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The Sunshine Boys

The Sunshine Boys (1996)

August. 08,1996
|
5.9
|
PG-13
| Drama Comedy TV Movie

Two aging comedians who acrimoniously dissolved their act eight years earlier must overcome their differences when they have the chance for a lucrative movie comeback.

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Reviews

Hellen
1996/08/08

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

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Console
1996/08/09

best movie i've ever seen.

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Intcatinfo
1996/08/10

A Masterpiece!

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Deanna
1996/08/11

There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.

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RainDogJr
1996/08/12

If you check the acting filmography of Woody Allen you may find movies you may have never heard of before, in my case I was extremely surprised when I found that Allen participated in an Alfonso Arau (Alfonso Arau's Zapata is a film you must avoid like the plague, I've been avoiding it and feel darn good!) film (the 2000 Picking Up the Pieces, that has in it also Sharon Stone, Cheech Marin, David Schwimmer and Kiefer Sutherland), certainly quite bizarre that Allen is in that film. Thankfully over the last years Allen has appear only in his very own projects (hey Whatever Works arrives tomorrow in the US! Can't wait to see it, and I just hope it can be playing in my city at least well, at least by the end of this year. Allen's previous film, the great Vicky Cristina Barcelona, was released in the US in August 2008 and in my city in December 2008), actually Picking Up the Pieces is the last one of those "strange" titles in his acting filmography.This one, The Sunshine Boys (a 1995 TV movie based on the Neil Simon play of the same name) is one of those almost unknown titles with Allen but unlike, to name one, Picking Up the Pieces The Sunshine Boys is a movie I first knew not on the internet but when I came across with its R4 DVD. And I usually come across with that R4 DVD and certainly I had considered buying it, certainly just because of Allen (Peter Falk or Sarah Jessica Parker may be the reason why you may be interested in seeing this movie), but until yesterday I did that when I found at a supermarket extremely cheap R4 DVDs. I ended adding to my collection two absolute gems: Terry Zwigoff's great film Ghost World (that I saw on DVD more than a year ago but that I didn't have in my collection) and Martin Scorsese's The Last Waltz (I have seen only bits but can't wait to see the entire film). I got Ghost World for about $1 and The Last Waltz for about $2, and there it was in the bunch the R4 DVD of The Sunshine Boys for only $1 then if it completely sucked, like I was thinking it would, well at least I only paid $1 for its DVD.The Sunshine Boys is about, for those who like me never heard of the play by Neil Simon, a former comedian duo (Allen and Falk) that now after many years of their separation have the chance to return to the big leagues, via a cameo in a big Warner Brothers movie, but the only problem is that they can't stand each other. Allen doesn't appear during the first minutes of the movie, he appears after like 10 minutes, certainly that is not much but the very first minutes with only Falk and Sarah Jessica Parker (as the niece and agent of Falk's character) are very bad (I was like "remember you paid only $1), we have the present situation of Falk's character, we see one of his auditions, for a part in a commercial, and for his good the director of the commercial admires him but, and like us, finds him now very annoying, unfunny, he certainly will not get the part and also he really annoyed me. This stuff, I mean this character of Falk who always changes things from the scripts, who is really annoying only worked for me when Allen's character is with him for the very first time. That part is the funniest and well just the best of the whole movie, actually after Falk's character suffers his collapse the movie is totally uninteresting if not totally un-watchable (Whoopi Goldberg appears in one really bad scene). In short, if you are a fan of Allen (he is good enough to keep us fans satisfied with his work) this is worth to take a look BUT only if you can find it on TV or you can find its DVD as cheap as I found it, don't rush in order to see it. The Sunshine Boys isn't really good or really terrible, it is just something watchable, a decent 90 minutes TV movie that I'm not going to see again. And well, at least I loved when Allen's character says a 5 year old kid comes twice a week to teach him how to play Nintendo, he has to be better than his grandson! Hope that when he gets to play Nintendo really good he gets better luck than Homer Simpson when Homer was ready to kick Bart's butt and put an end to Bart's supremacy!

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moonspinner55
1996/08/13

Neil Simon's cantankerous comedy about old show-biz team of Lewis and Clark reuniting in the modern day for one more performance--and picking up right where they left off, by arguing--didn't quite work in 1975, despite lots of acclaim. Walter Matthau was ill-suited for the larger role of Willie Clark, though it did give us the return of George Burns as Al Lewis, for which he nabbed a Supporting Oscar. Simon has tweaked the material for this TV-made remake, peppering the dialogue exchanges with some modern references (which don't really work) and changing Clark's nephew to a niece (which does). Peter Falk plays Willie Clark this time, and though Falk isn't naturally a comedian (and his Jewish lapses into Yiddish), he holds his own with Simon's hit-or-miss rhythm and wrings some laughs out of the outrageous arguments. Woody Allen's performance as Al Lewis is even better; Allen doesn't bicker so much as search for logic in the illogical, and this coupled with some very funny lines results in a surprisingly successful bit of casting (who would've thought we'd ever see Woody Allen performing Neil Simon!). Sarah Jessica Parker is terrific as well playing Clark's level-headed relative and agent, hoping for a miracle in bringing these two together again--though sweetly resigned to the fact it may never happen. Good production values (except for some bad lighting), a smooth pace and a satisfying finish; this one is more enjoyable than the theatrical feature simply due to the casting. Falk and Allen would appear not to be convincing as a former comedy duo from the 1960s, and yet they nearly pull it off.

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cresee
1996/08/14

I am a great fun of all Woody Allen's works, especially when he appears on the screen himself. This movie was one of the stops on my journey to discover all his productions and for the first time I was severely disappointed. It's just simply unwatchable from the beginning. I should have become suspicious when old, grumpy, horribly annoying Peter Folk confused East and West sides of Manhattan! What a crap! This movie does not include any plot, Woody's funny remarks on TV shopping are only funny moments. Falk stays equally annoying to the end (thankfully it lasts 90mins only) mumbling nonsense crap for more than an hour. No No No. It's definitely the second on my list of the-worst-movies-ever (the first being 2012 Doomsday!)

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Gyran
1996/08/15

This is a made-for -TV film of the Neil Simon comedy, better known in the Walter Matthau and George Burns version. Peter Falk and Woody Allen play two grumpy old comedians who get back together after many years of mutual hatred.Woody Allen understates his performance in the George Burns role and his character is pleasingly different from his normal screen persona. Unfortunately Peter Falk's performance is so mannered that it renders the film virtually unwatchable

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