Also Playing
Carpool
Most Viewed:
Taylor Lautner to star in 'Max Steel'(3390 views)Jack Black animates film pitch(3187 views)'Blind Side' tackles box office competition(2665 views)Nine(1478 views)Bennett Miller to direct 'Moneyball'(1375 views)Overture nabs rights to 'Stone'(1039 views)
|
Franklin Laszlo - Tom Arnold
Daniel Miller - David Paymer
Martha - Rhea Perlman
Mr. Hammerman - Rod Steiger
Detective Erdman - Kim Coates
Kayla - Rachael Leigh Cook
Andrew Miller - Mikey Kovar
Bucky Miller - Micah Gardener
Travis Jordan - Blake Warkol
Chelsea - Colleen Rennison
Pic pairs David Paymer as uptight workaholic Daniel Miller and Tom Arnold as Franklin Laszlo, a benevolent carny master in desperate payroll straits. Their lives intersect during a bungled robbery, with Franklin taking Daniel and a minivan full of schoolkids hostage, with cops, more robbers and a manic meter maid (Rhea Perlman) in hot pursuit.
Heart of the film is a silly, very extended chase scene through Seattle (i.e. , Vancouver) streets and malls, during which Franklin and the kids engage in merry pranksterism and some serious bonding. By the end, set in a giant hangar where some carnival rides are conveniently stored, Daniel (he's in advertising, natch) has learned the lessons about loosening up, spending more time with his family and walking out on the System that are requisite in such films.
Laying it on extra thick is Rod Steiger as the humorless owner of a gourmet emporium where the employees know how to pronounce mille-feuille and doughnut is a dirty word. Of course, that's all changed by the end of the film, too. Arnold and Paymer ain't Lemmon and Matthau, but they'll do. Arthur Hiller's pacing is crude, but that seems to be the point. Throughout it all, the kids sing along with the Ramones' "I Wanna Be Sedated." Mission accomplished.
Preceding "Carpool" is WB's new five-minute Chuck Jones Daffy Duck cartoon, "Superior Duck," which doesn't loom to rank with Jones', or Daffy's, best.
Camera (Technicolor), David M. Walsh; editors, William Reynolds, L. James Langlois; music, John Debney; production design, James D. Vance; art direction, Sandy Cochrane; set design, Gary Myers; set decoration, Dominique Fauquet-Lemitre; costume design, Trish Keating; sound (Dolby), Larry Sutton; stunt coordinator, Conrad Palmisano; associate producer, B. Casey Grant; assistant director, Richard Cowan; casting, Lynn Stalmaster. Reviewed at UA/Criterion Theater, N.Y., Aug. 23, 1996. MPAA Rating: PG. Running time: 90 MIN.
Variety is striving to present the most thorough review database. To report inaccuracies in review credits, please click here. We do not currently list below-the-line credits, although we hope to include them in the future. Please note we may not respond to every suggestion. Your assistance is appreciated.








