Everyone enjoys a good rom-com and with the plethora of different variations of this genre now being developed by individuals, we would have to thank the contributions of actress Meg Ryan and actor Billy Crystal for their iconic 1989 rom-com film When Harry Met Sally… If there’s one title among the rest that needs to be crowned the best romance/comedy, then this film will win unanimously.
Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan in a still from When Harry Met Sally…
But by far, the most praise that this film receives is for the iconic conclusion that it ends with, which is still hailed as the best in cinema history in regards to a rom-com. But this wasn’t the original plan that the director and co-writer Rob Reiner had in mind, in fact, it was a tragic tale that he would’ve brought to life if he hadn’t met...
Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan in a still from When Harry Met Sally…
But by far, the most praise that this film receives is for the iconic conclusion that it ends with, which is still hailed as the best in cinema history in regards to a rom-com. But this wasn’t the original plan that the director and co-writer Rob Reiner had in mind, in fact, it was a tragic tale that he would’ve brought to life if he hadn’t met...
- 2/18/2024
- by Deepak Bisht
- FandomWire
From left: Tom Hanks in You’ve Got Mail (Getty Images/Handout), Adam Sandler in The Wedding Singer (Getty Images/Handout), Billy Crystal in When Harry Met Sally (Hulton Archive/Getty Images)Graphic: The A.V. Club
A mere 15 seconds into the first, very confusing teaser trailer for Anyone But You—the...
A mere 15 seconds into the first, very confusing teaser trailer for Anyone But You—the...
- 2/1/2024
- by Christina Izzo
- avclub.com
Tom Hanks turned down the lead in 'When Harry Met Sally...' because he was "happy" to be getting divorced.The 'Elvis' actor's wife Rita Wilson - who he wed in 1988, a year after his marriage to Samantha Lewes ended - revealed the Oscar-winning star was offered Billy Crystal's role of Harry Burns in the classic 1989 film, but struggled to understand the perspective of the character.Speaking on 'Table for Two with Bruce Bozzi', Rita said: "People probably don’t know this, but Tom was offered 'When Harry Met Sally…', and he turned it down because he was going through a divorce and he was very happy to be not married.“And so he could not understand that a person going through a divorce would have anything other than just like, ‘I’m so happy.’”Tom went on to star opposite 'When Harry Met Sally...'...
- 6/18/2023
- by Viki Waters
- Bang Showbiz
Tom Hanks was leading the romantic comedy genre in the 90s with Meg Ryan, but his wife, Rita Wilson, revealed that he actually turned down starring in another classic.
During a recent episode of the Table for Two with Bruce Bozzi podcast, the actress-producer said Hanks was asked to star in 1989’s When Harry Met Sally…, but declined the role.
“People probably don’t know this, but Tom was offered When Harry Met Sally…, and he turned it down because he was going through a divorce and he was very happy to be not married,” Wilson said. “And so he could not understand that a person going through a divorce would have anything other than just like, ‘I’m so happy.’”
The Forrest Gump actor later went on to star opposite Ryan in 1993’s Sleepless in Seattle and 1998’s You’ve Got Mail. And Billy Crystal ended up landing the role...
During a recent episode of the Table for Two with Bruce Bozzi podcast, the actress-producer said Hanks was asked to star in 1989’s When Harry Met Sally…, but declined the role.
“People probably don’t know this, but Tom was offered When Harry Met Sally…, and he turned it down because he was going through a divorce and he was very happy to be not married,” Wilson said. “And so he could not understand that a person going through a divorce would have anything other than just like, ‘I’m so happy.’”
The Forrest Gump actor later went on to star opposite Ryan in 1993’s Sleepless in Seattle and 1998’s You’ve Got Mail. And Billy Crystal ended up landing the role...
- 6/18/2023
- by Carly Thomas
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Billy Crystal has delighted When Harry Met Sally fans by recreating a scene from the hit Eighties film.
The comedian starred opposite Meg Ryan in Nora Ephron’s 1989 romcom, which is widely considered to be one of the greatest of the genre.
Marking his 75th birthday on Tuesday (14 March), Crystal thanked fans for their well-wishes, while treating them to a throwback from the film.
In the photo, Crystal is shown crouching on the floor in a cream fisherman’s jumper, navy jeans and white trainers.
Crystal posted the picture next to a still of him wearing the same outfit and same position in the original film, captioning the post: “Thank you all.”
