The Fortune Cookie (2001)
The Fortune Cookie Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Billy Wilder
Studio:MGM (Video & DVD)
Rating:4
Rated:NR
Date Added:2007-01-04
Purchased On:2007-04-01
ASIN:B000056HEF
UPC:0027616858931
Price:14.98
Genre:Satire
Release:2001-06-03
Location:0392
Duration:126
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:2.35:1
Features:Anamorphic
Black & White
Subtitled
Custom 1:Copied
Billy Wilder  ...  (Director)
  ...  (Writer)
 
Jack Lemmon  ...  
Walter Matthau  ...  
Ron Rich  ...  
Judi West  ...  
Cliff Osmond  ...  
Lurene Tuttle  ...  
Harry Holcombe  ...  
Les Tremayne  ...  
Lauren Gilbert  ...  
Marge Redmond  ...  
Noam Pitlik  ...  
Harry Davis  ...  
Ann Shoemaker  ...  
Maryesther Denver  ...  
Ned Glass  ...  
Sig Ruman  ...  
Archie Moore  ...  
Howard McNear  ...  
William Christopher  ...  
Bartlett Robinson  ...  
Summary: Billy Wilder's insurance-scam comedy, written with partner I.A.L. Diamond, is one of the legendary filmmaker's surlier efforts. Were it not for the star-making performance of Walter Matthau (which won him an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor), it might not have registered so strongly with audiences. Shot in a grimy black and white, the story begins as CBS cameraman Harry Hinkle (Jack Lemmon) is injured on the sidelines of a football game when Cleveland Browns star Boom Boom Jackson (Ron Rich) accidentally barrels into him. Hinkle's all right, but his ambulance-chasing brother-in-law William Gingrich (Matthau), also known as "Whiplash Willie," has a lawsuit filed before Hinkle even wakes up at the hospital. Hinkle is reluctant to join in on the scheme, which involves staying in a wheelchair, until he realizes it may bring his ex-wife (Judi West) back, even though her eyes practically flash dollar signs at the thought of his case's settlement potential. Working on Hinkle's conscience, however, is a burgeoning friendship with Jackson, who feels horrible about the incident. Not as sure-footed or as brazenly funny as many other Wilder efforts, the film nevertheless boasts a comic turn by Matthau that is deliciously conniving and endlessly inventive. Wilder, Hollywood's most caustically funny blend of pessimist and optimist, doesn't even aim for balance here. He clearly loves Matthau's character above all others and lets him run the show. The Lemmon and Matthau franchise began here and would go on to include their reteaming for Wilder's films The Front Page and Buddy Buddy. --Robert Abele