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Melvin and Howard
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Directed by Jonathan Demme.
Jonathan Demme's breakthrough movie featured the shaggy energy and affection for marginal American eccentrics that marked his earlier Citizens Band (1977) and such later films as Something Wild (1986) and Married to the Mob (1988). Melvin Dummar (Paul LeMat) is a barely-getting-by Nevada milkman. One day in the early 1970s, while driving down a lonely highway, Melvin picks up a shaggy, bearded bum (Jason Robards Jr.) and offers him a ride into town. Melvin gives the bum a quarter at the end of the ride, and that, so far as Melvin is concerned, is that. The story goes off on a new tangent, involving the on-and-off marriage between Dummar and his contest-happy wife Lynda (Mary Steenburgen). During one of the multitude of financial crises endured by the Dummars, Melvin discovers that the tramp he picked up was none other than billionaire Howard Hughes -- and when Hughes dies, Melvin inherits $150 million. The movie's wide acclaim included Oscars for Steenburgen and Goldman's script and New York Film Critics Awards in almost all major categories, including Best Picture and awards for Demme, Goldman, Steenburgen, and Robards. Demme would gain even greater attention in the 1990s as the director of The Silence of the Lambs (1991) and Philadelphia (1993). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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JimBellJimBell Melvin and Howard
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
loved it.
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"Melvin and Howard generally has a place in my top ten movies. It is the story of how multi-millionaire Howard Hughes left $156 million to a magnesium bag packer, milk delivery man, and gas station attendant named Melvin Dummar—or maybe the will was a forgery. Jason Robarts plays a lonely and complex Howard whom Melvin rescues from a desert motorcycle accident. Mary Steenburgen is wonderful as Melvin’s ditzy wife who criticizes him for being an impractical dreamer while she keeps leaving him and supporting herself in strip clubs. Besides the excellent performances, the movie is driven by an earnest desire to give the real Melvin his due, as the movie was shot on-site in Nevada, California, and Utah. Ultimately, this warm, charming, sad, and funny movie is about being working poor in America. It should ring true today. In the 1960s the average CEO of a company earned about 35 times as much as the person on the factory floor; today a CEO earns about 1,000 times as much. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
One critic called Jonathan Demme's wistful, strange comedy "an almost flawless act of sympathetic imagination" and compared it to Jean Renoir directing a script by Preston Sturges. Actually, it was the fertile imagination of screenwriter Bo Goldman that concocted the story of Melvin Dummar (Paul LeMat), a Nevada milkman who picks up reclusive billionaire hitchhiker Howard Hughes (Jason Robards Jr.). According to this woolly tale, Dummar later inherits $150 million when Hughes dies. Goldman and Mary Steenburgen, who played Dummar's contest-obsessed wife, won Oscars for this slice of eccentric American life, which put Demme on the map as a director. It was his first big-budget job, and he infused plenty of whimsy and picaresque touches, helped greatly by Robards's and LeMat's off-kilter performances. It presaged by a few years Demme's similarly colorful road movie, Something Wild. ~ Michael Betzold, All Movie Guide
 



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