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Small Time Crooks (2000)
Released By: Dreamworks   Rating: PG   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Dreamworks
Genre: Drama
MPAA Rating: PG
Director: Woody Allen
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Hugh Grant, Jon Lovitz, Tracey Ullman, Woody Allen, Tony Darrow
Published ID: 123283
UPC: 667068640229,
Plot: Thirty-one years after Take the Money and Run, Woody Allen returns to a life of crime in this broad comedy. Allen plays Ray Winkler, a low-brow con man who is married to Frenchy (Tracy Ullman), a former stripper. Ray and his buddies concoct a scheme to rob a bank by digging a tunnel from a defunct pizza place next door; as a cover, Frenchy opens a cookie shop in the storefront while Ray and company dig in the back. Ray's burglary is a failure, but Frenchy's cookies are a rousing success, and within a year the store has spawned a nationwide franchise that makes the Winklers rich. However, while Ray wants to move to Miami and bask in the sun, nouveau riche Frenchy now aspires to join high society, with posh art dealer David (Hugh Grant) as her guide. Written and directed by Allen and shot in New York City, Small Time Crooks features one of Allen's trademark strong supporting casts, including Michael Rapaport, Elaine Stritch, Jon Lovitz, and Elaine May. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Ullman Matches Allen
Added 4/26/2009

I'm not always a big fan of Woody Allen's films but he and Tracey Ullman make a great pair in this 95-minute farce. Ullman has to be one of the most talented ladies to never achieve real movie stardom. She matches Allen laugh-for-laugh in here and, in some respects, even steals the show.

"Small Time Crooks" has a real classic-film feel to it, one of those old bickering spouse films but with more modern-day humor. Allen and Ullman trade some very funny insults, and there are many of these quality gags. Ullman is just plain hilarious as the bimbo-like "Frenchy."

Add a gigolo (Hugh Grant), a couple of inept crooks, a couple of old-time favorites, Elaine Strich and Elaine May, and a pretty funny premise and you have some good entertainment and an underrated Allen film.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Some Definite Chuckles
Added 11/21/2008

Small Time Crooks is not classic Woody, but it certainly isn't pretentious or boring. The plot is fantastic and it's hard to suspend disbelief but a lot of the jokes here work. It's hard to say the same thing about his other recent releases, however. I would say that, as a director, Allen's been in full-fledged decline since Husbands and Wives, but this movie is small in scale and accomplishes its task. I like Tracey Ullman and thought she excelled in her role. Allen's script dances on the tightrope between condescension and humor in regards to these characters but in the end obtains respectable results.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Take the Money and......
Added 2/19/2008

Everyone I hope recognizes that, if one lives long enough, that one is bound to start recycling ideas. That is the case here with Woody Allen's partial revival of his early film classic Take the Money and Run, with a class twist. Here Roy (Allen's character) is just as dimwitted as old Virgil of Take the Money but as an older and wiser man he knows when to quit (for a while anyway). So when Roy and his associates' attempted bank robbery is foiled by his bugling his wife's successful cookie shop cover operation sees them through the rough spots, again for a while. After a trip through the wilds of bourgeois New York the couple, after some disasters personal and financial, go back to the old tricks of the trade. I am not altogether sure what this says about class mobility in a democratic society but Roy please do not call me for your next caper. Funny, in Allen's slapstick way, in spots but not his best in this genre.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
An okay idea that goes nowhere
Added 11/8/2007

This movie struck me as being similar in tone to Take the Money and Run, a much older Woody movie that he stars in as an inept bank robber. Small Time Crooks starts off the same, with Woody and his rag tag group of wannabe crooks who are working at tunneling underground to a nearby bank. The cookie bakery his wife, played by Tracy Ullman, is using as a front for the operation ends up becoming an overnight success which turns them into millionaires.

From that point on, the movie stopped being entertaining. It really does just come to a screeching halt. Practically nothing interesting happens from this point on with Woody and Tracy, and the rest of the cast is pretty much discarded with. There was far too much of Tracy in this movie and Hugh Grant just bored me everytime he was on screen. Jon Lovitz, Michael Rapaport and Tony Darrow are completely underused as Woody's gang. Elaine May actually turned out to be pretty funny as Tracy's dim bulb cousin and should have had more screen time.

I was really hoping to see more of the old Woody spirit in here, but it just felt really unimaginative. Not to say that he's completely lost it. Scoop is a good recent example of Woody recapturing that old magic again, but this one just missed the mark with me.


0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Woody Lite
Added 7/18/2007

Small Time Crooks is Woody Lite, well worth a three star rating. It is a fun little movie with some very engaging actors including Tracy Ullman and Hugh Grant. This is good fun, if not memorable. It hearkens back to the older Woody movies that are fun for the sake of being fun.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Ullman Matches Allen
Added 4/26/2009

I'm not always a big fan of Woody Allen's films but he and Tracey Ullman make a great pair in this 95-minute farce. Ullman has to be one of the most talented ladies to never achieve real movie stardom. She matches Allen laugh-for-laugh in here and, in some respects, even steals the show.

"Small Time Crooks" has a real classic-film feel to it, one of those old bickering spouse films but with more modern-day humor. Allen and Ullman trade some very funny insults, and there are many of these quality gags. Ullman is just plain hilarious as the bimbo-like "Frenchy."

Add a gigolo (Hugh Grant), a couple of inept crooks, a couple of old-time favorites, Elaine Strich and Elaine May, and a pretty funny premise and you have some good entertainment and an underrated Allen film.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Some Definite Chuckles
Added 11/21/2008

Small Time Crooks is not classic Woody, but it certainly isn't pretentious or boring. The plot is fantastic and it's hard to suspend disbelief but a lot of the jokes here work. It's hard to say the same thing about his other recent releases, however. I would say that, as a director, Allen's been in full-fledged decline since Husbands and Wives, but this movie is small in scale and accomplishes its task. I like Tracey Ullman and thought she excelled in her role. Allen's script dances on the tightrope between condescension and humor in regards to these characters but in the end obtains respectable results.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Take the Money and......
Added 2/19/2008

Everyone I hope recognizes that, if one lives long enough, that one is bound to start recycling ideas. That is the case here with Woody Allen's partial revival of his early film classic Take the Money and Run, with a class twist. Here Roy (Allen's character) is just as dimwitted as old Virgil of Take the Money but as an older and wiser man he knows when to quit (for a while anyway). So when Roy and his associates' attempted bank robbery is foiled by his bugling his wife's successful cookie shop cover operation sees them through the rough spots, again for a while. After a trip through the wilds of bourgeois New York the couple, after some disasters personal and financial, go back to the old tricks of the trade. I am not altogether sure what this says about class mobility in a democratic society but Roy please do not call me for your next caper. Funny, in Allen's slapstick way, in spots but not his best in this genre.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
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