The tweet caught the eye of the Merriam-Webster dictionary’s account, which replied: “Icon | noun | a person or thing widely admired especially for having great influence or significance in a particular sweater.”
Ben Stiller commented: “Lots of love and respect @BillyCrystal.
The comedian starred opposite Meg Ryan in Nora Ephron’s 1989 romcom, which is widely considered to be one of the greatest of the genre.
Marking his 75th birthday on Tuesday (14 March), Crystal thanked fans for their well-wishes, while treating them to a throwback from the film.
In the photo, Crystal is shown crouching on the floor in a cream fisherman’s jumper, navy jeans and white trainers.
Crystal posted the picture next to a still of him wearing the same outfit and same position in the original film, captioning the post: “Thank you all.”
The tweet caught the eye of the Merriam-Webster dictionary’s account, which replied: “Icon | noun | a person or thing widely admired especially for having great influence or significance in a particular sweater.”
Ben Stiller commented: “Lots of love and respect @BillyCrystal.
- 3/15/2023
- by Isobel Lewis
- The Independent - Film
It takes pressure to create diamonds, and Night Court Season 1 Episode 5 applies it to both Abby and Olivia, revealing facets in the women we haven't seen before.
When confronted by the lawyer who witnessed her most embarrassing moment, Olivia's panic and insecurity do a lot to humanize the tough-talking prosecutor.
Meanwhile, the challenges Abby encounters looking for a new apartment (not helped by Gurgs's non-traditional real estate skills) finally find Judge Pollyanna's tipping point.
Much like the original series, the revival often portrays the courthouse as some sort of bureaucratic biosphere wherein the rule of law is more of a theoretical ideal.
Any people-based system -- and this is probably doubly true of publically underfunded ones -- relies on the exchange of services/favors and thrives on interpersonal connections.
Gurgs is the epitome of courthouse glue. And her expertise is rooted in outside-the-box thinking.
Her strategy of sourcing apartment...
When confronted by the lawyer who witnessed her most embarrassing moment, Olivia's panic and insecurity do a lot to humanize the tough-talking prosecutor.
Meanwhile, the challenges Abby encounters looking for a new apartment (not helped by Gurgs's non-traditional real estate skills) finally find Judge Pollyanna's tipping point.
Much like the original series, the revival often portrays the courthouse as some sort of bureaucratic biosphere wherein the rule of law is more of a theoretical ideal.
Any people-based system -- and this is probably doubly true of publically underfunded ones -- relies on the exchange of services/favors and thrives on interpersonal connections.
Gurgs is the epitome of courthouse glue. And her expertise is rooted in outside-the-box thinking.
Her strategy of sourcing apartment...
- 2/8/2023
- by Diana Keng
- TVfanatic
Of all the modern day romantic comedies, few are written as confidently as Nora Ephron's "When Harry Met Sally..." The story is deceptively simple, yet devastatingly witty — and that has as much to do with Ephron's crackling grasp on syntax as it does with the conversations that inspired her. Ephron was notorious for taking inspiration from everything around her in her work. For "When Harry Met Sally," she was partly inspired by interviews (and heated debates) with actor-slash-director Rob Reiner. He provided the template for one half of the film's titular duo, the cynical, recently-divorced Harry Burns. Sally was, of course, inspired by Ephron herself. Their dynamic (or at least the dramatization of it) built up fascinating stakes in a story where nothing "really" happens. Writing it had been easy enough, but finding two actors that could carry the weight of it would prove slightly challenging.
Casting the role of Sally was a breeze,...
Casting the role of Sally was a breeze,...
- 1/28/2023
- by Lyvie Scott
- Slash Film
The hotly-anticipated Fifty Shades of Grey movie is finally released in cinemas today (February 13) to coincide with Valentine's Day this weekend, and it's got our minds racing about just one thing....
The most ridiculously silly orgasms in movie history, obviously!
From Jennifer Aniston's otherworldly pleasure to Jason Biggs's doubly embarrassing shortcomings - here are 10 fantastically farcical orgasms on the silver screen below:
1. Jason Biggs in American Pie (1999)
Virginal, apple pie-bonking Jim Levenstein can't believe his luck when his history tutoring with sexy Slovakian exchange student Nadia (Shannon Elizabeth) turns into something more. So excited is Jim, however, that he barely contains himself at her touch, only lasting a few more seconds on second go, until he, er, explodes again.
