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Moving Violations

Moving Violations
Moving violations movie poster.jpg
Moving Violations movie poster
Directed by Neal Israel
Produced by Joe Roth
Harry J. Ufland
Written by Neal Israel, Pat Proft (screenplay)
Paul Boorstin, Sharon Boorstin (story)
Starring
Music by Ralph Burns
Cinematography Robert Elswit
Edited by Tom Walls
Production
company
SLM Production Group
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date
  • April 19, 1985 (1985-04-19)
Running time
90 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Box office $10,600,000 (USA)

Moving Violations is a 1985 comedy film starring John Murray, Jennifer Tilly, Brian Backer, Sally Kellerman, Nedra Volz, Clara Peller, Wendie Jo Sperber and Fred Willard. It was directed by Neal Israel and was the film debut of Don Cheadle.

The film follows a group of people in Birch County, California, a fictionalized city/county which is very similar to real-life Los Angeles, who after being ticketed for numerous traffic violations and as a result lose their licenses and driving privileges (and their vehicles impounded), are ordered by Judge Nedra Henderson (Sally Kellerman) to attend a driving course program in order to get their licenses and their vehicles back. However, the assigned teacher for this course, Deputy Henry "Hank" Halik (James Keach), is also conspiring with the judge in a plan to make sure these offenders fail miserably, and at any cost, so they can sell their impounded vehicles. Their actions make one of the offended individuals, landscaper Dana Cannon (John Murray), very suspicious of their scheme and he enlists his fellow students to expose the plot.

The trailer contains several scenes and lines of dialogue that were not in the final film, including a traffic school classroom scene with the offending drivers in which the classroom is much smaller than the one featured in the actual film.

Writer and director Israel himself attended traffic school.

The film was reviewed poorly by Janet Maslin at The New York Times, who described it as an "especially weak teen-age comedy even by today's none-too-high standards." In a later appraisal, David Nusair of Reelfilm.com wrote that Moving Violations contains "enough laughs to be had here to warrant a mild recommendation."


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