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The Out-of-Towners

 
Movies:

The Out-of-Towners

  • Director: Arthur Hiller
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Urban Comedy
  • Themes: Fish Out of Water, Nothing Goes Right, Culture Clash
  • Main Cast: Jack Lemmon, Sandy Dennis, Sandy Baron, Milt Kamen, Anne Meara, Robert Nichols
  • Release Year: 1969
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 98 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: G

Plot

Ohio businessman Jack Lemmon is offered a golden job opportunity; all he has to do is relocate himself and wife Sandy Dennis to New York City. What follows has led some critics to complain that playwright Neil Simon has written a "hate letter" to Manhattan. Within a 36 hour period, the couple (a) loses their airplane luggage; (b) are forced to travel from Boston to New York in a greasy old train; ( c ) can't get any sort of service because virtually everyone in Fun City is on strike; (d) are mugged twice, once while they're asleep; (e) are reduced to sleeping on Central Park benches in their day clothes.....and so it goes, until the shabby, disheveled Lemmon tells his prospective bosses off, and he and his wife head back to Ohio---- almost. Punctuated by Sandy Dennis' plaintive "Oh, my Gawwwwd", The Out of Towners tightens the screws and ups the ante on the classic "comedy of errors" formula. Filmed on location, the picture features a who's who of character actors (Milt Kamen, Anne Meara, Phil Bruns, Dolph Sweet, Richard Libertini, Paul Dooley, Robert Walden, Ron Carey etc. etc. etc.) When first shown on network television, the film was shorn of its closing punchline because of an eccentric censorship rule. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Ann Prentiss - Airline Stewardess; Ron Carey - Cab Driver; Philip Bruns - Officer Meyers; Graham Jarvis - Murray, the mugger; Ray Ballard - Attendant; Paul Dooley - Day Porter; Maxwell Glanville - Redcap; Anthony Holland - Desk clerk, night; Paul Jabara - lst Hippie; Jon Korkes - Looter; Richard Libertini - Railway Porter, Boston; Carlos Montalban - Vargas; Dolph Sweet - Police Sergeant; Robert Walden - Second Burglar; Billy Dee Williams - Man in Lost Property Office; Robert King - Agent in Boston; Johnny Brown - Waiter on Train

Credit

Charles Bailey - Art Director, Walter Tyler - Art Director, Forrest T. Butler - Costume Designer, Grace Harris - Costume Designer, Peter R. Scoppa - First Assistant Director, Arthur Hiller - Director, Fred A. Chulack - Editor, Quincy Jones - Composer (Music Score), Clay Lambert - Makeup, Armand Delmar - Makeup, Andrew Laszlo - Cinematographer, Paul Nathan - Producer, Arthur Jeph Parker - Set Designer, Dennis L. Maitland - Sound/Sound Designer, Neil Simon - Screenwriter, Neil Simon - Play Author

Similar Movies

Barefoot in the Park; Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number!; The Grass Is Always Greener over the Septic Tank; The Heartbreak Kid; National Lampoon's Vacation; A New Leaf; Quick Change; Avanti!; Leon The Pig Farmer; Permette? Rocco Papaleo; Fumo Di Londra; Planes, Trains and Automobiles; Bon Voyage!
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Wikipedia: The Out-of-Towners (1970 film)
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The Out-of-Towners

promotional poster
Directed by Arthur Hiller
Produced by Paul Nathan
Written by Neil Simon
Starring Jack Lemmon
Sandy Dennis
Music by Quincy Jones
Cinematography Andrew Laszlo
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) May 28, 1970
Running time 98 min.
Language English
Budget $3,500,000 (estimated)

The Out-of-Towners is a 1970 comedy film written by Neil Simon, directed by Arthur Hiller, and starring Jack Lemmon and Sandy Dennis. It was released by Paramount Pictures on May 28, 1970.

Much of the film's humor is derived from the interaction between George, the manic husband desperately collecting the names of everyone he encounters with plans to sue every last one of them, and Gwen, the mousy wife who accepts each new indignation with quiet resignation.

A number of comic actors, including Anne Meara, Sandy Baron, Ann Prentiss, Paul Dooley, and Anthony Holland, were cast in small supporting roles.

Both Lemmon and Dennis were nominated for Golden Globe awards in the comedy acting categories. Simon's screenplay won him the Writers Guild of America award for Best Comedy Written Directly for the Screen.

The movie was remade with Steve Martin and Goldie Hawn in 1999.

Contents

Origins

Originally, playwright Neil Simon planned his tale of a suburban Ohio couple's misadventures in New York City to be one of a quartet of vignettes in his Broadway play Plaza Suite. However, he quickly realized the comic possibilities were numerous enough to warrant a full-length treatment, and the action was more suitable for the screen than the stage. During filming in the spring of 1969, Hiller took full advantage of Manhattan, including Grand Central Station, Central Park, and the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in his location shooting, and substituting MacArthur Airport in Islip, New York, for the Twin Oaks, Ohio, air terminal.

Plot

The plot revolves around Gwen and George Kellerman, whose company has offered him a job promotion in New York City. From the moment they depart their home town of Twin Oaks, Ohio, the couple suffers nearly every indignity out-of-towners possibly could experience: Heavy fog forces their flight to circle around Kennedy Intl. Airport repeatedly and finally be rerouted to Boston's Logan Airport, where they discover their luggage - in which George's ulcer medication and Gwen's extra cash are packed - was left behind. Just missing the train at South Station, they chase it to the next stop by cab, board it and wait two hours for seats in the dining car, only to discover the only food left are peanut butter sandwiches, green olives, and crackers. Upon arrival at Grand Central Terminal in New York, penniless, they discover that mass transit, cab drivers, and sanitation workers all are on strike. Making their way to the Waldorf-Astoria on foot past tons of garbage in a torrential downpour, they discover their reservation - guaranteed for a 10:00pm arrival - has been given away, and the hotel - like every other one in the city - is booked to capacity due to the strikes. What follows is a series of calamities that includes two muggings (one while they sleep in Central Park), kidnapping by armed liquor store robbers while the Kellermans are riding in a police car, a cracked tooth, broken high heels, accusations of child molestation, an exploding manhole cover, expulsion from a church, and an attack by protestors in front of the Cuban embassy. With each successive catastrophe, George angrily writes down each perpetrator's name and promises to sue them or their company when he returns home. The only thing that goes right for George is he somehow manages to arrive on time for his interview. Despite receiving a very lucrative offer, the two realize an upwardly mobile move to the big city is not what they truly cherish and desire for themselves or their family, and they make the decision to return to Ohio, only to be subjected to one more major catastrophe -- their flight home is hijacked to Cuba.

Cast

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