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The Gingerbread Man (film)

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The Gingerbread Man
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRobert Altman
Screenplay byAl Hayes
Based onA manuscript
by John Grisham
Produced byJeremy Tannenbaum
Starring
CinematographyGu Changwei
Edited byGeraldine Peroni
Music byMark Isham
Production
companies
Distributed byPolyGram Filmed Entertainment
Release date
  • January 23, 1998 (1998-01-23)
Running time
114 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$25 million[citation needed]
Box office$1.5 million (USA)

The Gingerbread Man is a 1998 American legal thriller film directed by Robert Altman and based on a discarded John Grisham manuscript. The film stars Kenneth Branagh, Embeth Davidtz, Robert Downey Jr., Tom Berenger, Daryl Hannah, Famke Janssen, and Robert Duvall.

Plot

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Rick Magruder (Kenneth Branagh) is a divorced lawyer with a reputation for underhanded dealings and protecting criminals. After another successful trial, Magruder celebrates at a party hosted by his firm, becoming increasingly drunk. As he stumbles out of the party, he has a chance meeting with a woman named Mallory Doss (Embeth Davidtz), a waitress at the party who seems to have lost her car. Rick drives the woman to her home, where her car has been already parked, seemingly by her father, Dixon Doss (Robert Duvall). Rick and Mallory walk into the house arguing about her abusive father. Mallory carelessly undresses in front of him, after which they spend the night together.

The next day, Mallory asks him to file suit against her father because of his dangerous behavior. Having started a relationship with Mallory, Rick agrees and is successful in having Dixon put on trial thanks to favors from his staff, including his investigator, Clyde Pell (Robert Downey, Jr.). Mallory's ex-husband, Pete Randle (Tom Berenger) also takes the stand, to testify about his former father-in-law's erratic behavior. Dixon appeals to the judge, claiming that the charges against him are fabricated and exaggerated, but the judge sentences him to a mental institution. Upon being taken away, Dixon attempts to attack Magruder, vowing revenge. With her father institutionalized, Magruder and Mallory continue their relationship, but not long after, Dixon is able to escape from the institution. Scared of retaliation, Magruder assigns Pell to guard Mallory while he attempts to gain support from the police to apprehend Dixon. The police are unhelpful, even after Dixon and his friends set Mallory's car on fire, due to the many cases Magruder has won against them.

A short time later, Magruder receives an unmarked letter containing pictures of his children with their faces cut out of them. Worried for his children, he takes them out of school, despite not having full custody of his children and needing his wife's permission to take them. Despite the objections of the teachers, Magruder escapes with his children, calling his wife (Famke Janssen) to assure her that he is doing it only for their safety. During the call, Magruder's children are apparently taken by Dixon's crew, and he is forced to rendezvous with Mallory so that she can lead him to her father's house. After they arrive, Magruder forces Dixon into a standoff where the older man is killed with a shot through the throat. Dixon's men seemingly escape with Magruder's children, and he is forced to give chase. However, upon catching them, his children are not with them, having been turned into the police office hours earlier.

In the aftermath, Magruder is charged with murder and is threatened with disbarment. Realizing that he has been set up, Magruder has Clyde look into Mallory's background, suspicious that she might have something to gain from her father's death. The search reveals that Dixon's land is worth millions, and on top of that, Mallory had never actually divorced Pete Randle. With no will found, Mallory, and by relation, Randle, are granted ownership of Dixon's estate. Suspicious of Randle, Clyde and Magruder track the man down. Clyde is killed by Randle, and Magruder is forced into a desperate struggle in the middle of a violent hurricane. While the two grapple with one another, Mallory arrives and shoots Randle in the back with a flare gun. Her husband falls into the flood waters below, dead. Mallory claims that she had no idea about her husband's plans, but Magruder is still suspicious. He removes another flare from her flare gun, and when he returns it to her, she attempts to kill Magruder with it. Realizing that Mallory and Randle were working together, Magruder signals the police, who arrest Mallory. As the film concludes, Magruder decides not to fight the charges against him, accepting a plea deal that involves community service. In the courtroom, he spies Mallory being led away in handcuffs, who gives him a knowing look.

