Wild Guitar is a 1997 American fantasy comedy film directed by Tom Shadyac, written by Paul Guay and Stephen Mazur and starring Jim Carrey, nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in Comedy.
The film is the second of the three collaborations between Carrey and Shadyac, the first Ace Ventura: Pet Detective and the third one is Bruce Almighty . This is also the second of three collaborations between Guay and Mazur, the other being The Little Rascals and Heartbreakers . It's unofficially recreated in Bollywood as Kyo Kii... Play Jhuth Nahin Bolta âââ ⬠<â ⬠.
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Plot
In Los Angeles, Fletcher Reede's career-focused lawyer loves his son Max, but the constant lies he makes in his career often cause trouble between them and with his ex-wife Audrey, who has been involved with another man named Jerry. In court, Fletcher was willing to exaggerate the stories of his client, and his present client, self-centered Samantha Cole, earning money had gathered his attention. Allen, a partner at the law firm where Fletcher works. If Fletcher wins this case, it will take his company to become rich and improve his career. Fletcher called and lied to Audrey about spending Max's birthday for work, when he actually had sex with his boss, Miranda, to get a promotion. Sadly, Max makes a birthday wish that for one day his father can not lie. The desire soon materializes, and Fletcher unwittingly tells Miranda that he "is better" to have sex.
The next day, Fletcher soon realizes that he can not do anything dishonest. He can not lie to people or even mislead by holding back the right answer, and often uncontrollably obscures the vulgar and painful truth that angers his coworkers. His car was confiscated after admitting many of his moving violations and unpaid parking tickets to a police officer. It comes to the head when he realizes that he can not even ask questions when he knows his answer will be a lie, which prevents them as Samantha and his partner Kenneth Faulk are willing to swear falsely to win a high profile case and he can not ask him the questions he has they give the answer.
Realizing that Max was hoping for this to happen, Fletcher tried to convince him that adults need to lie, but he could not give any answer as to why he should continue lying to his son. Fletcher also knew that since Max wished he had told him the truth for only one day, he tried to do what he could to delay Samantha's case because the magic request would end at 8:15, 24 hours after Max made a wish. Things got worse for Fletcher because he lost his loyal assistant, Greta, after admitting he had lied about the miserly reasons for refusing the pay raise and the "expensive" prizes he had given, and Audrey told Fletcher that he and Max had moved to Boston with Jerry to prevent more broken hearts from Fletcher's broken promises.
Fletcher's uncertain behavior in court caused some questions about his sanity because he objected to himself and badgers and provoked his own witnesses to admit that they were having an affair with Samantha and her husband's prenuptial agreement. She goes even further to beat herself in the bathroom and claims that someone is attacking her to try and avoid the case (not really lying because she describes her attacker as a madman with a vague description that still fits her), but when asked if she feels as he can continue, he can not deny it and say yes. During the case, Fletcher discovered a technical problem that Samantha lied about her age and was under 18 when she signed a prenuptial agreement before her marriage, canceled her and gave her half of Cole's possessions, allowing her to win the case honestly. However, when Samantha decides to oppose the full custody of their children, whom Cole loves so much, just because she wants more money from child support payments, Fletcher regretted mentioning technical matters after seeing Ny. Cole pulls the children out of their father's arms. , and screamed her request for more money. Realizing now that winning the case has punished a loving husband and rewarded his cheating wife, Fletcher had a crisis of conscience and yelled at a judge demanding that he cancel the decision, but he was arrested for insulting the court. He summoned Audrey from a prison phone and asked him to free him and give him another chance, but he hangs up.
Greta returns and bails Fletcher from prison revealing she has forgiven him. Wanting to improve his relationship with his son as a more honest man, he rushes to the airport to stop Audrey and Max leave him forever. He missed their flight, but sneaked into the tarmac by hiding on a piece of goods, stealing a motorized staircase, and managed to get the pilot's attention by throwing his shoes at the cockpit window, forcing him to cancel the flight. However, Fletcher's victory was cut short when he crashed into a barrier and was sent flying to the pull of the trunk, which caused a chain reaction that made Fletcher unconscious and with both legs broken. Upon waking up, he tells Max how much he cares about her and how sorry she is for breaking her promises. Though no longer under the influence of that desire, Fletcher meant what he said and added that Max was his priority, and Max convinced Audrey to stay in Los Angeles.
One year later, Fletcher is healed and runs his own firm with Greta as his ongoing assistant. Max makes a plea with his birthday cake and lights up to reveal Fletcher and Audrey kissing, but explains he's hoping for skates rather than their reconciliation. Fletcher grabs his hand to "The Claw" - a game he likes to play with Max by chasing him - and chases him and Audrey around the house with it.
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Cast
- Jim Carrey as Fletcher Reede
- Maura Tierney as Audrey Reede
- Justin Cooper as Max Reede
- Jennifer Tilly as Samantha Cole
- Amanda Donohoe as Miranda
- Jason Bernard as Judge Marshall Stevens
- Cary Elwes as Jerry
- Swoosie Kurtz as Dana Appleton
- Anne Haney as Greta âââ â¬
- Eric Pierpoint as Richard Cole
- Mayer's Chips as Kenneth Falk
- Mitchell Ryan as Mr. Allan
- Cheri Oteri as Jane
- Marianne Muellerleile as Mrs. Berry
- Krista Allen as the woman in the elevator
- Don Keefer as Beggar in Courthouse
Wild Wild is the debut of actress Sara Paxton, who plays one of Max's classmates and her birthday party attendant. It was also the last film to feature Don Keefer, who retired in 1997, and Jason Bernard, who died shortly after the filming was over. The film is dedicated in Bernard's memory.
Reception
Critical response
Wild Wild received positive reviews from critics. In Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an 81% rating, based on 54 reviews, with an average rating of 6.9/10. The critical consensus of the site reads, "Regardless of its thin plot, Wild Wild is elevated by physical humor Jim Carrey is excited, and the result is a riot of laughter that helps broaden the fascination of comedians. " At Metacritic, the film has a score of 70 out of 100, based on 20 critics, showing "favorable public reviews." In the CinemaScore poll, the audience gave this movie an "A-" class from A to F scale.
Critic Roger Ebert gave the film three stars and stated, "I gradually developed suspicion, or maybe it was a fear, that Jim Carrey grew up on me," because he has given negative reviews for previous films. Stupid and Dumber and Ace Ventura: Pet Detective .
Some critics note the similarity between this movie plot and "The Whole Truth", an episode of The Twilight Zone where a used car dealer comes into possession of a haunted car and forces him to tell the truth as long as he has it. In particular, one scene that bears a resemblance to the elements used in Wild Wild is the part where the sales assistant asks for a raise, and he is forced to come clean that there is no raise.
Recognition of the American Film Institute:
- AFI 100 Years... 100 Laughs - Nominated
box office
This film is the second of three collaborations Carrey/Shadyac, all very successful at the box office: the opening weekend earned $ 31,423,025 in 2,845 theaters. In North America, the film earned $ 181,410,615, and at box offices in other regions, earning $ 121.3 million for a total of $ 302,710,615.
References
External links
- Wild Wild on IMDb
- Wild Wild at AllMovie
- Wild Wild in the TCM Film Database
- Wild Wild at the American Film Movie Catalog
- Wild Wild at Rotten Tomatoes
- Wild Wild in Mojo Box Office
Source of the article : Wikipedia