Movies DVDs Music Books Comix TV Games HWJ Blogs
Contact Us | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | Subscribe | About

Title Search: Advanced Search
         
 
Max Bialystock is a theatrical producer who sweet-talks rich old women to get them to invest in his Broadway plays. Then he meets Leo Bloom, who innocently realizes that if Max were to get a lot of money to invest in play which was a guaranteed flop, that they would be rich. The two then proceed to find the worst play ever written, obtain a large number of investors, hire a lead actor and director with absolutely no talent, and then sit back to wait for the bad reviews. The plan is faultless, at least they think so....

(2005) OVERVIEW
—1. Overview
—2. Reviews and Blogs
—3. Cast and Crew
—4. Photo Pages
—5. Trailers, Clips, DVDs, Books, Soundtrack
—6. Posters (Matthew Broderick)
—7. Production Notes (pdf)
—8. Spiritual Connections
—9. Presentation Downloads

Reviews
by David Bruce
and Tom Price

HJ FLASH VIDEO REVIEW by david bruce

Comment on David's blog


BASIC CREDITS

Release Date: December 16, 2005 (NY, LA, CHI, SF, TOR; wider release:enlarge December 25; wide release: January 13, 2006)
Studio: Universal Pictures
Director: Susan Stroman
Screenwriter:
Mel Brooks, Thomas Meehan
Starring: Nathan Lane, Matthew Broderick, Uma Thurman, Will Ferrell, Gary Beach, Roger Bart
Genre: Comedy, Musical
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (for sexual humor and references)
Official Website: TheProducersmovie.com

MPAA: Rated PG-13 for sexual humor and references.
Runtime: 134 min. For rating reasons, go to FILMRATINGS.COM, and MPAA.ORG. Parents, please refer to PARENTALGUIDE.ORG

THE PRODUCERSClick to go to Tom's BlogThe strength of the new film lies in several choreographed dance numbers, including “I Wanna Be a Producer,” in which Broderick, blending in with a few dozen accountants in green eye shades, dreams of glory with showgirls in costumes laden with 20 pounds of pearls.
Review by Tom Price

SYNOPSIS
From the brilliantly twisted mind of MEL BROOKS comes a scheme so clever, so bold and so disturbingly simple that it can’t possibly go wrong:

Step One: You start with Broadway’s smash hit The Producers -- The New Mel Brooks Musical, winner of a record-breaking 12 Tony Awards, and based on Mel Brooks’ Oscar-winning 1968 film The Producers.

Step Two: You have two major film studios, Universal Pictures and Columbia Pictures, join forces to bring the musical play to the big screen.

Step Three: You enlist the phenomenal SUSAN STROMAN, winner of five Tony Awards, including two for directing and choreographing The Producers -- The New Mel Brooks Musical on Broadway, to make her motion picture directorial debut with the film version.

Step Four: You bring the original Tony Award-winning stars, NATHAN LANE and MATTHEW BRODERICK, back to recreate their signature roles and surround them with two of

Hollywood’s biggest talents, Academy Award nominee UMA THURMAN and comic superstar WILL FERRELL.

And before you can say “Step Five,” you have the makings of the big, fun-filled, laugh-a-minute musical movie event audiences have been waiting for: The Producers.

Only one person in the world could have conceived of such a plan: the incomparable Mel Brooks, whose fabulous career comes full circle with this new film version of The Producers. Brooks was already a television veteran when he made his feature film directorial and writing debut with The Producers in 1968. The modestly budgeted comedy, starring Broadway favorite Zero Mostel and a newcomer named Gene Wilder, became a sleeper hit and earned Brooks an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay.

enlargeAt the time, movie audiences were shocked at the sheer audacity of the film’s premise involving fading theatrical producer Max Bialystock (Mostel) and timid, neurotic accountant Leo Bloom (Wilder), who conspire to intentionally produce a Broadway flop in order to bilk the show’s backers out of millions of dollars. The film has since become a classic.

Fast forward to 2001, when Brooks, having spent 30 years creating such comic masterpieces as Blazing Saddles, Young Frankenstein, High Anxiety, Silent Movie and Spaceballs, became the toast of Broadway with his stage musical of The Producers -- with an original score by Brooks, book by Brooks and THOMAS MEEHAN (Annie, Hairspray) and choreography and direction by Susan Stroman (Contact, Crazy for You). The show’s stars, Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick, both of whom had already scored successfully in movies and on Broadway in both plays and musicals -- winning Tony Awards along the way -- saw their careers soar to dazzling new heights in the career-defining roles of Bialystock and Bloom. The Producers was nominated for 14 Tony Awards and won 12, more than any other show in Broadway history. It received Tonys in each category it was nominated, including three for Brooks -- for Best Musical, Best Score and Best Book of a Musical.

A few years later, when serious conversations started taking place about a film version of the musical, Brooks was adamant that as many as possible of the talents responsible for the success of the original Broadway production would return for the film version, including director / choreographer Stroman, stars Lane and Broderick, as well as Tony Award winner GARY BEACH and Tony Award nominee ROGER BART, who, respectively, created the roles of the flamboyantly untalented director Roger DeBris and his common-law assistant Carmen Ghia.

However, there were a couple of opportunities for casting major talents who would be new to the project. The role of Ulla, Bialystock and Bloom’s luscious Swedish secretary / slash / receptionist, was the perfect showcase for an actress to demonstrate her skills at comedy, singing and dancing. Everyone agreed that Uma Thurman -- red-hot from her roles in Kill Bill: Vols. I and II and Oscar-nominated for Pulp Fiction -- could make the part her own. And to play the wildly demented Hitler-loving playwright, Franz Liebkind, none other than Hollywood’s top comic actor, Will Ferrell, was given the chance to broaden his range with the role of the singing and dancing Nazi.

With Brooks producing, along with his frequent associate JONATHAN SANGER (The Elephant Man, Vanilla Sky), from a screenplay by Brooks and Meehan, the movie classic that became a Broadway sensation is now a comedy-musical movie event.




Continue:
Private Spiritual Concerns

I will not post these comments. I welcome your spiritual concerns and prayer needs.  I will correspond with you, usually within two weeks.
Email David Bruce

OFFICIAL SITE
Publicity information and images © 2005 Universal Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
No other uses are permitted without the prior written consent of owner. Use of the material in violation of the foregoing may result in civil and/or criminal penalties. Credits and dates are subject to change. For more information, please visit their official site.

Hollywood Jesus News Letter
Receive the Hollywood Jesus Newsletter FREE.

Sign up here