Sadly Stifler (Seann William Scott) had previously coerced Jim to set up a webcam in his room so they can all watch the frisky teenage pair, but he unwittingly...
The most ridiculously silly orgasms in movie history, obviously!
From Jennifer Aniston's otherworldly pleasure to Jason Biggs's doubly embarrassing shortcomings - here are 10 fantastically farcical orgasms on the silver screen below:
1. Jason Biggs in American Pie (1999)
Virginal, apple pie-bonking Jim Levenstein can't believe his luck when his history tutoring with sexy Slovakian exchange student Nadia (Shannon Elizabeth) turns into something more. So excited is Jim, however, that he barely contains himself at her touch, only lasting a few more seconds on second go, until he, er, explodes again.
Sadly Stifler (Seann William Scott) had previously coerced Jim to set up a webcam in his room so they can all watch the frisky teenage pair, but he unwittingly...
- 2/13/2015
- Digital Spy
They’ll have what she’s having! In 1989 director Rob Reiner and late screenwriter Nora Ephron created one of the most iconic romantic comedies of all time, When Harry Met Sally. The smash followed Harry Burns (Billy Crystal) and Sally Albright (Meg Ryan) through years of friendship before the pals became romantic. This groundbreaking classic paved the way for a proliferation of couples on the big and small screen, who started out as friends before finally moving to the next level. On the 25th anniversary of When Harry Met [...]...
- 7/15/2014
- Us Weekly
Note: Do not read on if you have not yet seen Season 1, Episode 9 of The CW's "The Carrie Diaries," titled "The Great Unknown."
We returned to a sullen Carrie Bradshaw moping around Castlebury, Conn., in tonight's episode of "The Carrie Diaries." After Carrie's dad caught her partying at Limelight and lying about her internship, he banned her from Manhattan and Interview magazine.
The silver lining? Carrie had more time to bask in the newfound attention she received from Sebastian. The former bad boy broke up with queen bee Donna in last week's episode, making him free to pursue his feelings for Carrie. Then there was a scene that lasted for about 10 hours about a Rubik's cube (sigh).
Carrie's feelings for Sebastian were so overwhelming that she sobbed to Mouse that she was "scared" and "really likes him." I think the scene of Carrie crying on her bed was meant to...
We returned to a sullen Carrie Bradshaw moping around Castlebury, Conn., in tonight's episode of "The Carrie Diaries." After Carrie's dad caught her partying at Limelight and lying about her internship, he banned her from Manhattan and Interview magazine.
The silver lining? Carrie had more time to bask in the newfound attention she received from Sebastian. The former bad boy broke up with queen bee Donna in last week's episode, making him free to pursue his feelings for Carrie. Then there was a scene that lasted for about 10 hours about a Rubik's cube (sigh).
Carrie's feelings for Sebastian were so overwhelming that she sobbed to Mouse that she was "scared" and "really likes him." I think the scene of Carrie crying on her bed was meant to...
- 3/12/2013
- by Rebecca Shapiro
- Aol TV.
Ouch! A new report says that Taylor reached out to Harry while she was in London, but he totally burned her! They are both set to attend the Nrj Awards in Cannes this weekend — will Taylor finally get the reunion she wants?
The lyrics of “I Knew You Were Trouble” must be haunting Taylor Swift, as Harry Styles is “long gone” because “when I fell hard you took a step back… without me”. Taylor was seen arriving in London on Jan. 21, and while there, she was “desperate to meet up with Harry”, but he told her that he was too busy because he was “put off by how serious she was about him”. Poor Taylor! However, she may be in luck as she is set to see Harry again very soon! The pair are both set to perform at the Nrj Awards in Cannes, France on Jan. 26. Will Taylor have...
The lyrics of “I Knew You Were Trouble” must be haunting Taylor Swift, as Harry Styles is “long gone” because “when I fell hard you took a step back… without me”. Taylor was seen arriving in London on Jan. 21, and while there, she was “desperate to meet up with Harry”, but he told her that he was too busy because he was “put off by how serious she was about him”. Poor Taylor! However, she may be in luck as she is set to see Harry again very soon! The pair are both set to perform at the Nrj Awards in Cannes, France on Jan. 26. Will Taylor have...
