Lazy, womanizing Jack gets employed at the NYC HQ of the multinational conglomerate, INC. Crazy chaos, promotions, firings, suicides etc. seem to be the way of the day.Lazy, womanizing Jack gets employed at the NYC HQ of the multinational conglomerate, INC. Crazy chaos, promotions, firings, suicides etc. seem to be the way of the day.Lazy, womanizing Jack gets employed at the NYC HQ of the multinational conglomerate, INC. Crazy chaos, promotions, firings, suicides etc. seem to be the way of the day.
- Colonel Tolliver
- (as Brian Doyle Murray)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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The cast, as a whole, is first rate. Judge Reinhold is the recent business school graduate courted by the massive INC Corporation for his Senator father's favors. As a result, he manages to get promoted repeatedly no matter how badly he screws up. He winds up doing the right thing just to stay alive. This is one of those movies that offers me moments when I can't catch my breath from laughing. I have seen it a number of times and the Rick Moranas conversation with his Mercedes dealer almost kills me every time. It has a number of very subtle corporate digs that will make you laugh till you cry if you catch them as they whiz by.
Overall rating: 7 out of 10.
Danny De Vito is excellent as a manager who has been forced to jump to his early fall from an office window; Don Novello as the car driver with a taste for Julio Iglessias; Judge Rheinhold playing Jack Issel is great as the son of a congressman; Rick Moranis as a PR head is also great especially with the delivery of the line "I love this business" as he is checking his blood pressure; as is Jane Seymour, offering the line, after making love to a colleague: 'I wouldn't be much if a screwed my way to the bottom."
Great movie all round. I specially liked the line "we make everything from toilet paper to nuclear power plants."
You will certainly enjoy this one!
By no means a great, or more than mildly entertaining, movie In other words a Judd H. trademark flick. HOWEVER, many of the scenes have haunted me since first seeing it upon its debut, never to see it again since.
Certain scenes and lines are incredible funny, or perverse: especially Eddie Albert's president. The board meetings are all incredible funny. Albert's reaction at a board meeting to a anti-government bombing of "Mr. Chicken" franchises results in a speech that is completely absurd, and yet it differs very little from the speeches given by real business leaders and politicians who link what is now called "globalization" with the exercise of human rights.
Devito IS also good, but in a side story. And Don King spouts wonderful nonsense, ignored by everyone, in a cameo made during the brief period he, and his hairstyle, were seen as charmingly wacky.
It is worth seeing, should you run across it and do not expect too much.
Did you know
- Trivia[00:08:23]When Frank Stedman (Danny DeVito) is looking at the article about him being investigated for illegally selling shares of stocks, the photo in the paper of him is actually a still photo of his Louie De Palma character from the television series ''Taxi'' (1978-1983).
- Goofs[25:38]When Jack is first shown his new office in Complaints, the name plate by his door appears and disappears between shots.
- Quotes
Don King: Mr. Chairman, we are a company on the move. I have two mega stocks and a super promotional idea that can bring INC from $500 million, to $1 billion in gross revenue. That is not about white power, nor is it about black power. It's about green power! Money! M-O-N-E-Y! We're talking about geometric progression. One... four... eight... 16... the numbers boggle the mind! So in conclusion, all we have to do is to get off the dime, and put this show on the road. Thank you very much.
- Alternate versionsThe TV network version has various additional scenes which include:
- Jack walking across a basketball court and shooting a basket with some player friends of his while on his way to his first day at INC.
- Additional bit of dialog between Helms and General Toliver in the helicopter.
- A scene of Jack buying a Rolling Stones magazine at a corner news stand and the first introduction Robert Hoover and Al Kennedy bickering about Helms.
- Additional dialog between Jack and Jane in her office telling him that "information is power."
- Another bit of dialog where Kennedy discuses INC's plans for a proxy fight over a company called West Oil during the board meeting in which Helms disagrees.
- Helms detailing INC's strengths in another bit while discussing an unpaid phone bill over a client.
- Kennedy telling Jane about him quitting INC and his plan for asking Helms to join a Los Angeles office during the board meeting scene with the little German-speaking man.
- Additional scene of Jack first arriving at Helms' house and a frantic Kennedy trying to talk to Helms during his morning jog around his back garden about an Los Angeles job and being set upon by a guard dog as well as treading across a reflecting pond to keep up with him.
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Big Kahuna (1999)
- SoundtracksCry On Your Own Shoulder
Performed by General Public
Written by General Public
Produced by General Public and Greg Ladanyi
Courtesy of I.R.S. Records and Virgin Records
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- $9,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $3,393,807
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $1,937,934
- Jan 5, 1986
- Gross worldwide
- $3,393,807
- Runtime
- 1h 30m(90 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1