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Worth Winning

 
Movies:

Worth Winning

  • Director: Will MacKenzie
  • AMG Rating: star
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Romantic Comedy
  • Themes: Playing the Field, Schemes and Ruses, Otherwise Engaged
  • Main Cast: Mark Harmon, Madeleine Stowe, Lesley Ann Warren, Maria Holvoe, Mark Blum
  • Release Year: 1989
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 103 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

A self-centered womanizer makes a wager that he will be able to propose to three women in a three month time and have each one accept in this romantic Philadelphia-set comedy. His three victims are an icy concert pianist, an innocent blonde receptionist for the Philadelphia Eagles, and a rich, horny hausfrau. The fellow plans to prove his success by videotaping each proposal. Sure enough he succeeds, but things quickly sour when the ladies find out that he's duped them. They then team up to get revenge and teach him a thing or two about real love. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

Cast

Andrea Martin - Claire Braudy; Tony Longo - Terry Childs; Alan Blumenfeld - Howard Larimore; Devin Ratray - Howard Larimore, Jr.; David Brenner - Celebrity Auctioneer; Jeff Benson - Football Player at Party; Russ Bolinger - Gus; Todd Cameron Brown - Owen Braudy; Catherine M. Cummings - Box Office Woman; Linda Dona - Lady at the Paddock; Brad Hall - Eric; Rick Hurst - Big Bouncin' Bob; Sanford Jensen - Bidding Man at Auction; Jon Korkes - Sam; Ben Kronen - Bidding Man at Auction; Emily Kuroda - Cory Chu; Shannon Lawrence - Chloe Braudy; Arthur Malet - Ticket Taker; Julie Merrill - Lady at the Paddock; Micah Rowe - Bryan; Joan Severance - Lizbette; John Walcutt - Chip; Meg Wyllie - Granny; Richard Price - Camera Operator; Paul M. Basta - Camera Operator; Thomas Bellin - Minister; Robert Gus Blue - Football Player at Party; Ian Bruce - Bidding Man at Auction; Francis J. D'Imperio - Kid in Volvo; Reggie Doss - Football Player at Party; Nancy Glass - Channel 8 Newscaster; Linden King - Football Player at Party; Cari Lightfoot - Ticket Seller; Robert Mayon - Sportscaster; Andrew McCullough - Stage Manager; William P. McManus - Kid in Volvo; Raymond J. Mullen - Kid in Volvo; Karen Newman - Amy; John Page - Football Player at Party; Dustin Perez - Kid in Volvo; John Sciarra - Football Player at Party; Marcy Shelton - Track Cashier; Samuel Shipman - Kid in Volvo; Phillip Simon - Maitre'd; Irv Waitsman - Camera Operator; Gerard J. Wilson - Video Tech; John Carter - Mr. Cooper; Dan Lee Clark - Football Player at Party

Credit

Jon Hutman - Art Director, Gil Friesen - Co-producer, Dale Pollock - Co-producer, Robert Blackman - Costume Designer, Will MacKenzie - Director, Sidney Wolinsky - Editor, Patrick Williams - Composer (Music Score), David Anderle - Musical Direction/Supervision, Lona Jeffers - Makeup, Lilly Kilvert - Production Designer, Adam Greenberg - Cinematographer, Tom Joyner - Producer, David F. Klassen - Set Designer, King Hernandez - Special Effects, Norman Howell - Stunts, Doug Coleman - Stunts, Josann McGibbon - Screenwriter, Sara Parriott - Screenwriter, Dan Lewandowski - Book Author

Similar Movies

1 2 3; The Bachelor; How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days; Can't Buy Me Love; She's All That; Dawg; Wedding Bell Blues
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Worth Winning

Movie Poster
Directed by Will Mackenzie
Produced by Neil Koenigsberg
Written by Josann McGibbon
Sara Parriott
Dan Lewandowski (novel)
Starring Mark Harmon
Madeleine Stowe
Lesley Ann Warren
Music by Patrick Williams
Cinematography Adam Greenberg
Editing by Sidney Wolinsky
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) 27 October 1989 (USA)
Running time 103 min.
Country  United States
Language English
Gross revenue $3,690,400 (USA)

Worth Winning is a 1989 film starring Mark Harmon and Madeleine Stowe, directed by Will Mackenzie. It was written by Josann McGibbon and Sara Parriott, based on the novel by Dan Lewandowski.