- 1/25/2013
- by Eleanore Hutch
- HollywoodLife
Happy New Year! We survived the Mayan apocalypse and the gods have granted us news of a baby from Kim Kardashian and Kanye West to celebrate. Will it be named Khrist? Konstantinople? Kompassion? Maybe Bluer Ivy? One can only speculate, and the same goes for what wonders 2013 will behold. Considering this is a movie website I figured there would be no better way to ring in the new year with a selection of ten screen captures from movies you're sure to recognize along with the famous lines that accompany them. Many I'm sure you expect, but hopefully a couple are a surprise and perhaps will even provoke you to give one of them a watch. Either way, Happy New Year! The Godfather: Part II John Cazale and Al Pacino in The Godfather: Part IIPhoto: Paramount Pictures Michael Corleone I know it was you, Fredo. You broke my heart. You broke my heart!
- 1/1/2013
- by Brad Brevet
- Rope of Silicon
Six years ago, while surfing channels on television, I came across a Season 1 episode of Gossip Girl. I instantly became a fan. I was fascinated by the glamorous lives of these socialites living in the Upper East Side of New York City. One of the characters I identified with was "Lonely Boy," also known as Dan Humphrey (played by Penn Badgley). He was a middle-class boy from Brooklyn who became the Nick Carraway character we viewers could live vicariously through. Another character I adored was the Queen Bee, Blair Waldorf. She's a brunette Regina George -- a character we're supposed to see as a villain, but can't help but love because of the charm and great comedic talent of Leighton Meester.
Season 1 was the prime of the series. It was a genuinely great character-driven drama that I was not afraid to defend to those that dismissed it as a silly teen soap.
Season 1 was the prime of the series. It was a genuinely great character-driven drama that I was not afraid to defend to those that dismissed it as a silly teen soap.
- 12/19/2012
- by Alfonso Espina
- Aol TV.
With over 35 years in showbusiness, Billy Crystal has played some iconic roles: Morty the Mime of "This Is Spinal Tap," Dr. Ben Sobel as seen in "Analyze This" and "Analyze That," and of course Harry Burns from the Nora Ephron-scripted "When Harry Met Sally..."
Crystal's favorite role, however, isn't one of those characters. Rather, it's Mike Wazowski, the one-eyed animated monster Crystal voiced in "Monsters, Inc."
In an interview with THR, Crystal said of Mike Wazowski, “He’s my favorite character I’ve ever played.”
With $255 million in domestic grosses, "Monsters Inc." is Crystal's biggest box office hit. He gets the chance to return to his most cherished role in the upcoming "Monsters University," a prequel to the original film, which is due out on June 21, 2013. Audiences won't have to wait that long to see Crystal, though: He's also teaming up with Bette Midler for the holiday release of "Parental Guidance.
Crystal's favorite role, however, isn't one of those characters. Rather, it's Mike Wazowski, the one-eyed animated monster Crystal voiced in "Monsters, Inc."
In an interview with THR, Crystal said of Mike Wazowski, “He’s my favorite character I’ve ever played.”
With $255 million in domestic grosses, "Monsters Inc." is Crystal's biggest box office hit. He gets the chance to return to his most cherished role in the upcoming "Monsters University," a prequel to the original film, which is due out on June 21, 2013. Audiences won't have to wait that long to see Crystal, though: He's also teaming up with Bette Midler for the holiday release of "Parental Guidance.
- 10/13/2012
- by The Huffington Post
- Huffington Post
Comedian Billy Crystal has weighed in on why women and men can’t be friends (according to his character Harry Burns in “When Harry Met Sally” the “sex part always gets in the way”). Now he's reportedly writing a book offering a male perspective on aging.
The 64-year-old is said to be working on a book on “senior citizenship, which sources say is hilarious,” according to the Hollywood Reporter. As the Reporter noted, Billy Crystal has been talking about aging for…well…ages. (“[In your sixties] you’ll have a major surgery, the music is still too loud, but it doesn’t matter because you can’t hear it anyway!” he groused to a group of middle schoolers in 1991’s “City Slickers.”) And in 2009, he dusted off his one-man Tony-Award winning biographical show “700 Sundays” -- which takes viewers on a journey to the characters who’ve made up his life from his youth...
The 64-year-old is said to be working on a book on “senior citizenship, which sources say is hilarious,” according to the Hollywood Reporter. As the Reporter noted, Billy Crystal has been talking about aging for…well…ages. (“[In your sixties] you’ll have a major surgery, the music is still too loud, but it doesn’t matter because you can’t hear it anyway!” he groused to a group of middle schoolers in 1991’s “City Slickers.”) And in 2009, he dusted off his one-man Tony-Award winning biographical show “700 Sundays” -- which takes viewers on a journey to the characters who’ve made up his life from his youth...
