Paul Bongard is a young tv commercial producer who has an affair with his female boss and her teenage daughter.Paul Bongard is a young tv commercial producer who has an affair with his female boss and her teenage daughter.Paul Bongard is a young tv commercial producer who has an affair with his female boss and her teenage daughter.
Thomas Ruisinger
- Travel Agent
- (as Tom Ruisinger)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaJoanna Cameron said she didn't find out her role required nudity until after she was cast. It took her by surprise. Producers told her they assumed she'd be fine with it. Fortunately, she was. Living in California she had visited nude beaches several times and she'd even posed nude as a model. In a 2003 interview, she said that what she did was pretty tame compared to the full nudity she'd seen in other movies. When it came time to undress on set, she ignored the fact that there was a room full of mostly guys staring at her and she just focused on her acting.
- Quotes
Paul Bongard: [in slow motion] Where's the boat?
Paul's father: [in Paul's mind] You missed it... son.
- Alternate versionsThe version that runs on the Fox Movie Channel is cut by 10 minutes.
- ConnectionsReferenced in P.S. I Love You (2007)
- SoundtracksOrdinary Man
Music and Lyrics by Mark Shekter
Featured review
It has been a long time since I have seen this and can't remember much of it. However, I just wanted to respond to the other person that posted thinking it wasn't much of a satire of advertising. To today's audience it may not seem so, but at the time I think it was considered pretty cutting within the industry as the people portrayed were recognizable parodies of well-known people in the field. For example the character played by Joanna Barnes would seem to me to absolutely be based on Mary Wells Lawrence (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Wells_Lawrence).
It definitely was not the first film to satire advertising and others may have been earlier and better (Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?) but at the time, it was exploring a theme that might still be considered if not cutting edge, not yet done to death.
It definitely was not the first film to satire advertising and others may have been earlier and better (Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?) but at the time, it was exploring a theme that might still be considered if not cutting edge, not yet done to death.
- xtopherson
- Jun 4, 2009
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- Blöde Sch.... I love you
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