Contents

Tagline

"An engaging comedy about a bachelor and three near Mrs."

Plot

Taylor Worth is a devastatingly handsome and charming weatherman for a Philadelphia television station. A confirmed bachelor, he sees a lot of women and gains the envy of his closest friends.

One of them, Ned Broudy, offers Taylor a wager, that he cannot get three randomly chosen women to fall in love with him over a specified period of time and accept a proposal of marriage.

Taylor takes the bet, putting up his weekend cabin against a valuable painting that Ned and Clair Broudy own.

Clair knows nothing of the bet, so she is pleased when her husband fixes up Taylor with her friend Veronica Briskow, a concert pianist. Ned is sure that the haughty Veronica will have nothing in common with a shallow TV weatherman, but Taylor does find a way to attract her interest.

The remaining two women Taylor must persuade to fall in love with him are Erin Cooper, a sexy Philadelphia Eagles cheerleader, and Eleanor Larimore, an attractive older woman. The choice of Eleanor is a dirty trick on Ned's part, inasmuch as she is already married.

Eager to teach Ned a lesson, Taylor quickly seduces Erin, then proposes marriage to her in front of a hidden TV camera. This causes jealousy in her protective friend Tarry Childs, who plays for the football team, but he wants Erin to be happy. And although Taylor doesn't have many scruples, he refuses to sleep with Erin after learning she is still a virgin.

His next mission is Eleanor. It turns out she is unsatisfied at home and a willing participant when Taylor flirts with her while posing as a shoe salesman, engaging him in dangerous sex in public places. She, too, accepts Taylor's secretly filmed marriage proposal -- two down and one to go.

Veronica won't be easy. She is career-minded and not eager for marriage. Plus the sex between her and Taylor is surprisingly disappointing so far.

The more time they spend together, though, Taylor realizes he doesn't want to lose Veronica after the wager is won. He proposes at his cabin and she accepts. Clair is delighted, Ned devastated.

Then the real trouble begins. Taylor first needs to break it off with Erin, disappointing her desire to start a family, which he does by pretending to be impotent. Eleanor, alas, is enjoying her improved sex life and brags about it openly to Clair and Veronica.

It becomes clear that three women are seeing the same man. Taylor is dumped by his fiancees. Erin finds solace in the arms of her football player while Eleanor takes pleasure in Taylor's humiliation at being exposed for what he really is, but Veronica is genuinely heartbroken.

A broken man, Taylor tells his friend Ned to forget the bet. As a grand gesture, he makes a public apology to Veronica at a benefit auction in a giant hall, expressing his love and his desire to be with her for everybody to hear.

Principal cast

Actor Role
Mark Harmon Taylor Worth
Madeleine Stowe Veronica Briskow
Lesley Ann Warren Eleanor Larimore
Andrea Martin Clair Broudy
Tony Longo Tarry Childs
Maria Holvoe Erin Cooper
Mark Blum Ned Broudy

Critical reception

Janet Maslin of The New York Times does not write negatively about the acting but closes her review with the following about the direction and writing:

The screenplay, by Josann McGibbon and Sara Parriott, is sometimes a shade funnier than Will Mackenzie's direction, which is phenomenally flat. Mr. Mackenzie's idea of wit is to load the film with carrots, cigars and many other phallic objects, most of which get clipped or chopped. If Freud were here, he'd sue.[1]

References

External links


 
 

 

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