The Out-of-Towners

The Out-of-Towners (1970)

Genres - Comedy, Travel  |   Sub-Genres - Urban Comedy  |   Release Date - May 28, 1970 (USA - Unknown), May 28, 1970 (USA)  |   Run Time - 97 min.  |   Countries - United States  |   MPAA Rating - G
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Synopsis by Hal Erickson

Ohio businessman Jack Lemmon is offered a golden job opportunity; all he has to do is relocate himself and wife Sandy Dennis to New York City. What follows has led some critics to complain that playwright Neil Simon has written a "hate letter" to Manhattan. Within a 36 hour period, the couple (a) loses their airplane luggage; (b) are forced to travel from Boston to New York in a greasy old train; ( c ) can't get any sort of service because virtually everyone in Fun City is on strike; (d) are mugged twice, once while they're asleep; (e) are reduced to sleeping on Central Park benches in their day clothes.....and so it goes, until the shabby, disheveled Lemmon tells his prospective bosses off, and he and his wife head back to Ohio---- almost. Punctuated by Sandy Dennis' plaintive "Oh, my Gawwwwd", The Out of Towners tightens the screws and ups the ante on the classic "comedy of errors" formula. Filmed on location, the picture features a who's who of character actors (Milt Kamen, Anne Meara, Phil Bruns, Dolph Sweet, Richard Libertini, Paul Dooley, Robert Walden, Ron Carey etc. etc. etc.) When first shown on network television, the film was shorn of its closing punchline because of an eccentric censorship rule.

Characteristics

Moods

Keywords

husband-and-wife, business-trip, job-interview, city, mugging, on-the-road, Murphy's-Law

Attributes

High Production Values