze This; El Pandillero
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Johnny Dangerously

Movie poster
Directed by Amy Heckerling
Produced by Michael Hertzberg
Written by Harry Colomby
Jeff Harris
Bernie Kukoff
Norman Steinberg
Starring Michael Keaton
Joe Piscopo
Marilu Henner
Maureen Stapleton
Peter Boyle
Griffin Dunne
Dom DeLuise
Danny DeVito
Dick Butkus
Byron Thames
Alan Hale, Jr.
Glynnis O'Connor
Music by John Morris
Cinematography David M. Walsh
Editing by Pembroke J. Herring
Distributed by 20th Century Fox (US)
Release date(s) United States 21 December 1984
Country  United States
Language English

The film Johnny Dangerously is a 1984 comedy spoof of 1930s' crime/gangster movies directed by Amy Heckerling. The movie stars Michael Keaton as an honest, goodhearted man who is forced to turn to a life of crime to finance his neurotic mother's skyrocketing medical bills and to put his younger brother through law school. The movie also stars Joe Piscopo, Marilu Henner, Maureen Stapleton, Peter Boyle, Griffin Dunne, Dom DeLuise, Danny DeVito, Dick Butkus and Alan Hale, Jr..

Contents

Music

The theme song "This Is the Life" was written for the movie by "Weird Al" Yankovic, though for legal reasons, "This Is the Life" was not featured on home video releases of the film, until the DVD was released in 2002. The VHS home video version of the film featured a version of the Cole Porter song "Let's Misbehave". [1]

Plot summary

A pet shop owner catches a young boy shoplifting a puppy. To discourage the kid from a life of crime, the owner tells a story . . .

It is 1910. Young Johnny Kelly is a poor but honest newsboy in New York City. Johnny beats up Danny Vermin in self defense and discovers his mom needs an operation they cannot afford. Since the execution of Johnny's father, Killer Kelly, his widow, Ma Kelly, has supported Johnny and his younger brother, Tommy, who is fascinated by the law.

Johnny's fight with Vermin attracted the notice of local crime boss Jocko Dundee, and Johnny, seeing no honest way to earn the money for his mom's operation, sees no choice than to do a job for Dundee, even though it probably means breaking the law, and in doing so, "breaking his mother's heart". He helps Dundee rob the nightclub belonging to Dundee's rival, Roman Moronie. When asked his name, Johnny coins the name, "Johnny Dangerously." But, Moronie never "forgets a fargin face."

Years pass. With his mom's continuing medical problems, Johnny goes to work for the Dundee gang full time. He becomes a suave young man, with plenty of folding cash. The whole neighborhood (including the Pope) knows that Kelly is really Johnny Dangerously, but Johnny's secret identity is carefully concealed from his brother and mother. They think he is a law-abiding nightclub owner. Similarly, the gang knows nothing of Johnny's mother and brother. Tommy is now in law school, with a girlfriend, and somewhat of a prig--he wants to drop out of law school so he can get a job, marry his girlfriend, and "get laid." With the assistance of a public health film ("Your Testicles and YOU"), Johnny gets him to go back to law school.

Johnny comes to Dundee's headquarters—he is still involved in a running feud with Moronie—to find he has taken on two new gang members: Danny Vermin, and his sidekick Dutch. Danny has lived up to his potential and become a total scumbag, with a taste for using opera audiences as shooting galleries with his .88 Magnum pistol ('it shoots through schools...'). Moronie, subtle as always, sends a robot with a machine gun to try to knock off the gang. He is not successful, and Johnny retaliates by knocking down Moronie's club (which was in need of expansion anyway) with a bomb dropped from a biplane.

The two gangs war. In the meantime, Johnny falls for a young showgirl new to the big city, Lil Sheridan. They go for a long walk together, ending in sexual fireworks.

The war continues. Moronie sends a plumber to plant explosives in Dundee's toilet. Dundee has a narrow escape, and he retires in Johnny's favor. Johnny negotiates a truce with Moronie.

Meanwhile, Tommy graduates from law school (Johnny's illicit earnings, of course, have paid for the tuition). Despite Johnny's efforts to steer him into a law firm, he goes to work for the District Attorney's office. A bit miffed that his money should be used to train a crimefighter, Johnny is nevertheless not worried—District Attorney Burr is on his payroll. The D.A. tries to sidetrack Tommy, but he becomes a major public figure. After he holds hearings looking into Moronie's activities, the rival crime boss is deported to Sweden despite his protests that he's "not from there."

Against Johnny's orders, Burr and Vermin conspire to kill Tommy. Tommy is badly injured, but survives. Divining the truth, Johnny has Burr killed—but this leaves Tommy as the new D.A.

Tommy recovers, and weds his girlfriend. Vermin discovers that Dangerously is the D.A.'s brother—and Tommy promptly overhears Vermin chortling about it. Tommy confronts Johnny, who agrees to quit the life of crime. The gang, though, isn't as eager and suggests Johnny may be turning state's evidence against them. Johnny denies this, and goes to turn the evidence against himself to the Crime Commissioner—who Vermin has just killed—under circumstances that suggest Johnny is the killer. Not only that, Vermin steals Johnny's prized bubble gum case (formerly Dundee's cigarette case).

Johnny is arrested for murder, but says he is innocent and the holder of the case is the guilty party. Tommy tries the case against him. Johnny is found guilty, sentenced to the electric chair and sent to death row. But when Vermin congratulates Tommy, and Tommy notices that he has Johnny's case, he realizes Johnny is innocent. Ma Kelly sucker punches Vermin in the crotch, and the cigarette case drops out of the stricken mobster's pocket. Ma Kelly and Tommy realize that "Johnny didn't do it."

Meanwhile, his mom is using her contacts to investigate the murder. She finds the cleaning lady who is a witness to Vermin's presence. Tommy hits Vermin with a grand jury subpoena, and he knows that he must kill Tommy.

Johnny arrives on Death Row, where he receives rock star treatment from the starstruck warden. He receives word of Tommy's danger, and plots an escape, prevailing on the warden to move up his execution ("We'll bump Steinberg.") As he is taken to the chair, Johnny assembles what looks like a tommy gun from parts handed to him by inmates. He escapes in a laundry truck driven by Lil.

Johnny, through a wild chase, arrives at the theatre where Tommy is to be killed. He shoots and wounds Vermin, saving Tommy. The governor pardons Johnny as Vermin is arrested.

Back to 1935. The young shoplifter is round eyed. Having taken in the lesson that crime doesn't pay, he is given a kitten as Johnny Kelly, law abiding pet shop owner, says "Crime doesn't pay." The kid goes on his way. Johnny, dressed in a tux, heads off in a riotous limo with Lil Sheridan: "Well, it pays a little!"

References

External links


 
 
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Bud Austin (Actor, Crime/Comedy)
Joe Piscopo (Actor, Comedy)
Glynnis O'Connor (Actor, Drama/Crime)

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