What's new

Matt Hough

Reviewer
Senior HTF Member
Joined
Apr 24, 2006
Messages
26,131
Location
Charlotte, NC
Real Name
Matt Hough
Matt Hough

The Fortune Cookie Blu-ray Review

fortunecookietop-1024x746.jpg


Writer-director Billy Wilder’s view of human nature takes on an even sourer tone in his 1966 comedy The Fortune Cookie.

[review]
Read more.
 

Robin9

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Dec 13, 2006
Messages
7,637
Real Name
Robin
I haven't seen this one in a long time. I'd forgotten Sig Rumann is in it. Perhaps I should buy this disc!
 

Steve...O

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Dec 31, 2003
Messages
4,376
Real Name
Steve
Thanks, Matt! Like Robin, I haven't seen this in quite some time (and maybe not all the way through) and I will be including this on a future TT order. Glad to hear this disc is consistent with their usual high quality. Lemmon is a great actor and Matthau is a terrific screen presence in any mobile he's in.
 

Rick Thompson

Screenwriter
Joined
Jul 1, 2008
Messages
1,865
Saw this in original release. No interest in seeing again. This type of bitter outlook on the world I find repellant.
 

Ronald Epstein

Founder
Owner
Moderator
Senior HTF Member
Joined
Jul 3, 1997
Messages
66,476
Real Name
Ronald Epstein
Funny this review just appeared.

I watched this movie for the very first time ever this morning on my big screen.

Thought the film was good, not great. I love Matthau and Lemmon so the film could have been about mowing grass and I would have liked it. There were some very funny pieces of dialogue that I enjoyed. I don't know -- I guess it might be the fact that it has a real downer of a message about society in general.

I will say this...

The transfer is outstanding. Oustanding! I love when black and white films really show their colors. The transfer is nice and sharp with just enough grain. It really "POPS!" If you don't believe me, look at the photo I took while watching...

IMG_0452.JPG
(Click on above photo for larger image)
 

Alan Tully

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Feb 19, 2008
Messages
4,615
Location
London
Real Name
Alan
Saw this in original release. No interest in seeing again. This type of bitter outlook on the world I find repellant.

Yup, I saw this at the pictures an age ago under the UK title of Meet Whiplash Willie (they probably rightly thought that most people in the UK didn't know what a fortune cookie was, I didn't), Matthau and Lemmon's wife are lowlifes, but Lemmon & the guy who injured him are good guys.
 

battlebeast

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Aug 10, 2010
Messages
4,435
Location
Edmonton, Alberta
Real Name
Warren
Just watched this gem for the first time.

Matthau and Lemmon team up for the first time here. It is Walter Matthau's first time working with Director Billy Wilder, but Jack Lemmon is a seasoned pro. Together, they make cinema magic; it would not be the last time they would partner, appearing in seven other films together.

Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond deliver a witty, sharp take on the insurance scam, a screenplay filled with funny quips and witty one liners.

Matthau is the star of the picture, winning a much-deserved supporting Oscar for his leading performance. But Jack Lemmon holds his own, and is very good too. Lemmon appears as if he is having a ball zooming around the sets in his motorized wheelchair as the "crippled" cameraman, while Matthau is in his element as the shady "Whiplash Willy", out to score a big payout for his "injured" brother-in-law.

Not to be forgotten is the football player who injured Harry Hinkle, Luther 'Boom Boom' Jackson (played by Ron Rich). Rich is very believable as the brooding, morose footballer, depressed at hurting Hinkle.

As a dark comedy, the picture is much along the lines of The Apartment in terms of atmosphere. But the films wins with perfect direction, a brilliant screenplay, and a standout performance from Walter Matthau.

Twilight Time's Blu Ray is nearly perfect; grey scale is spot on and the overall picture is very sharp. There are hardly any spots, artifacts, or dust, dirt and other anomalies. There is one big one I noticed, a white spot that appears for one frame. Other than that, I didn't see really anything else except maybe one spec. The picture looks amazing. Audio is likewise perfect, with no hiss, hum, crackle, or other extraneous noise present. the Mono 2.0 soundtrack is just fine; a surround-sound track wouldn't have a chance to be utilized fully.

There are no bonus features, really, beside's the film's trailer (which should be mandatory on ALL releases, ever), Twilight Time's perennial isolated score track, and booklet with essay by Julie Kirgo (as good as ever).

In the end, I liked this film. It wasn't what I expected, but I enjoyed it. I've loved Matthau and Lemmon since the first time I saw Grumpy Old Men, and I think they work very well together every time. Billy Wilder has worked with Ray Milland, Gregory Peck, Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, Barbara Stanwyck, Edward G. Robinson, Charles Laughton, Fred MacMurray, Marlene Dietrich, William Holden, Jean Arthur, Bogart, Audrey Hepburn, Erich Von Stroheim, and many others, a vertitable who's who of golden age cinema, and in each instance, has crafted a masterpiece. Billy Wilder, one of the greatest directors of all time, can take the most innocuous subject and make a hit out of it. The Fortune Cookie proves this true.

Video: 4.75/5
Audio: 5/5
Bonus: 2/5

Overall: 4/5
 

Osato

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Feb 7, 2001
Messages
8,167
Real Name
Tim
Just discovered and watched this film tonight. I enjoyed it! Good film not great. Great actors though. I laughed a lot as well.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Latest Articles

Forum statistics

Threads
356,710
Messages
5,121,094
Members
144,146
Latest member
SaladinNagasawa
Recent bookmarks
0
Top