Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

My Cousin Vinny

 
Movies:

My Cousin Vinny

  • Director: Jonathan Lynn
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Courtroom Comedy, Comedy of Manners
  • Themes: Fish Out of Water, Culture Clash, Miscarriage of Justice
  • Main Cast: Joe Pesci, Ralph Macchio, Marisa Tomei, Mitchell Whitfield, Fred Gwynne
  • Release Year: 1992
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 120 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

When sweet Northern college kid Bill (Ralph Macchio) and his buddy Stan (Mitchell Whitfield) are picked up and thrown into the slammer in a hick Southern town, at first it looks like no big deal. Then they are informed that they are accused of murder. Penniless and without a single friend in the area, Bill decides to call his goofy cousin Vinny (Joe Pesci), who has somehow recently become a lawyer. Full of family feeling and bravado, Vinny, who has never tried a criminal case in his short life as a lawyer, rides south to defend his trusting relative. He's an expert motormouth and street-level logician from the wilder reaches of metropolitan New York, complete with a thick accent and the attitude to go with it. Otherwise, he's much less well qualified than your average public defender. When he arrives on the scene with his equally brassy girlfriend Lisa (Marisa Tomei), Bill is fairly sure he's going to be sentenced to death. His buddy Stan is even less confident of his legal representative, if that's possible, and the first thing Vinny has to do is to regain the consent of his clients to represent them. The local judge doesn't seem any too sympathetic to Vinny's verbal shenanigans either, and even the most optimistic supporter of the boys would begin to have doubts at this point -- and Vinny's no exception. With the insistent moral encouragement of his girlfriend, Vinny somehow accomplishes the impossible and wins grudging (if very irritated) respect from all concerned, for once studying as if his life depended on it. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

Review

Anyone who greeted My Cousin Vinny with wariness, uncertain about a fish-out-of-water comedy featuring abrasive New Yorkers in the deep South, should reconsider this gem that gave the world Marisa Tomei. Tomei may not have blossomed into the star many thought she'd be, but her Oscar-winning performance opposite Joe Pesci was the most endearing introduction of new talent in years. Stealing every scene she's in, Tomei makes whining charming and toughness vulnerable, all with an exceptional sense of comic timing. Dale Launer's script offers some hilarious, if predictable, culture clashes, and the chemistry of Pesci and Tomei give the story exhilarating zip. As the exasperated judge, Fred Gwynne (in his final film appearance) is a perfect anchor and straight man, while Ralph Macchio and Mitchell Whitfield make the most of secondary roles, watching the unpracticed courtroom manner of the lawyer hired to defend them with dawning horror. The story is not high on originality, but its tight execution, especially the intelligent details of the case, make My Cousin Vinny a first-class piece of populist entertainment. Director Jonathan Lynn tried to wring another hit from the courtroom antics of novice attorneys with 1997's Trial and Error, starring Jeff Daniels and Michael Richards, but couldn't duplicate Vinny's intoxicating charm. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

Cast

Lane Smith - Jim Trotter III; Austin Pendleton - John Gibbons; Suzi Bass - Woman; Michael Burgess - Prison Van Driver; Maury Chaykin - Sam Tipton; Bill Coates - Bailiff; J. Don Ferguson - 1st Guard; Michael Genevie - 2nd Guard; Ken Jones - Jimmy Willis; Ron Leggett - 2nd Deputy; Jeff Lewis - 1st Deputy; Bruce McGill - Sheriff Farley; Thomas Merdis - Man in Town Square; Pauline Meyers - Constance Riley; Muriel Moore - 1st Juror; Aubrey J. Osteen - 3rd Deputy; Bob Penny - 2nd Juror; James Rebhorn - George Wilbur; Raynor Scheine - Ernie Crane; Larry Shuler - Hotel Clerk; Lou Walker - Grits Cook; Chris Ellis - J.T.; Jill Jane Clements - Courtroom Clerk; Michael Simpson - Neckbrace

Credit

Michael Rizzo - Art Director, Rando Schmook - Art Director, David Rubin - Casting, Carol Wood - Costume Designer, Jonathan Lynn - Director, Tony Lombardo - Editor, Randy Edelman - Composer (Music Score), James Sarzotti - Makeup, Victoria Paul - Production Designer, Peter Deming - Cinematographer, Dale Launer - Producer, Paul Schiff - Producer, Michael Seirton - Set Designer, Robert J. Anderson, Jr. - Sound/Sound Designer, Dale Launer - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Crocodile Dundee; Crocodile Dundee II; Doc Hollywood; Maid to Order; My Blue Heaven; Protocol; Sister Act; Ladies of the Jury; Trial and Error; Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil; Cookie's Fortune; Analyze This; The Whole Nine Yards; Legally Blonde; The Fighting Temptations; Chooch; Find Me Guilty
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: My Cousin Vinny
Top
My Cousin Vinny

