Tucker: The Man and His Dream

    Tucker: The Man and His Dream
    1988

    Synopsis

    Ypsilanti, Michigan, 1945. Engineer Preston Tucker dreams of designing the car of future, but his innovative envision will be repeatedly sabotaged by his own unrealistic expectations and the Detroit automobile industry tycoons.

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    Cast

    • Jeff BridgesPreston Tucker
    • Joan AllenVera
    • Martin LandauAbe
    • Frederic ForrestEddie
    • MakoJimmy
    • Dean StockwellHoward Hughes
    • Christian SlaterJunior
    • Nina SiemaszkoMarilyn Lee
    • Marshall BellFrank
    • Peter DonatKerner

    Recommendations

    • 100

      TV Guide Magazine

      A gorgeous, fluid, wonderfully exhilarating movie.
    • 88

      The Globe and Mail (Toronto)

      This happy daydream contains Coppola's most assured work since "Apocalypse Now;" save for its modesty, it is in no way inferior to his masterpiece, "The Godfather" Saga. [12 Aug 1988]
    • 88

      Boston Globe

      It's also [Coppola's] most gloriously extravagant film since "One from the Heart." [12 Aug 1988]
    • 80

      Chicago Reader

      Francis Coppola's stylish and heartfelt tribute to the innovative automobile designer Preston Thomas Tucker turns out to be one of his most personal and successful movies.
    • 80

      Time

      The result is a film consistent narratively, confident stylistically and abounce with the quaint quality that animated both the hero and his times, something we used to call pep.
    • 80

      Los Angeles Times

      Stylistically, the film is a dream. But in every case, the style has a reason. [12 Aug 1988]
    • 75

      Chicago Tribune

      The late '40s world Coppola has put together for Tucker is an extremely stylized one: Vittorio Storaro's cinematography has the bright, hard, almost lacquered look of old Technicolor; Dean Tavoularis' sets, built with slanting floors and surfaces, create an imaginary, compacted space in which actors and objects seem to be thrusting out toward the camera; and the transitions between scenes, based on visual rhymes and elaborate wipes, effectively remove the movie from the orderly flow of normal film time. [12 Aug 1988]
    • 70

      Variety

      Tucker represents the sunniest imaginable telling of an at least partly tragic episode in recent history.

    Seen by

    • smilenkovska