Flirting With Disaster (1996)
Facts
| Directed by | David O. Russell |
| Cast | Ben Stiller, Patricia Arquette, Téa Leoni, Mary Tyler Moore, Alan Alda, Josh Brolin, Glenn Fitzgerald, Richard Jenkins, David Patrick Kelly, Cynthia Lamontagne, George Segal, Lily Tomlin and Celia Weston |
| Theatrical Release | March 22, 1996 |
| DVD Release | June 15, 1999 |
| Running Time | 92 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 717951002433 |
| Buy this item ... | 7 new from $6.74, 14 used from $4.17 |
About Flirting With Disaster
Sometimes a filmmaker's second movie gets labeled as a sophomore slump. David O. Russell (Spanking the Monkey) shreds that fate with Flirting with Disaster, an outrageous, free-spirited comedy about private people forced into public situations. Mel Coplin (Ben Stiller) finds the opportunity he's been waiting a lifetime for: an adoption agency rep (Téa Leoni) has located his birth parents and the agency will fly him to California if they can record the reunion. With wife Nancy (Patricia Arquette) and new son in tow, the neurotic Mel is compelled to discover his origins, despite the protests of his neurotic adoptive parents (a wonderful Mary Tyler Moore and George Segal). To give away the plot any more would be a crime, but as the title states, Mel is on a collision course of Oedipal proportions. Russell, who made incest an intriguing black-comedy topic in Spanking, is very liberal with sex and permits dangerous situations. His characters mix it up at a moment's notice. The two women along for the ride are not just bit players: Leoni (Deep Impact) keeps her high-energy comic routine flying, while the grounded Arquette keeps the baby in arm, despite the mad wanderings of her husband. Stiller is a perfect comic foil. --Doug Thomas Amazon.com
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User Reviews
Average user review:| One of my absolute favorites! |
| Funny |
Also, cute were Tia Leoni, Patricia Arquette, and the unnamed baby. The cast of stars they meet on the way - Mary Tyler Moore, Lily Tomlin, George Segal, Alan Alda, the 2 gay friends - all were a hoot!
A comedy of errors, boo boos, fumbles, sexual attractions gone wrong, parents that make their kids crazy, and the hillarious stay in a B & B - all kept me and my man laughing out loud. It kept our attention, was funny, sweet, and a great night at the movies, ala sofa and ice cream in the living room.
see it. loads of fun! July 15, 2008
| Character-Driven Screwball Farce Still Shines with a Stellar Cast |
Russell was smart to cast four veterans as Mel's two sets of parents. As his adoptive parents, George Segal and a cast-against-type Mary Tyler Moore are hilarious playing classic New York Jewish stereotypes. Moore, in particular, has a field day playing the obnoxious dark side of Rhoda Morgenstern rightfully proud of her unsagging breasts. As the couple who turns out to be Mel's real parents, Alan Alda and Lily Tomlin are equally funny as graying New Mexico hippies heavy into their art and LSD. When Mel meets them, that's when the film becomes a whirlwind, Noises Off-type of farce with all the personal shenanigans coming to a head. Playing a gay couple who happen to be FBI agents, a surprisingly deft Josh Brolin (No Country for Old Men) and the always dependable Richard Jenkins (superb in this year's The Visitor) shine as bickering personality opposites. Glenn Fitzgerald as Mel's psychotic brother and Celia Weston as a Reagan-loving Southern matron round out a razor-sharp cast. It all ends rather abruptly, but Russell shows a genuine talent for juggling a lot of comic possibilities with supple dexterity. The 2004 Collector's Edition DVD is light on extras - just three deleted scenes, a few outtakes that don't compare to the final film, and a brief featurette on the film's development and production. May 10, 2008
| Jerry Garcia, blah blah blah... |
Definitely one of Ben Stiller's best and a perfect cast. Like another reviewer said, I can watch it a hundred times and still see something I hadn't seen before. January 11, 2008
| Outstanding cast, lousy script |
Unfortunately, the script is a series of left turns and sidetracks,
and the thin storyline that is marginally focused is ludicrous to the
point of being annoying. Amazingly, very few funny things happen in this movie, which is a shame. Ends abruptly and cluelessly as well. July 23, 2007
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