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Jonathan Lynn
Produced by Dale Launer
Paul Schiff
Written by Dale Launer
Starring Joe Pesci
Marisa Tomei
Ralph Macchio
Mitchell Whitfield
Lane Smith
Austin Pendleton
and Fred Gwynne
Distributed by Twentieth Century Fox
Release date(s) March 13, 1992
Running time 120 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget $11,000,000
Gross revenue $64,088,552

My Cousin Vinny is a 1992 comedy film written by Dale Launer, and directed by Jonathan Lynn, starring Joe Pesci, Ralph Macchio and Marisa Tomei, and featuring Fred Gwynne in his final role. The film deals with two young New Yorkers traveling through rural Alabama who are put on trial for a murder they did not commit, and the comedic attempts of a cousin, Vincent Gambini, a newly minted lawyer, to defend them.

Much of the humor comes from the contrasting personalities of the Italian American Vinny and his fiancee Mona Lisa, and the more somber Southern townspeople. Pesci and Tomei received vast critical praise for their performances, and Tomei won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress.

Additionally, Gwynne, who had long been typecast due to his role as Herman Munster in the television show The Munsters, received critical acclaim for his performance as the candidly human Judge Chamberlain Haller.[citation needed]

The cast also included Mitchell Whitfield, Lane Smith and Bruce McGill.

In the August 2008 edition of the American Bar Association Journal, My Cousin Vinny was rated #3 in their cover story listing of "The 25 Greatest Legal Movies", after To Kill a Mockingbird and 12 Angry Men.[1]

Contents

Plot

While driving through the fictional Beechum County, Alabama, on their way to visit UCLA, New Yorkers Billy Gambini (Macchio) and his friend Stan Rothenstein (Mitchell Whitfield) accidentally forget to pay for a can of tuna after stopping at a convenience store. After they leave the store, the clerk is shot and killed, and Billy and Stan, who match the descriptions of the murderers given by witnesses, are then pulled over and detained in connection with the murder. Due to circumstantial evidence and a series of miscommunications based on the boys' assumption that they have merely been detained for shoplifting, Billy ends up being charged with murder, and Stan is charged as an accessory.

The pair call Billy's mother, who tells her son that there is an attorney in the family, Billy's cousin, Vincent LaGuardia Gambini (Pesci), who travels to Beechum County accompanied by his fiancee, Mona Lisa Vito (Tomei). Unfortunately, although he is willing to take the case, Vinny is a neophyte personal injury lawyer from Brooklyn, New York, newly admitted to the bar (after six attempts and six years), with no trial experience whatsoever.

Although Vinny manages to fool the trial judge, Chamberlain Haller (Gwynne), about being experienced enough to take the case, his ignorance of basic court procedures and abrasive, disrespectful attitude towards the judge gets him into trouble immediately. Much to his clients' consternation, Vinny does not even bother to cross-examine any of the witnesses in the probable cause hearing. As their claims go unquestioned, it appears that the prosecution has an airtight case that will inevitably lead to a conviction at the trial. After Vinny's poor showing at the hearing, Billy and Stan decide to fire him and use the public defender John Gibbons (Austin Pendleton), but Vinny asks for a chance to question one witness to prove himself.

The trial then opens with Vinny representing his cousin and the public defender representing Stan. Despite some further missteps, including wearing an old-style long-tailed tuxedo to court (his suit fell in the mud and Judge Haller warned that Gambini had better be seen in court in a suit that had better be made out of cloth) and sleeping through the opening statement made by District Attorney Jim Trotter (Smith), Vinny shows that he can make up for his ignorance and inexperience with an aggressive, perceptive questioning style. While the public defender stutters through a line of ill-prepared questions that appear to bolster the case against the boys, Vinny quickly and comprehensively discredits the testimony of the first witness. Billy's faith is rewarded, and Stan yells out in court that he wants to retain Vinny after all.