- 8/8/2012
- by Anthonia Akitunde
- Huffington Post
You've got friends, right? I'm assuming you have some friends. Okay, phew. Now, what do those friends look like? Are they all you-shaped? That is to say, dudes, you've got some chick friends, yeah? Chicks, you've got some dude friends, right? Of Course You Do. I may have been a bit of a tomboy growing up. I may enjoy rolling with the homies more than your average female, but I can't be the only one. I mean, people have friends of the opposite sex. Friends they are not trying to bone. Friends they just enjoy because, as much as men and women are disimilar, they're not two different species. So what gives, Hollywood? What's with the dearth of non-romantic friendships between the opposite sexes? You haven't been listening to Harry Burns again, have you Hollywood? I love Harry Burns, I do, but Harry Burns is full of sh*t.
Men and women can't be friends,...
Men and women can't be friends,...
- 8/1/2011
- by Joanna Robinson
When Harry Met Sally (1989) No, no, you did not have great sex with Sheldon. A Sheldon can do your income taxes. If you need a root canal, Sheldon’s your man. But humpin’ and pumpin’ is not Sheldon’s strong suit. It’s the name. “Do it to me, Sheldon. You’re an animal, Sheldon. Ride me, big Shel-don.” Doesn’t work. Synopsis Harry Burns (Billy Crystal) and Sally Albright (Meg Ryan) meet while sharing a ride from Chicago to New York City after college. After some awkward situations and interesting conversation, they part ways a little less than amicably. Five years later, they bump into each other again, and once again part under less than ideal conditions. Five more years go by and both have seen their share of love’s ups and downs. This time, however, their friendship is able to blossom, and as it develops the central question of the film is tested: “Can...
- 11/4/2009
- by Paul Sileo
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
“I was in here yesterday,” says Vivian Ward (Julia Roberts) to the snooty store assistant in modern fairytale Pretty Woman. “You wouldn’t wait on me. You people work on commission, right?” The shamed clerk at the exclusive Rodeo Drive shop mumbles in agreement. “Big mistake. Big. Huge. I have to go shopping now.” And with that Vivian, dressed head to toe in swanky designer labels and completely transformed from her streetwalker roots sweeps confidently out of the shop, that soon-to-be familiar Roberts grin (this was 1990) spread across her face. It was the moment that a star was born, catapulting Roberts to mega-stardom and giving ‘the little person’ victory over those that look down on them and 19 years later remains so popular that it’s been voted the UK’s favourite movie moment in a new poll.
Essentially it’s a revenge scene, but performed so sweetly and with such...
Essentially it’s a revenge scene, but performed so sweetly and with such...
- 6/9/2009
- Boxwish.com
To mark the release of Sony Pictures Classics' "Rachel Getting Married," we've thrown together what we think are some of the best wedding toasts seen in film. "Rachel Getting Married" stars Anne Hathaway, Debra Winger, Rosemarie DeWitt, Bill Irwin, Mather Zickel, Anna Deavere Smith, Anisa George and Tunde Adebimpe. Hathaway has grown up from the "Princess Diary" days and shows her true value as an actress who is most adaptable. Anne's had her time with some of the best of Hollywood, most recently in this summer's strong performer "Get Smart" starring Steve Carell. From comedy, family, drama, horror, animated, romance and more, Hathaway is the poster child for talent and versatility. What's "Rachel Getting Married" about? This is a contemporary drama with an aggressive sense of humor about the return of an estranged daughter to the family home for her sister's wedding. Kym's (Hathaway) reemergence throws a wrench into the family dynamics,...
- 9/30/2008
- Upcoming-Movies.com
This severe case of divided personality seems to result from the fact that star Tom Selleck must be a credible threat to kill his parents by the end of the film; so for an hour we have to see what a basically nice, charming guy he's playing. The result, in any event, is a weak comedy with bleak boxoffice prospects.
Selleck plays Jon Aldrich, a Chicago stockbroker who flies off to Florida when he gets an emergency call that his mother is in the hospital. Mom (Anne Jackson, in the film's class performance), turns out to be OK, but dad Harry Aldrich (Don Ameche) turns out to be in the throes of what the film keeps calling senile dementia. Harry is living in a time warp where it's always 1943 and every meeting with his son is a joyful reunion.
