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Tough Guys Don't Dance (1987)
Released By: Media Home Entertainment   Rating: R   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Media Home Entertainment
Genre: Mystery-Suspense
MPAA Rating: R
Director: Norman Mailer
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Clarence Williams III, Debra Sandlund, Isabella Rossellini, Lawrence Tierney, Ryan O'Neal, Wings Hauser
Published ID: 540
UPC: 027616895387,
Plot: Norman Mailer wrote and directed this demented film noir, which takes place in a Provincetown of perpetual twilight. Most of the tale, based on his best-selling novel, is told in flashback as Dougy Madden (Lawrence Tierney) pays a visit to his son Tim (Ryan O'Neal). Dougy, a tough ex-bartender, is ravaged by cancer and decides to see Tim one last time in order. But Tim is suffering both from writer's block and from the effects of too many years of drink, drugs, and sex. His sexy wife Patty Lariene (Debra Sandlund) has recently left him and disappeared. Even worse, one morning he awakens from his stupor to find the front seat of his car covered with blood and a severed head inside his drug stash. He tries to rekindle a relationship with his ex-wife Madeleine (Isabella Rossellini), now married to the psychotic Provincetown police chief, Alvin Luther Regency (Wings Hauser), and he re-acquaints himself with old prep school friend Wardley Meeks III (John Bedford Lloyd), who was also married to the missing Patty Lareine. As the murders pile up and Tim's psyche takes a beating, Dougy decides to help Tim put an end to this chaotic mess of murders. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Oh God, Oh Man, Oh God, Oh Man
Added 7/18/2009

Oh God, Oh Man, Oh God, Oh Man, Oh God...

If you can find this movie, watch it simply for the laughs and don't expect to get anything else from it. Might I add that the source material for this movie, Norman Mailer's novel of the same name, isn't a whole lot better. I don't even think it's in print anymore.

May we inter this farce to the ground. In God's name we pray, amen.

1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Norman Mailer, Director?
Added 5/1/2009

Back in the 80s, Norman Mailer turned his novel "Tough Guys Don't Dance" into a screenplay that he went on to direct. It's a entertaining mess of a film with over the top lines coming one after the other while the bodies pile up. While generally a competent director when Mailer made a mistake, it turned into a disaster. The worst scene, as Mailer admitted in a 30 minute interview included as a special feature, is clearly when Ryan O'Neal stands on the beach yelling "Oh God, oh man" over and over again. To be blunt, O'Neal is not very good here and Isabella Roselleni is barely in the film. The supporting cast, from Wings Hauser to the always excellent Lawrence Tierney, make the film watchable.

While the plot moves along quick enough despite a lack of sympathetic characters, the film is also helped by a good score and some lush landscape and setting. Mailer, for all his faults as a director, used Cape Cod to his advantage in shooting the film.

The special features include the interview with Mailer which explains how the film came together and his experience with the cast and as a director. Mailer clearly had a soft spot in his heart for the film and admitted that while the film contained flaws, he was responsible for them. The other special features include a look at Provincetown and a funny preview where Mailer reads critical reviews insulting the film.

A great film? No. But entertaining enough and if you can buy it cheap then take a gander on it. And be prepared to laugh your head off at the dialogue.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Perhaps They Shouldn't Direct Either
Added 4/12/2009

Written and directed by Norman Mailer, Tough Guys Don't Dance is based on his 1984 novel of the same name. It is a tale of intrigue and murder on Cape Cod. It shows everything that is right and wrong about the man and his works. The dark humor is often very funny, and the script shows flashes of brilliance. Yet, it also is mindlessly hung-up sexually - bizarrely homophobic - and between those flashes it often sounds like a bad soap opera. The characters are drawn with mixed success. The nouveau-riche trash Patty Lareine is on target (I've met her first cousin), yet the Southern WASP patrician Wardley Meeks III is a wild miss, not because of the acting but because of the writing. The movie is worth seeing, yet it could have - should have - been better.
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
A VERY MAILER MOVIE (AS IN GREAT, EMBELLISHED WITH SPEEDBUMPS)
Added 11/14/2007

When classmates in the 60's were reading Salinger I started reading Mailer. And haven't stopped. Until he died last week. Happily I've read and collected all but a few of his titles. I enjoyed his film translation of TGDD because I'd read and enjoyed/learned from the book.Now I guess it's re-reading time.

This film is as Mailer as the book. With a strong, character-driven plot drawn with the brilliance and pomposity Mailer's famous for. Personally,
I like his departure from expected forms, taking risks which might prove embarrassing. Flowing or stumbling, the flow of TGDD is still audaciously Mailer-brilliant. Funny on purpose or an egotistic misstep, artistically insightful or hung-over-off, it's still is way up with acknowledged smartest, entertaining flicks.

TGDD is an learning experience as well as an entertainment, in terms of the human experience as well as film writing and directing. Somehow, the characters seem exactly as I saw them when reading.

For a double hit, try reading the book before or after viewing the movie - I've come to like reading after viewing, for the imagery. It will make an impression, and an impressive one.

1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Great Movie
Added 9/2/2007

Norman Mailer's genius shines through with every scene. Very entertaining and plenty of black humour.
3 out of 5 people found this helpful.
Oh God, Oh Man, Oh God, Oh Man
Added 7/18/2009

Oh God, Oh Man, Oh God, Oh Man, Oh God...

If you can find this movie, watch it simply for the laughs and don't expect to get anything else from it. Might I add that the source material for this movie, Norman Mailer's novel of the same name, isn't a whole lot better. I don't even think it's in print anymore.

May we inter this farce to the ground. In God's name we pray, amen.

1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Norman Mailer, Director?
Added 5/1/2009

Back in the 80s, Norman Mailer turned his novel "Tough Guys Don't Dance" into a screenplay that he went on to direct. It's a entertaining mess of a film with over the top lines coming one after the other while the bodies pile up. While generally a competent director when Mailer made a mistake, it turned into a disaster. The worst scene, as Mailer admitted in a 30 minute interview included as a special feature, is clearly when Ryan O'Neal stands on the beach yelling "Oh God, oh man" over and over again. To be blunt, O'Neal is not very good here and Isabella Roselleni is barely in the film. The supporting cast, from Wings Hauser to the always excellent Lawrence Tierney, make the film watchable.

While the plot moves along quick enough despite a lack of sympathetic characters, the film is also helped by a good score and some lush landscape and setting. Mailer, for all his faults as a director, used Cape Cod to his advantage in shooting the film.

The special features include the interview with Mailer which explains how the film came together and his experience with the cast and as a director. Mailer clearly had a soft spot in his heart for the film and admitted that while the film contained flaws, he was responsible for them. The other special features include a look at Provincetown and a funny preview where Mailer reads critical reviews insulting the film.

A great film? No. But entertaining enough and if you can buy it cheap then take a gander on it. And be prepared to laugh your head off at the dialogue.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Perhaps They Shouldn't Direct Either
Added 4/12/2009

Written and directed by Norman Mailer, Tough Guys Don't Dance is based on his 1984 novel of the same name. It is a tale of intrigue and murder on Cape Cod. It shows everything that is right and wrong about the man and his works. The dark humor is often very funny, and the script shows flashes of brilliance. Yet, it also is mindlessly hung-up sexually - bizarrely homophobic - and between those flashes it often sounds like a bad soap opera. The characters are drawn with mixed success. The nouveau-riche trash Patty Lareine is on target (I've met her first cousin), yet the Southern WASP patrician Wardley Meeks III is a wild miss, not because of the acting but because of the writing. The movie is worth seeing, yet it could have - should have - been better.
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
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