Paper Moon (2003) United States of America
Paper Moon Image Cover
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Director:Peter Bogdanovich
Studio:Paramount
Producer:Frank Marshall, Peter Bogdanovich
Writer:Alvin Sargent, Joe David Brown
Rating:3
Rated:PG
Date Added:2014-09-02
UPC:097360846546
Price:$12.98
Awards:Won Oscar. Another 6 wins & 8 nominations
Genre:Comedy
Release:2003-08-12
IMDb:0070510
Location:1395
Duration:102
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.85:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
Languages:English, French
Subtitles:English
Features:The Making Of Paper Moon -
Asking For The Moon
Peter Bogdanovich  ...  (Director)
Alvin Sargent, Joe David Brown  ...  (Writer)
 
Ryan O'Neal  ...  Moses Pray
Tatum O'Neal  ...  Addie Loggins
Madeline Kahn  ...  Trixie Delight
John Hillerman  ...  Deputy Hardin / Jess Hardin
P.J. Johnson  ...  Imogene
Jessie Lee Fulton  ...  Miss Ollie
James N. Harrell  ...  The Minister (as Jim Harrell)
Lila Waters  ...  The Minister's Wife
Noble Willingham  ...  Mr. Robertson
Bob Young  ...  Gas Station Attendant
Jack Saunders  ...  Station Master
Jody Wilbur  ...  Cafe Waitress
Liz Ross  ...  The Widow Morgan (Pearl)
Yvonne Harrison  ...  The Widow Bates (Marie)
Dorothy Price  ...  Ribbon Saleslady
Ed Reed  ...  The Lawman - Bates' Home
Eleanor Bogart  ...  The Widow Stanley (Elvira)
Dorothy Forster  ...  The Widow Huff (Edna)
Lana Daniel  ...  Moze's Girlfriend
Herschel Morris  ...  The Barber
Dejah Moore  ...  Salesgirl ($20 bill)
Ralph Coder  ...  Store Manager
Harriet Ketchum  ...  Store Customer
Desmond Dhooge  ...  Cotton Candy Man
Kenneth Hughes  ...  Harem Tent Barker
George Lillie  ...  The Photographer
Burton Gilliam  ...  Floyd (Desk Clerk)
Floyd Mahaney  ...  Beau (Hardin's Deputy)
Gilbert Milton  ...  Leroy's Father
Randy Quaid  ...  Leroy
Tandy Arnold  ...  Leroy's Brother
Dennis Beden  ...  Leroy's Brother
Vernon Schwanke  ...  Leroy's Brother
Hugh Gillin  ...  2nd Deputy
Art Ellison  ...  Silver Mine Gentleman
Rose-Mary Rumbley  ...  Aunt Billie (as Rosemary Rumbley)
László Kovács  ...  Cinematographer
Verna Fields  ...  Film Editor
Summary: Adapted from the novel, "Addie Pray" (1971) by Joe David Brown, PAPER MOON is the story of Moses Pray and Addie Loggins. With scenery reminiscent of "The Grapes of Wrath," the film is set in the depression-era Midwestern region of the United States. As the movie opens, we see a small group of mourners clustered at a graveside. Among the mourners is Addie, the dead woman's small daughter. Moses Pray -- ostensibly of the "Kansas Bible Company" -- approaches the group, as the service concludes, and two of the elderly women remark that the child bears some resemblance to him and asks if he might be related. "If ever a child needed kin, it's now," one lady says. With no knowledge of who her father is, Addie's only haven is her Aunt's home in St. Joseph, Missouri. Having identified himself as a "traveling man spreading the Lord's gospel in these troubled times," "Mose" is prevailed upon to deliver the helpless child to her Aunt since he's going that way, anyway. Addie, wise beyond her years, soon discovers that Mose is little more than a scam artist traveling from town to town delivering unordered Bibles and charging exorbitant prices to recently widowed women whom he identifies through the obituary columns of local papers. Soon, Addie and Mose become a team, traveling from town to town, making money in every dishonest way imaginable, and looking for the ultimate score. The colorful characters they meet along the way make the film all the more interesting. Paramount among these is "Miss Trixie Delight," an exotic dancer who Mose rescues from a traveling carnival and her minion, Imogene. The film is peppered with "regional" dialog. Perhaps one of the most memorable lines of the movie is uttered when Mose is forced to wrestle a backwoodsman in order to trade his new car for the hillbilly's battered old truck. "Make him say calf-rope, Leroy!" one of the observers calls out.