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Popi

 
Movies:

Popi

  • Director: Arthur Hiller
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Satire, Domestic Comedy
  • Themes: Fathers and Sons, Immigrant Life, Cons and Scams
  • Main Cast: Alan Arkin, Rita Moreno, Miguel Alejandro, Ruben Figueroa, John Harkins
  • Release Year: 1969
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 115 minutes

Plot

Striving for a better life for his two sons, a Puerto Rican immigrant named Popi (Alan Arkin) goes about his mission in a singularly eccentric fashion in this comedy from director Arthur Hiller. So intent is Harlem resident Abraham "Popi" Rodriguez (Arkin) upon providing his boys with the American dream, that he puts off marrying his beautiful girlfriend Lupe (Rita Moreno) in order to carry out the mother of all harebrained schemes. After instructing his boys how to row with lessons in Central Park, Popi takes them to Florida and sets them adrift on the ocean, knowing that two cute "refugees from Cuba" seeking asylum in the U.S. will become celebrity cases and probably be adopted by rich WASP's. Popi's plan works like a charm, with his sons even earning an audience with the president, but a visit to the hospital where they're recovering from their ordeal at sea sinks his big plans. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide

Cast

Joan Tompkins - Miss Musto; Anthony Holland - Pickett; Arny Freeman - Mr. Diaz; Barbara Dana - Receptionist; Antonia Rey - Mrs. Cruz; Arnold Soboloff - Dr. Perle; Victor Junquera - Novitas Man; Gladys Velez - Silvia; Anita Dangler - Nurse; Judith Lowry - Old Lady

Credit

Robert Gundlach - Art Director, Albert Wolsky - Costume Designer, Peter R. Scoppa - First Assistant Director, Arthur Hiller - Director, Anthony Ciccolini - Editor, Dominic Frontiere - Composer (Music Score), Dominic Frontiere - Songwriter, Norman Gimbel - Songwriter, Mike Maggi - Makeup, Andrew Laszlo - Cinematographer, Herbert B. Leonard - Producer, Tina Pine - Screenwriter, Les Pine - Screenwriter

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Wikipedia: Popi
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Popi

Original poster
Directed by Arthur Hiller
Produced by Herbert B. Leonard
Written by Tina Pine
Lester Pine
Starring Alan Arkin
Rita Moreno
Music by Dominic Frontiere
Cinematography Andrew Laszlo
Editing by Anthony Ciccolini
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s) May 27, 1969
Running time 113 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Popi is a 1969 American comedy-drama film directed by Arthur Hiller. The screenplay by Tina Pine and Lester Pine focuses on a Puerto Rican widower struggling to raise his two young sons in the New York City neighborhood known as Spanish Harlem.

Contents

Plot

Abraham Rodriguez, known as Popi to his sons Luis and Junior, supports them by working three jobs, leaving him little time to supervise them. He hopes to earn enough to marry his girlfriend Lupe and move the family into a better home in Brooklyn. Realizing his boys have a better chance of making good as political refugees than products of the ghetto in which he is raising them, he plots to set them adrift in a rowboat off the coast of Miami Beach in the hope they will be mistaken for escapees from Cuba and offered asylum. After teaching them how to row a boat in the lake in Central Park and how to handle a motorboat on the East River, they depart for Florida.

Popi steals a boat and tells the boys to take it out until they run out of fuel, then remove the outboard motor and begin to row back to shore. When he is unable to alert the Coast Guard to their plight, he fears they are lost until he hears a report about the heroic rescue of two young "Cuban" boys. Luis and Junior, suffering from dehydration and severe sunburn, are hospitalized, and soon find themselves indundated with flowers and toys from thousands of well-wishers, many of whom offer to adopt them. Wearing a disguise, Popi sneaks into their hospital room and tries to convince them they are better off being raised by wealthy parents. The three begin to argue loudly, alerting the staff and prompting Popi to flee, followed by his sons. Much to the relief of the boys, their hoax is exposed, and they happily return to their impoverished life in the barrio with their loving father.

Cast

Critical reception

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times said the film "splits apart in the middle. The first half, set in New York, is rich and warm, filled with the flavor of city life. The second half, involving the Florida plan, functions only on the level of TV situation comedy. It is simply not believable . . . That is not to say that Popi isn't an engaging movie. It is, largely because the kids were well cast and because of Arkin." [1]

Variety observed, "Arkin is given too much free rein for his very personal style, and is sometimes guilty of working a scene, meant to be poignant or even dramatic, for a laugh, which he usually gets. The undecided mood of the film works against it for any lasting impression on the viewer." [2]

Awards and nominations

For the second year in a row, Alan Arkin won the Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actor, after being honored the previous year for his performance in The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter. He was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama but lost to John Wayne in True Grit.

Tina Pine and Lester Pine were nominated for the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Original Screenplay but lost to William Goldman for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.

DVD release

The film was released on DVD in fullscreen format on April 1, 2003. It has audio tracks in English and Spanish and subtitles in English, Spanish, and French.

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 "Popi" Read more