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Funny Money
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Directed by Leslie Greif
Leslie Greif directs this adaptation of Ray Cooney's hit British play, a throwback farce about mistaken identity. Chevy Chase plays Henry Perkins, a listless late-middle-aged executive in a wax fruit company; his wife, Carol (Penelope Ann Miller), is similarly bored, a struggling sculptor and housewife in Hoboken, NJ. On his way home from work to a surprise birthday party Carol is throwing, he accidentally switches briefcases with a Russian mobster. He opens the suitcase at a local bar and discovers five million dollars inside. He rushes home and tries to arrange a flight to Barcelona for Carol and him so they can take the money and run. Detective Sergeant Genero (Armand Assante) shows up later; he saw Henry at the bar and is suspicious of his actions. The Perkins, along with their friends Vic and Gina Johnson (Christopher McDonald and Alex Meneses), concoct an elaborate plan to fool the detective, which is only complicated by Carol getting sloppy drunk, the arrival of a homicide detective (Kevin Sussman), a famous gallery owner (Rebecca Wisocky), Henry's boss (Robert Loggia), a frustrated standup comic cabbie (Guy Torry), two more identical briefcases, and the party guests. The comic action reaches a climax in a standoff with Mafia kingpin Mr. Big (Zoltan Butuc). ~ All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Leslie Greif creates Funny Money as an homage to ridiculous '60s comedies by directors like Blake Edwards, complete with an animated opening-credits sequence. And while the jokes at times seem just as old and the staging a bit stiff, it achieves a modicum of success through its persistent silliness and harmless good will. After a needlessly drawn-out setup, the action starts to pick up steam once Henry brings the suitcase home and the pile-up of comic complications begins. The interior of the apartment is clearly a soundstage and the action shot from a flat, theatrical point-of-view. This may have been a deliberate attempt to mimic studio comedies, but a more filmic approach and less clunky editing would speed the story along at a livelier pace. Chevy Chase is similarly stilted as Henry, which suits his character, but that doesn't mean he couldn't have worked more humor into his characterization. Penelope Ann Miller and Alex Meneses compensate with energetic what-the-hell performances, precisely what's needed for such a production. The most quietly effective role belongs to Kevin Sussman, who imbues his nervous Nelly homicide detective with just the right mix of fumbling foolery and professional proficiency, like Inspector Clouseau's slightly more competent little brother. ~ Michael Buening, All Movie Guide
 

Community ratings

mavens
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most people
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Other opinions

lopezdash
lopezdash
liked it.
apillarofash
apillarofash
is neutral about it.
onelove
onelove
is neutral about it.
stuntman_James
stuntman_James
lost interest.
achance42
achance42
is not interested.
SkyPilot
SkyPilot
is not interested.