Suckers | |
---|---|
Directed by | Roger Nygard |
Produced by | W.K. Border |
Written by | Roger Nygard Joe Yanetty |
Starring | Joe Yanetty Jake Johannsen Daniel Benzali David Ackert Utah Blue Eli Danker Wayne Duvall Louis Mandylor David Poland Michael D. Roberts Valente Rodriguez |
Music by | Billy Sullivan Walter Werzowa |
Cinematography | Nathan Hope |
Edited by | Roger Nygard |
Production
company |
NEO Motion Pictures
|
Distributed by | Creative Light Entertainment Creative Light Worldwide |
Release date
|
2001 |
Running time
|
87 mins |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $2,000,000 |
Suckers is an award winning comedy drama that was directed by Roger Nygard who co-wrote the story with Joe Yanetty. It is about the car sales business in the United States. It gives an insight into how things happen with the techniques that are employed to sell cars. The film has something of a cult following and some car dealers have used it to motivate their sales staff. It stars Joe Yannetty, Jake Johannsen, Daniel Benzali, Michael D. Roberts , Louis Mandylor and Lori Loughlin.
Bobby (played by Louis Mandylor) is nice-guy looking for work. He also owes a lot of money to these loan sharks, Chad and Everett. One day he walks into Southside Motors in L.A., and takes a job as a car sales man. This is where it all happens and he enters into the shady world of car sales. The dealership manager (played by Daniel Benzali) is a bald headed bully who has no qualms about screwing the customer. Unfortunately for Bobby, he doesn't have the knack for screwing the customers. Things are also complicated when the loan sharks come to collect money that Bobby owes them.
The story for the film was written by Joe Yanetty and Roger Nygard who is a stand-up comic and former car salesman. Nygard also directed the film. For the story, Nygard drew on accounts that he had heard from his car dealer friends. One was about a woman who used sex to steal a car and left the salesman stranded and naked.
The film had its premiere at the Comedy Arts Festtval in Aspen. The film was a 2001 Video Premiere Award Winner in the Screenplay category, beating Tony Johnston's Full Disclosure by David Davis and Brian Cox, O.K. Garage by Brandon Cole, and Doug Campbell's The Tomorrow Man. It was shown at the 2000 Cinequest Film Festival. It picked up an award at the festival in the "Special Jury Artistic Merit Award" category. It was also an entrant at the Waterfront Film Festival.
The film has played on HBO and Cinemax.