Big Business

    Big Business
    1988

    Synopsis

    In the 1940s in the small town of Jupiter Hollow, two sets of identical twins are born in the same hospital on the same night. One set to a poor local family and the other to a rich family just passing through. The dizzy nurse on duty accidentally mixes the twins unbeknown to the parents. Our story flashes forward to the 1980s where the mismatched sets of twins are about to cross paths.

    Votre Filmothèque

    Cast

    • Bette MidlerSadie Ratliff / Sadie Shelton
    • Lily TomlinRose Ratliff / Rose Shelton
    • Fred WardRoone Dimmick
    • Edward HerrmannGraham Sherbourne
    • Michele PlacidoFabio Alberici
    • Daniel GerrollChuck
    • Barry PrimusMichael
    • Michael GrossDr. Jay Marshall
    • Deborah RushBinky Shelton
    • Nicolas CosterHunt Shelton

    Recommandations

    • 70

      The New York Times

      Big Business, which, though it never quite delivers the boffo payoff, is a most cheerful, very breezy summer farce, played to the hilt by two splendidly comic performers.
    • 70

      Los Angeles Times

      Like a sensational party the night before, Big Business may not bear the closest scrutiny in the cold light of day, but it gives an irresistible glow at the time. And when it gets on a roll, it's a movie with more wit to its lines and a more pungent array of them than much of the mishmash that has passed as Bette Midler's Greatest Movie Hits. [10 Jun 1988, p.1]
    • 60

      Time Out

      Midler gets to play her vulgar, trashy self twice over, Tomlin introduces a little comic variety as the gutsy blue collar worker and the drippy sister, and Abrahams handles the mechanical plot with skill, if not style. The frenetic fun reduces everyone to a cipher; it's difficult to care about any of them.
    • 50

      Chicago Sun-Times

      If there’s anything worse than a long, slow, boring buildup to a payoff, it’s the buildup without the payoff. This movie doesn’t feel finished.
    • 50

      Washington Post

      This classic comedy of errors is over-structured by cousin-writers Dori Pierson and Marc Rubel and mechanically laid out by director Jim Abrahams.
    • 50

      Chicago Tribune

      It's too smoothly controlled to be funny, which is Big Business's problem as a whole. [10 Jun 1988, p.A]
    • 50

      Christian Science Monitor

      Some scenes in a Manhattan hotel have the amiable ring of old-fashioned farce to them, but most of the going is noisy and obvious. [10 Jun 1988, p.21]
    • 40

      Empire

      Ultimately lost in it's own contrivances, Big Business still manages a few laughs thanks to it's big name leading lady.

    Vu par

    • effy