Cast

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Production

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The film was based on an original story by John Grisham that was subsequently adapted into screenplay form. Kenneth Branagh liked the story and agreed to do the film but only if a highly regarded director signed on as well. In July 1996, it was announced that Luis Mandoki was to direct the film, with Annette Bening in the female lead, and it was to have been filmed in Memphis, Tennessee. However, when Bening fell pregnant, she had to drop out, with Mandoki departing shortly afterwards. Branagh went to work on The Proposition while the producers looked for another director. John Dahl was offered the film before the producers settled on Robert Altman.[2][3] Altman wanted to work with Branagh but only, as he told him, "If we can fool the audience by not making you the hero, by making you flawed."[4]

Once Altman came on board, he heavily re-worked the script, giving credit to the pseudonymous Al Hayes.[5] Altman said in an interview, "I just wanted to change the elements of these kinds of stories as much as I could and then I wanted to stay out of the courtroom."[4] Altman changed the setting to Savannah, Georgia, and added the threat of a hurricane throughout the movie. For the look of the film, Altman was inspired by The Night of the Hunter.[6]

Principal photography would occur during early 1997.[7] In addition to Two Girls and a Guy, which was also shot in the early months of 1997, the film was Robert Downey Jr.'s first acting role after a 1996 drug arrest.[8] It has been said that Downey Jr. "didn't even read the script" when he accepted the role.[8]

Release

[edit]

The Gingerbread Man was intended to open in the fall of 1997 but was delayed after an audience test screening reportedly went poorly. Polygram Films brought in an outsider to re-edit the movie without informing Altman, and claimed that his version "lacked tension and suffered from an inappropriate music score".[9] At one point, the publicized squabble between the studio and the filmmaker got so bad that he wanted his name taken off the film.[10] According to Branagh, the film previewed well but not up to the expectations of the studio. He said in an interview: "There's this enormous pressure to wrap everything up neatly and to resist things that stray from formula. Anything that suggests complexity in a character makes them unsympathetic in the eyes of some people, and they see that as a great crime."[10] Polygram backed down when their version tested worse than Altman's in a preview. The studio was upset that Altman had completely rewritten Grisham's script so that it was more critical about lawyers.[9]

Years later, Ray Pride interviewed Altman about the post-production debacle and he replied, "Well, it's criminal, their treatment of that film. There was a vindictive order from the guy who was running [Polygram Films], he was so pissed off with me, he literally told them, 'I want that movie killed.' We're talking to lawyers, but it's almost impossible to win a lawsuit. You can't prove what a film could have done. They were just pissed off because it didn't test the way they wanted it to with the teenagers, y'know, in those malls."[11]

Reception

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In his review for the San Francisco Chronicle, Mick LaSalle wrote, "If it weren't for Altman's touches, The Gingerbread Man would be a mediocre thriller. Even with them, it can't be more than a top-notch genre film, but top-notch is top-notch."[12] Jay Carr of The Boston Globe said that the film "is fun junk...We're talking claptrap here, but it's more enjoyable than it has any business being, thanks to director Robert Altman and star Kenneth Branagh."[13] In his review for The Independent, Boyd Tonkin wrote, "It does not sprawl or wander as the Altman of old would have. Neither does it ever really catch alight. This is a waterlogged venture in more ways than one."[14] Roger Ebert, giving the film three stars, labeled the film as "all atmospheric, quirky, and entertaining."[15] The film holds a 60% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 47 reviews.[16]

References

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  1. ^ a b McCarthy, Todd (15 January 1998). "The Gingerbread Man". Variety. Retrieved 27 November 2021.
  2. ^ Archerd, Army (July 17, 1996). "Whoopi to fete prez on his 50th". Variety.
  3. ^ Angelini, Sergio (July 9, 2021). "The Gingerbread Man - BFI Southbank Programme Notes". BFI.
  4. ^ a b Chollet, Laurence (January 22, 1998). "Forget the Author - This is an Auteur". The Record.
  5. ^ Ascher-Walsh, Rebecca (January 30, 1998). "Tough Cookie". Entertainment Weekly.
  6. ^ Goodman, Joan (23 November 1996). "Directing dangerously". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on February 26, 2016. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
  7. ^ MEL GUSSOWMARCH 31, 1997 (1997-03-31). "Grisham's Escape Into Legal Thrillers - The New York Times". The New York Times. Retrieved 2019-02-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ a b Falk, Ben (2014). Robert Downey Jr.: The Fall and Rise of the Comeback Kid. Pavilion Books. ISBN 9781910232125.
  9. ^ a b Clarke, Roger (August 1, 1998). "A Right Dust-Up in Tinseltown". Financial Times.
  10. ^ a b Portman, Jamie (April 9, 1998). "Working with Altman Sweet Treat for Branagh". Calgary Herald.
  11. ^ Pride, Ray (November 22, 2006). "Robert Altman: putting my gloves in a shoe box". Movie City Indie. Retrieved 2007-05-30.
  12. ^ LaSalle, Mick (March 6, 1998). "Altman's Sure Touch is Gingerbreads Best Thrill". San Francisco Chronicle.
  13. ^ Carr, Jay (March 6, 1998). "Gingerbread Man has the Altman Taste". The Boston Globe.
  14. ^ Tonkin, Boyd (July 23, 1998). "The Big Picture: Shiftless in Savannah". The Independent.
  15. ^ "The Gingerbread Man movie review (1998) | Roger Ebert".
  16. ^ The Gingerbread Man at Rotten Tomatoes
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