After Harry Burns down his retirement-village home, Jon takes him to his Chicago condo where wife Audrey (Wendy Crewson) makes the best of things until Jon's income and savings vanish as a result of an FBI investigation (undercover agent played by Michael Murphy). Soon dad's wandering around in a daze, Audrey has taken the kids and scrammed, and shrewish sister Arlene (Christine Ebersole) has moved in with her bratty kids and commenced an affair with the apartment house's doorman (Robert Pastorelli). Mom and dad, pained by all the trouble they're causing, convince Jon, with Arlene's enthusiastic cooperation, that the best thing for Jon to do is kill them and thus relieve everybody of their burden.
Once the film gets to the murder attempts, with their effective slapstick gags (Jon unfailingly hurts himself more than he does his parents) and satiric bite, the film is at least entertaining. However, until then we're reassured over and over that Jon is a great guy, a wonderful husband and dad, a loving son (even though he hasn't seen his parents in eight years), an honest businessman (even though his firm is suffused with peculation) and an all-around sweetheart.
All without a trace of irony but a surplus of sitcom-like gags about nutty old pop. The film's first hour simply doesn't have the courage of its final 45 minutes' convictions.
FOLKS!
20th Century Fox
Mario & Vittorio Cecchi Gori and Silvio Berlusconi present a Penta Pictures Production
Producers Victor Drai, Malcolm R. Harding
Director Ted Kotcheff
Writer Robert Klane
Director of photography Larry Pizer
Production designer William J. Creber
Editor Joan E. Chapman
Music Michel Colombier
Casting Lynn Stalmaster
Color/Dolby
Cast:
Jon Aldrich Tom Selleck
Harry Aldrich Don Ameche
Mildred Aldrich Anne Jackson
Audrey Aldrich Wendy Crewson
Arlene Christine Ebersole
Running time -- 108 minutes
MPAA Rating: PG-13
(c) The Hollywood Reporter...
Selleck plays Jon Aldrich, a Chicago stockbroker who flies off to Florida when he gets an emergency call that his mother is in the hospital. Mom (Anne Jackson, in the film's class performance), turns out to be OK, but dad Harry Aldrich (Don Ameche) turns out to be in the throes of what the film keeps calling senile dementia. Harry is living in a time warp where it's always 1943 and every meeting with his son is a joyful reunion.
After Harry Burns down his retirement-village home, Jon takes him to his Chicago condo where wife Audrey (Wendy Crewson) makes the best of things until Jon's income and savings vanish as a result of an FBI investigation (undercover agent played by Michael Murphy). Soon dad's wandering around in a daze, Audrey has taken the kids and scrammed, and shrewish sister Arlene (Christine Ebersole) has moved in with her bratty kids and commenced an affair with the apartment house's doorman (Robert Pastorelli). Mom and dad, pained by all the trouble they're causing, convince Jon, with Arlene's enthusiastic cooperation, that the best thing for Jon to do is kill them and thus relieve everybody of their burden.
Once the film gets to the murder attempts, with their effective slapstick gags (Jon unfailingly hurts himself more than he does his parents) and satiric bite, the film is at least entertaining. However, until then we're reassured over and over that Jon is a great guy, a wonderful husband and dad, a loving son (even though he hasn't seen his parents in eight years), an honest businessman (even though his firm is suffused with peculation) and an all-around sweetheart.
All without a trace of irony but a surplus of sitcom-like gags about nutty old pop. The film's first hour simply doesn't have the courage of its final 45 minutes' convictions.
FOLKS!
20th Century Fox
Mario & Vittorio Cecchi Gori and Silvio Berlusconi present a Penta Pictures Production
Producers Victor Drai, Malcolm R. Harding
Director Ted Kotcheff
Writer Robert Klane
Director of photography Larry Pizer
Production designer William J. Creber
Editor Joan E. Chapman
Music Michel Colombier
Casting Lynn Stalmaster
Color/Dolby
Cast:
Jon Aldrich Tom Selleck
Harry Aldrich Don Ameche
Mildred Aldrich Anne Jackson
Audrey Aldrich Wendy Crewson
Arlene Christine Ebersole
Running time -- 108 minutes
MPAA Rating: PG-13
(c) The Hollywood Reporter...
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