Vinny's cross-examinations of the remaining eyewitnesses are similarly effective, but the DA produces a surprise witness: George Wilbur (James Rebhorn), an FBI analyst who testifies that his chemical analysis of the tire marks left at the crime scene shows that they are identical to the tires on Billy's Buick Skylark. Allowed only a brief recess to prepare his cross-examination and unable to come up with a particularly strong line of questions, Vinny becomes frustrated and sarcastically taunts Lisa about the usefulness of her wide-angle photographs of the tire tracks. She storms out, leaving Vinny alone. Moments later he later realizes that that photo actually holds the key to the case: the flat and even tire marks reveal that Billy's car could not have been used for the getaway. Vinny needs Lisa, an expert in automobiles, to testify to this. He drags her into court, and during Vinny's questioning, they patch up their differences.

Lisa proves Vinny's theory correct, as the pictures show that the getaway car had to have both a limited-slip differential and an independent rear suspension, and Lisa testifies that only two General Motors cars of similar vintage to Billy's Skylark offered both of these features; the Chevrolet Corvette (which, due to its well-known body shape, would not be mistaken for any other car) and the Pontiac Tempest (which is similar in body styling to Billy's Skylark). Vinny then recalls the FBI analyst, who concurs with Lisa that Billy's car did not produce the tracks. Next, Vinny calls the local sheriff, Dean Farley (McGill), who has run a records check at Vinny's request. The sheriff testifies that two men resembling Billy and Stan were arrested in Georgia driving a stolen Pontiac Tempest and in possession of a gun of the same caliber used to kill the clerk. Trotter then moves to dismiss all charges against Billy and Stan.

Throughout the film, Vinny and Judge Haller play a game of cat-and-mouse over Vinny's qualifications. Haller first discovers that, despite Vinny's claims that he tried "quite a few" murder cases, there exist no records of anybody named Vincent Gambini trying any case in New York State. Vinny then claims that he had his name changed during a previous career as a stage actor and continued to use the name when he opened a law practice. Vinny, believing that he should give the judge the name of someone with the kind of resume he claimed to have, supplies the name of a prominent New York attorney, Jerry Gallo. Unfortunately, Lisa reveals the source of Gallo's most recent publicity: he died the week before. Vinny then claims that Haller misheard "Gallo" when Vinny actually said "Callo". Finally, Lisa gets Vinny off the hook by calling his mentor, a judge from New York, who responds to Haller's request by claiming that Jerry Callo has a long and impressive trial history. The film concludes with Haller apologizing for doubting Vinny and praising his skills as a litigator. Vinny and Lisa then drive off together, arguing about plans for their wedding.

Filming locations

Sac-O-Suds convenience store is located on Georgia State Route 16 in Jasper County, Georgia, which is east of Jackson, Georgia. The courthouse is still in the town square of Monticello, Georgia. Dave's Barbecue and Sea Food (where Vinny and Lisa get in a fight near the end of the movie) is adjacent to the town square.

Shooting took place in and around Jasper and Putnam County, Georgia. Putnam General Motel where they first stay the night and then learn about grits in the morning is located on Highway 441 North in Putnam County outside of the town of Eatonton. The motel is still open but the restaurant is now closed and has been for a few years. The actual lumber plant that is supposed to be across the street from the Motel in the movie is actually the Georgia Pacific Plant in Jasper County Georgia. Sheriff Farley mentions that the two boys arrested in the Tempest were arrested in Jasper County, Georgia.

Reception

Box office

With a budget of $11,000,000, My Cousin Vinny was more successful than any had anticipated, grossing $52,929,168 domestically and $11,159,384 in the foreign markets, bringing its overall total to $64,088,552.

Awards

Marisa Tomei won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, the film's sole nomination, at the 65th Academy Awards in 1993. The film's director, Jonathan Lynn, later remarked that he wasn't the least bit surprised at either her nomination or her win.[citation needed]

Album

Pesci later reprised the Vincent LaGuardia Gambini character for his album, Vincent LaGuardia Gambini Sings Just for You, which contains the song "Hey, Cousin Vinny." The album cover portrays Pesci in a red suit similar to the "ridiculous" suit he wore in the film.

Cast

Actor Role
Joe Pesci Vincent LaGuardia "Vinny" Gambini
Ralph Macchio William Robert "Billy" Gambini
Marisa Tomei Mona Lisa Vito
Fred Gwynne Judge Chamberlain Haller
Mitchell Whitfield Stanley Marcus "Stan" Rothenstein
Lane Smith District Attorney Jim Trotter III

Austin Pendleton, Bruce McGill, and James Rebhorn also perform in supporting roles.

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "My Cousin Vinny" Read more

 

Mentioned in