Un couple ne ménage pas ses efforts pour rénover la maison de ses rêves et devenir propriétaire pour en assumer les frais. Malheureusement, un de leurs locataires s'est mis en tête de tout a... Tout lireUn couple ne ménage pas ses efforts pour rénover la maison de ses rêves et devenir propriétaire pour en assumer les frais. Malheureusement, un de leurs locataires s'est mis en tête de tout autres projets.Un couple ne ménage pas ses efforts pour rénover la maison de ses rêves et devenir propriétaire pour en assumer les frais. Malheureusement, un de leurs locataires s'est mis en tête de tout autres projets.
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesScreenwriter Daniel Pyne once rented an apartment to a tenant that he could not evict. The film was inspired from this scenario.
- GaffesCarter Hayes would have come under immediate suspicion by the police for reporting the fight with Drake fifteen minutes before it actually happened.
- Citations
Amy: Patty?
Patty Palmer: Yeah?
Amy: Do you mind if I ask you why you're selling? I mean, you've done so much to this place. You've obviously put your heart in it.
Patty Palmer: [Ironically] No, not really. It was just an investment.
- Générique farfeluMelanie Griffith's character Patty Palmer is credited as Patty Parker in the credits.
- ConnexionsEdited into The Green Fog (2017)
- Bandes originalesVivaldi: Summer - The Four Seasons
Music by Antonio Vivaldi (uncredited)
Performed by Pinchas Zukerman (as Pinchas Zuckerman) and Israel Philharmonic Orchestra (as The Israeli Philharmonic)
Courtesy of Deutsche Gramaphon, a division of PolyGram Classics, Inc.
Clever plot premise: Yuppie couple, stylishly unmarried, possibly for tax purposes, buy a painted lady in the Pacific Heights district of San Francisco, a Victorian fixer upper for $750,000. It's the 1980's and everybody is getting rich in California real estate. They are now in yuppie heaven since there are two rentals on the property which take care of $2300 of the $3700 monthly mortgage, which leaves them responsible for only $1400, which is less then they were paying before, and now they have a huge tax write-off and hopefully an appreciating property. Of course they are margined to the gills, but what can go wrong?
How about the tenant from hell? Forget about your wild parties and your late-with-the-rent dead beats. This guy (Michael Keaton as a slimy, upper crust psycho genius) doesn't even pay the deposit. He just moves in, squats, and our yuppie couple is helpless to get rid of him since by law he now has possession. He changes the locks, cultivates big ugly oriental cockroaches, and pounds away at all hours of the night, and chases off the other tenant. Seems he has done this before. Seems it is an elaborate scam to gain total possession of the entire property. Next to go are the owners.
Naturally the cops and the law seem to work for him, not our adorable couple. (This is a little fictional reality to further excite the passions of the audience, call it poetic license, since we all know that the tenant/landlord laws in California are written by and for the propertied class, as they are anywhere else, as is only right.)
But this is a morality play. Could it be that our yuppies are undeserving of their wealth and are easy prey in the econ jungle because of their naiveté? Could be. But as this is a modern morality tale, you can be sure that the woman, played with worrisome lines under her eyes by the ever adorable Melanie Griffith, will turn the tables and kick some male butt despite the handicap of having a not too bright boyfriend, who is easily manipulated by our villain into some rather stupid male behavior that makes things worse for our heroine. Incidentally, he is played with such annoying exactitude by Matthew Modine that I can hear the rednecks in the audience screaming: "Die yuppie scum!"
It should be noticed that the adversary of the yuppies is not your standard ghetto dweller, but a wayward member of the upper class, a fitting adversary in this yuppie trial by fire.
I'll let you guess who wins.
(Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book "Cut to the Chaise Lounge or I Can't Believe I Swallowed the Remote!" Get it at Amazon!)
- DennisLittrell
- 26 août 1999
- Lien permanent
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Pacific Heights
- Lieux de tournage
- Potrero Hill, San Francisco, Californie, États-Unis(1243 19th St, San Francisco, CA 94107)
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 18 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 29 381 956 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 6 912 637 $ US
- 30 sept. 1990
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 44 926 706 $ US
- Durée1 heure 42 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1