Carbon Copy (1981)
Directed by Michael Schultz
Genres - Comedy, Drama, Culture & Society, Family & Personal Relationships |
Sub-Genres - Comedy of Errors, Farce |
Release Date - Sep 25, 1981 (USA - Unknown), Sep 25, 1981 (USA) |
Run Time - 92 min. |
Countries - United Kingdom, United States |
MPAA Rating - PG
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Synopsis by Paul Brenner
George Segal plays rich and surly California executive Walter Whitney, who learns out-of-the-blue that he has a 17-year-old black son, in Michael Schultz's lightweight Carbon Copy. When his son Roger Porter (Denzel Washington) arrives, Walter tries to pass him off to his neighbors in the restricted all-white suburb as a sociological experiment. But when he eventually confesses his parenthood to his wife Vivian (Susan Saint James), his world is turned upside down. In a flash, all the trophies of upper-class white respectability are removed -- he loses his job, his credit cards are revoked, and Vivian throws him out of the house. Without the white man's trappings, he is forced to accept the help of downtrodden minorities. When he is compelled to manual labor, Walter comes to understand the troubles his son goes through.
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Keywords
advertising-executive, cross-cultural-relations, discrimination, father, generation-gap, life-changes, racism, son, teenagers