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This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia\'s quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (February 2008) |
This article is about the 1983 movie. For the Timeshare company, see Trading Places International.
| Trading Places | |
|---|---|
| Theatrical poster for Trading Places | |
| Directed by | John Landis |
| Produced by | George Folsey Jr. Aaron Russo Irwin Russo Sam Williams |
| Written by | Timothy Harris Herschel Weingrod |
| Starring | Dan Aykroyd Eddie Murphy Ralph Bellamy Don Ameche Denholm Elliott and Jamie Lee Curtis |
| Music by | Elmer Bernstein |
| Cinematography | Robert Paynter |
| Editing by | Malcolm Campbell |
| Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
| Release date(s) | |
| Running time | 118 min. |
| Country | |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $28,000,000 (estimate) |
| All Movie Guide profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
| | Philadelphia Portal |
Trading Places is an Academy Award-nominated 1983 comedy film starring Eddie Murphy, Dan Aykroyd and Jamie Lee Curtis. It was directed by John Landis and written by Timothy Harris and Herschel Weingrod. It was produced by Aaron Russo.
Contents |
The plot bears a remote resemblance to the Three Stooges 1935 short film Hoi Polloi. The movie\'s premise features two immensely wealthy and patrician brothers, Mortimer and Randolph Duke (Don Ameche and Ralph Bellamy), who find themselves on opposite sides of the nature versus nurture argument. The brothers decide that the best way to resolve the argument is to ruin a successful man\'s life, dramatically improve the fortunes of a street hustler, and see how they respond. Mortimer believes that regardless of their shifting fortunes, the well-bred subject will rise to the challenge and the riff-raff will fail no matter what opportunities are presented to him. Randolph insists the well-bred subject will unravel in society while the hustler will take full advantage of his new situation and become a changed man. Both satisfied with the plan, the Duke brothers shake hands to seal a wager for their "usual amount".
Louis Winthorpe III (Dan Aykroyd) is a respected senior employee of the Dukes who manages their Philadelphia commodities brokerage firm, Duke & Duke. His bona fides are impeccable, having attended Exeter and Harvard. Louis has reached the ideal level of detached self-satisfaction, complete with the superficial fiancée, Penelope. However, the Dukes arrange to shatter Louis\' reputation by having one of their operatives, Clarence Beeks (Paul Gleason), "expose" him as a petty thief. As Louis is processed in jail, a scene featuring a cameo by Frank Oz, Louis finds that another item has been planted in his clothing — a cellophane bag containing angel dust. Louis does not fare well in jail — by the time Penelope arrives to post bail, he is disheveled, bruised, black-eyed and cut. When he finally appears to convince Penelope he has been falsely accused, a prostitute, Ophelia (Jamie Lee Curtis), lustily kisses Louis and begs him for a dime bag, promising to "do all the things he likes".
Penelope flees in a state of shock, while Ophelia explains to Louis that someone (Beeks) paid her so Louis would enjoy the "prank." His life continues to deteriorate. His bank accounts have been frozen and he has been locked out of his home by his devoted butler, Coleman (Denholm Elliott), who is unhappily forced to take part in the Dukes\' plan since he is technically in their employ. Ophelia takes pity on the broken Winthorpe and takes him back to her apartment. At first she makes him sleep on the couch, as her bed is to be used "for business only." However, he suffers a horrible cold and she does not let him leave her bed, going as far as to cancel appointments for him.
Meanwhile, street hustler Billy Ray Valentine (Eddie Murphy) had been arrested when he innocently bumped into Louis, his action perceived as a robbery attempt and caught by police, with Winthorpe stating he "wants to press full charges." When Billy Ray is briefly jailed, he attempts to intimidate his hulking cellmates with his purported karate abilities, such as the Quart of Blood Technique. The Dukes bail him out and invite him into their limousine, and then into their supposed program that assists underprivileged members of society.
Billy Ray is brought to his new house (formerly Louis\') and eventually accepts his new luxury, inviting all of the patrons from his favorite bar back to the house for a party. However, Valentine already starts to show signs that he has been changed by wealth, seeing his guests as freeloaders. On his first day at his new job, the Dukes give Billy Ray a brief primer on their business, explaining the concept of commodities in the simplest possible terms. Billy Ray catches on in that the Dukes "make bets" and invest money on behalf of clients on whether futures will go up or down, comparing them to bookies. Eventually, Billy Ray\'s real-world perspective proves to be an accurate predictor of a commodity\'s movement.
