Crazy People Movie Review
Crazy People Review
"Crazy People" Overview

Rating: R
1990
Cast and Crew
Director : Tony BillProducer : Robert K. Weiss
Screenwiter : Mitch Markowitz
Starring : Dudley Moore,Daryl Hannah,Paul Reiser,J.T. Walsh,Bill Smitrovich,Alan North,David Paymer,Danton Stone,Paul Bates,Dick Cusack
Ah, the curse of an unorthodox sleep schedule. Yet again I find myself
watching movies I barely remember being advertised at times of night (or, in
this case, morning) that are highly strange. Griping about my combination of
yuppie flu and insomnia (the latter both coming on at the worst time) aside, I
found myself watching a movie this morning that I had not seen in years.
The movie, Crazy People, is one of those films for which the phrase "only in
Hollywood" was coined. Its hook: a bunch of lunatics come up with honest ad
campaigns (i.e. "Continental: We'll screw them to get your package there on
time" and "Sony: Because Caucasians are just too damn tall"). Its stars
slapped in: Dudley Morre (whom I affectionately nickname the British Warren
Beatty), Daryl Hannah (at the end of the 80s, the decade she shared with Kim
Basigner), Paul Reiser (before "Mad About You"), David Paymer (need I say
more), and J.T. Walsh.
To sum the plot up, Emory (Moore) is committed after pitching numerous honest
ad campaigns at his Madison Avenue firm. When the ads accidentally hit the
press and become ungodly successful, Drucker (Walsh) makes the decision to pull
Emory out of the nuthouse and put him back in the office.
One problem: Emory has fallen for Kathy (Hannah) and doesn't want to leave the
sanitarium.
So, the other lunatics begin helping him design ads for which they are paid
back in pens.
This, my friends, is where the movie takes a severe turn towards sucking.
As soon as the writer gets the chance, he takes the film away from its fairly
good premise and brings it into the realm of being a soapbox from which to
preach about the rights of the mentally ill for recognition and compensation.
He makes Moore become an articulate spokesperson for this, which forms an
extreme irony on two points. The first is that Dudley Moore is so drunk that
you can barely understand him throughout the film, and thus isn't very
articulate at all. The second is that the film is highly unfair to the
mentally ill.
Before I step on my own soapbox and make the mistake that Crazy People did, I
will say that the movie would have been more funny were it not exactly what
advertising (and, oftentimes, Hollywood) is… a series of good lines. Although
each ad slogan, such as "AT&T: We're tired of taking your crap", is howlingly
funny, and each character is tossed a few nice lines, the movie as a whole has
nothing beyond that. It seems to be an adman's movie. By admen, about admen.
Of course, being as highly Hollywood as Crazy People is, one can sit back,
relax, and enjoy the movie. One cannot, however, expect any deviation from the
norm other than a little more bravery to say what one wants.
Crazy People takes the standard road. It could have been great, or at least it
could have been decent, but it failed.
Reviewer: James Brundage



