The Big Bounce (2004 film)
The Big Bounce is a 2004 American comedy heist film starring Owen Wilson, Charlie Sheen, Sara Foster and Morgan Freeman. It was directed by George Armitage and based on the 1969 novel of the same name by Elmore Leonard. Leonard's novel had previously been adapted for the big screen in a 1969 film of the same name directed by Alex March and starring Ryan O'Neal. PlotJack Ryan, a surfer and small-time thief, has a fight with the intimidating Lou Harris, involving a baseball bat. Harris is a foreman on a Hawaii construction site run by duplicitous millionaire Ray Ritchie. When Jack is released from jail, both the police and Ritchie's business partner, Bob Rogers Jr., tell Jack to leave the island. However, Judge Walter Crewes takes a liking to Jack and offers him a place to stay and a job as a handyman at a small resort of beach-front bungalows that he owns. Jack has treacherous encounters with Harris and Rogers Jr., on numerous occasions. Ritchie has all his (substantial) property registered in the name of his wife, Alison. He is also cheating on her with a much younger woman, Nancy Hayes. When Nancy takes an interest in Jack, the Judge warns him that she likes "the criminal type" and cannot be trusted. Jack is falling for Nancy, and they break into houses for fun and profit. Nancy suggests to Jack a scheme to steal $200,000 that Ritchie is keeping for bribes and mob business. She arranges for him to sneak into Ritchie's house to steal the money from his safe. Jack arrives to find Ritchie face down motionless and his friend Frank shot and lifeless (although he does jump up and run off moments after he's hit the ground, only wounded superficially). In a conspiracy with Alison, Nancy has set up Jack to be Ritchie's "killer", with Alison to shoot him dead as an intruder. Alison blundered by overdosing Ritchie with poison, and shot the wrong man, Frank. It is revealed that Judge Crewes tried to make Jack the patsy as he is Alison's lover and has been part of the conspiracy, with the two promising to give Nancy the $200,000 for her part. Jack manages to steal the money from the safe before Nancy can, narrowly escaping and leaving Alison and Crewes to frame Nancy as Ritchie's killer. Alison and Crewes are seen sailing Ritchie's yacht, disposing of his body in the ocean. Nancy is in disguise, trying to escape the island before she is arrested for Ritchie's disappearance and murder. Jack spots Nancy as he's driving past her in a limousine, stopping to wish her well but refusing to help her after her attempt to frame him. He departs with the money and the beautiful vacationer from bungalow number 9 that he met while working at Judge Crewe's resort.[citation needed] Cast
ProductionGeorge Armitage was given a copy of Sebastian Gutirrez's script by Steve Bing, who became a producer on the film.[3]
The setting for the film was moved from the Thumb area of Michigan, where the novel was set,[5] to the North Shore of Oahu. The film was shot on location in Hawaii.[6] On the first day of pre-production, Armitage was hit in the eye with a piece of lava rock and contracted a virus. The director came down with an infection with two weeks left to shoot and had to go to the hospital, shutting down production, with Armitage commenting that, "Fortunately it was right at Christmas, so it turned into a Christmas break that we hadn't planned on, and I completed the picture afterwards."[4] Armitage says that despite this the film was very pleasant. "Now, being in Hawaii was probably a great deal of that. But it was just an extraordinary experience, and I credit the producer, Steve Bing, with that. He put up his own money, and I think he had $250,000 in bar bills, just picking up drinks for the crew and cast for all that time. So he couldn't have been more wonderful."[4] Post-productionAccording to Armitage, the film encountered troubles in post-production when Steve Bing suffered a crisis of conscience:
ReceptionOn Rotten Tomatoes The Big Bounce has an approval rating of 16% based on 135 reviews, with an average score of 4.20/10.[7] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 42 out of a 100 based on 36 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[8] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade "D" on scale of A to F.[9] Joe Leydon of Variety called it a "Modestly engaging, albeit instantly forgettable shaggy-dog story only gradually reveals itself as a seriocomic take on standard-issue noir."[10] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave it 2 out of 4 and although he enjoyed the characters he was critical of the lack of focus "The movie doesn't work. It meanders and drifts and riffs."[11] Author Elmore Leonard called the 1969 film version of his story The Big Bounce, filmed in California with Ryan O'Neal and Leigh Taylor-Young, "the second-worst movie ever made" and reserved first place for the 2004 remake.[12] Box officeThis film flopped at the American box office, grossing $6,808,550[2] against its $50 million budget.[1] References
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