Crazy People | |
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Theatrical release poster
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Directed by |
Tony Bill Barry L. Young (commercials) |
Produced by | Thomas Brand Robert K. Weiss |
Written by | Mitch Markowitz |
Starring | |
Music by | Cliff Eidelman |
Cinematography | Victor J. Kemper |
Edited by | Mia Goldman |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date
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Running time
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91 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $18 million |
Box office | $13,236,513 |
Crazy People (stylized as Cяazy People) is a 1990 American comedy film starring Dudley Moore and Daryl Hannah, and directed by Tony Bill.
Emory Leeson is an advertising executive who experiences a nervous breakdown. He designs a series of "truthful" advertisements, blunt and bawdy and of no use to his boss Drucker's firm.
One of his colleagues, Stephen Bachman, checks him into a psychiatric hospital. Emory goes into group therapy under the care of Dr. Liz Baylor and meets other voluntary patients, such as the lovely and vulnerable Kathy Burgess. There is also George, who can speak only one word: "Hello."
By mistake, Emory's advertisements get printed and the new campaign turns out to be a tremendous success. Campaigns like: "Jaguar — For men who'd like hand-jobs from beautiful women they hardly know." and "Volvo — they're boxy but they're good."
Drucker grabs credit for the ads. He assigns Stephen and the rest of his employees to design similar new ad campaigns featuring so-called honesty in advertising, but nothing works.
Emory is approached in the sanitarium about creating new ads himself. He insists that his fellow mental patients also be involved and suitably rewarded for their work, transforming the sanitarium into a branch of the advertising industry.
They come up with wild advertising slogans, like one for a Greek travel agency that goes: "Forget Paris. The French can be annoying. Come to Greece. We're nicer." And another one called "Come… IN the Bahamas" for the islands' national tourism board.
The patients experience happiness at being needed and improve from their various illnesses. The evil Drucker and the doctor in charge of the hospital get greedy and try to separate the team. But it doesn't work. Dr. Baylor defies her boss and Emory negotiates to get new automobiles for all of the patients. Emory and Kathy, who have fallen in love, leave the hospital in an army helicopter piloted by Kathy's long-lost brother.
It received mostly negative reviews and has 33% on Rotten Tomatoes. Roger Ebert envisioned a call from the fictional Movie Police in his review: