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Format: Laserdisc
 May 1993
 Rated R
 Recording Mode: Stereo
 Sound: Stereo
 100 min.
 Extra Info: SPECIAL EDITION
 UPC: 013023366961 |
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wild--at--heart (1336 ) 100%
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Like new inside and out! WIDESCREEN EDITION! From private collection. |
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* ML=ships from multiple locations, AE/AP/AA=ships from U.S. Military location.
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Movie Description Times are tough at Premiere Properties. To initiate a little incentive among the sales agents, Blake comes up with a sales program. The winner gets a new Cadillac and the loser gets unemployed.
Synopsis A group of real estate salesmen in Chicago vie for the best "leads" at a small firm selling property in "resort" areas, such as Florida and Arizona. When a hotshot executive from the head office arrives and proposes a vicious sales contest, competition gets stiff, and salesmen who have worked a lifetime for the company find their jobs in jeopardy.
Film Notes The film is based on the 1984 Pulitzer Prize-winning play by David Mamet that ran on Broadway (and in other cities) to sold-out audiences. Mamet has also directed several films, including HOUSE OF GAMES (1987), THINGS CHANGE (1988), HOMICIDE (1991), THE SPANISH PRISONER (1997), and THE WINSLOW BOY (1999), and written the screenplays for numerous films, including THE UNTOUCHABLES (1987), HOFFA (1992), and THE EDGE (1997).
In 1992, Al Pacino was nominated for two Academy Awards, one for Best Supporting Actor for his work in this film, and one, which he won, for Best Actor for his work in SCENT OF A WOMAN.
Shot in New York City and Kaufmann Astoria Studios in Queens, in DuArt Color and Super 35 Widescreen; prints by DeLuxe. Main title sequence design by Saxon/Ross Film Design; title opticals by Pacific Title.
Industry Reviews "...The pleasure of this unique film comes in watching superb actors dine on Mamet's pungent language like the feast it is..." Rolling Stone - Peter Travers (10/01/1992)
"...Splendid....A mordantly funny DEATH OF A SALESMAN for the 1990's..." New York Times - Vincent Canby (09/30/1992)
"...Tightly wound -- and actually very fine....[Baldwin acts with] reptilian gung-ho..." -- Rating: B+ Entertainment Weekly - Ty Burr (07/19/1996)
"...Mamet is a true magician with streetwise words, a writer who recognizes the poetry hidden in the most scalding language and creates profane dialogue hot enough to suck all the air out of the screen..." Los Angeles Times - Kenneth Turan (09/30/1992)
"...An indoor actor's movie with visual snap and distinction..." USA Today - Mike Clark (11/22/2002)
"...David Mamet's sales drama is notable for the quantity and quality of its swearing. Alec Baldwin, Ed Harris and Al Pacino all have a go..." Total Film - Daniel Webb (07/01/2003)
"[With] a fantastic cast who relished the searing scenes of male competitiveness..." Uncut - Uncut Staff (02/01/2005)
"[E]xemplary. Foley remains faithful to his source and gives his actors plenty of room to move..." Sight and Sound - Geoffrey Macnab (12/01/2005)
"Many of the plaudits go, rightly, to Mamet's screenplay....But James Foley's direction is also a key to the film's relentless, restless power." Empire - Empire Staff (04/01/2008)
Quotations "Lie. Cheat. Steal. All in a Day's Work."--marketing line for the film
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