The Fortune

    The Fortune
    1975

    Synopsis

    Two bumbling hustlers in the 1920s attempt to gain the fortune of an heiress. Nothing will stop them, not even murder.

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    Cast

    • Stockard ChanningFreddie Bigard
    • Jack NicholsonOscar 'Dix' Sullivan
    • Warren BeattyNicky Wilson
    • Ian WolfeJustice of the Peace
    • Rose MichtomMrs. Gould
    • Brian AveryAirline Steward
    • Florence StanleyWife of Justice of the Peace
    • Dub TaylorRattlesnake Tom
    • Catlin AdamsGirl Lover
    • Christopher GuestBoy Lover

    Recommendations

    • 80

      The New York Times

      It's a marvelous attempt to recreate a kind of farce that, with the notable exceptions of a handful of films by Blake Edwards and Billy Wilder, disappeared after World War II.
    • 80

      TV Guide Magazine

      A catalogue of slapstick errors, THE FORTUNE works well through the fine performances of the leads and the superb timing of director Nichols.
    • 63

      Chicago Reader

      Redeemed a bit by Adrien Joyce’s Preston Sturges-inspired screenplay, Nichols’s film is nonetheless as unfunny as Carnal Knowledge, and just as vicious.
    • 63

      USA Today

      Now that we no longer expect the world from any of them, the movie is an amusing 88-minute trifle with Beatty in a gigolo mustache and Nicholson with Art Garfunkel curls. [05 Jun 1998]
    • 60

      Variety

      The Fortune is an occasionally enjoyable comedy trifle, starring Jack Nicholson and Warren Beatty as bumbling kidnappers of heiress Stockard Channing, who is excellent in her first major screen role. Very classy 1920s production values often merit more attention than the plot.
    • 40

      Time Out

      Events degenerate into miscalculated farce and underline Nichols' continuing slick superficiality. Adrien Joyce's much hacked-about script sounds as though it was once excellent: a pity everyone treats it so off-handedly.
    • 40

      The New Yorker

      The tone is too playful, too bright. Is the heiress herself meant to be a treasure? Is she meant to be charmingly klutzy? You can't tell.
    • 40

      Newsweek

      One is left longing for Mike Nichols, the brilliant satirist who made us laugh at our foibles, but who seems to have given way to a cynical, grimly grinning moralist. [26 May 1975, p.84]