Both characters\' plights come to a head during a Duke & Duke Christmas party. Much to Mortimer\'s chagrin, Louis shows up dressed in a soiled Santa Claus costume, attempting to steal food at the buffet and frame Billy Ray, also brandishing a pistol. When he flees in a drunken stupor the Dukes see that Louis has hit rock bottom, and in a washroom conversation, Mortimer concedes defeat in the bet and pays the "usual amount" of their wagers: One dollar. Billy Ray, concealed in a bathroom stall smoking marijuana, overhears the conversation and learns of the Dukes\' plan to push him back on the streets while declining to restore Louis\' position. The Dukes reveal their true opinion of Valentine, when Mortimer remarks in the washroom: "Do you really believe I would have a nigger run our family business, Randolph?"
Billy Ray, realizing that he\'s been used, follows Louis back to Ophelia\'s apartment. Louis, who realises he\'s so unimportant now that even a dog urinates on him (because his red trousers make his leg look like a fire hydrant) attempts suicide with his pistol (comically failing, as the pistol jams, sinking him into an even bigger state of depression), and again with an overdose of pills (nearly succeeding). He is brought back to his original home and is nursed back to health, at which point Valentine, Coleman, and Ophelia inform him of the true nature of the Dukes\' nefarious scheme, and Louis is furious that the Dukes would abuse their power to destroy his life for one dollar. The four plan their revenge, with Billy Ray theorizing that "the best way to get back at rich people is to turn them into poor people". Billy Ray and Louis have learned of the Dukes\' plan to purchase (through Beeks) an advance copy of the official orange crop report, to help them corner the market in frozen concentrated orange juice. In an elaborate scheme that is risky due to the fact it is likely to backfire, as it nearly does, the four manage to steal the real crop report from Beeks and deliver a fake version to the Dukes. Pooling as much money as possible, including the life savings of Ophelia (who has by now become romantically attached to Louis) and Coleman, the money the Dukes paid for the fake crop report and their own investments, Billy Ray and Louis head to the the New York Board of Trade at 4 World Trade Center to execute their plan. With their knowledge of the actual crop report and the Dukes\' misplaced trust in the fake crop report, their strategy goes off with flying colors, resulting in an incredible (undisclosed) amount of wealth for Louis, Billy Ray, Ophelia and Coleman and a $394,000,000.00 margin call for the Dukes. Approached by the incredulous, indignant, and now-bankrupt Duke brothers, Billy Ray, just to rub in their misfortune, tells them that he and Louis made a wager that they could send the two of them onto the streets and get rich at the same time, while Louis bet that they couldn\'t. The wager: One dollar.
The movie ends with Billy Ray, Louis, Ophelia and Coleman enjoying a lavish tropical vacation.
With the authentic orange crop report indicating a good harvest of fresh oranges, frozen concentrated orange juice (FCOJ) would be less important to food producers and so would be likely to drop in price once traders heard the news. However, by way of a fraudulent report, the Duke brothers are led to believe that the orange harvest would be less successful, necessitating greater demand for stockpiled FCOJ in orange products in the coming year, thereby driving the price up. By capitalizing on this knowledge (and the Duke brothers\' missteps) the protagonists are able to profit by manipulating the futures market as follows:
Most of the movie was filmed on location in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Portions were set in New York City, at the World Trade Center and the New York Board of Trade exchange floor at 4 World Trade Center.
The final scene was filmed in Saint Croix, in the United States Virgin Islands.
The film was rated R by the MPAA, for brief nude scenes when Jamie Lee Curtis takes off her top in front of Dan Aykroyd and when several topless women dance at the party held by Valentine. There was also some strong language used in the movie.
Some elements are added or removed from the film for television.
| Films directed by John Landis |
|---|
Schlock (1973) • The Kentucky Fried Movie (1977) • National Lampoon\'s Animal House (1978) • The Blues Brothers (1980) • An American Werewolf in London (1981) • Trading Places (1983) • Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983) • Into the Night (1985)• Spies Like Us (1985) • ¡Three Amigos! (1986) • Amazon Women on the Moon (1987) • Coming to America (1988) • Oscar (1991) • Innocent Blood (1992) • Beverly Hills Cop III (1994) • The Stupids (1996) • Blues Brothers 2000 (1998) • Susan\'s Plan (1998) • Slasher (2004) • Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project (2007) • |
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