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Rat Race (film)

Rat Race is a 2001 comedy film directed by Jerry Zucker. Written by Andy Breckman, the film is inspired by Stanley Kramer's 1963 film It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, and it features an ensemble cast consisting of Rowan Atkinson, John Cleese, Whoopi Goldberg, Cuba Gooding Jr., Wayne Knight, Jon Lovitz, Kathy Najimy, Lanei Chapman, Breckin Meyer, Amy Smart, Seth Green, Vince Vieluf and Dave Thomas.

Plot
Eccentric hotel tycoon Donald Sinclair devises a game to entertain the high rollers who visit his Las Vegas casino. He arranges for six competitors to race the to Silver City, New Mexico, where $2 million is in a railway station locker. Sinclair's guests place bets on who will win. The racers consist of ne'er-do-well brothers Duane and Blaine Cody, businesswoman Merrill Jennings and her mother Vera, disgraced football referee Owen Templeton, Jewish tourist Randy Pear and his family, narcoleptic Italian tourist Enrico Pollini and no-nonsense attorney Nick Schaffer. Having initially agreed not to play, greed takes over and they start to race. Duane and Blaine destroy the airport's radar, grounding everybody else, but wrecking their own vehicle in the process so they rent another. They decide to split up to better their chances and have a locksmith create a duplicate locker key, but the locksmith overhears their plan and instead makes off with the key in a hot air balloon. The brothers catch up to him after a wild goose chase, leaving him and a stray cow hanging from the balloon's anchor rope. Later, after Blaine is distracted by two attractive women driving beside them on the road, they veer off of it and their rental car is crushed by a monster truck, which they steal. Merrill and Vera are given malicious directions by a woman selling squirrels as pets on the side of the road, and crash into a pile of other totaled vehicles containing her previous deceased victims. After venturing through the Mojave Desert, they steal a rocket car until it runs out of fuel. Left disoriented due to the car's extreme speed, they then accidentally stumble onto a busload of mental patients headed for Silver City. Owen is kicked out of a taxi for a bad call he made at a football game that caused the driver to lose a bet. Now without most of his clothes or other belongings, he then dupes and impersonates the driver of a bus on the way to transport a large group of Lucille Ball cosplayers to a convention, much to his dismay. After the cosplayers flood the bus with suds, he later hits the cow dangling from the balloon and crashes the bus. After the cosplayers lose the only spare wheel, Owen reveals that he is not the real driver and the enraged women chase him down the road. He steals a horse to escape. Randy forces his daughter Kimberly to defecate out of the window of their mini-van to avoid stopping; as revenge, she insists they visit a museum dedicated to Nazi officer Klaus Barbie, mistakenly believing it to be about Barbie the doll. The family awkwardly leaves the museum and steals Adolf Hitler's staff car after Duane and Blaine sabotage their mini-van. On the road, they are attacked by an all-female biker gang. Randy, who burns his tongue after the dashboard cigarette lighter accidentally ejects directly into his mouth, drives them into a large gathering honoring World War II veterans and bumps his upper lip on the steering wheel, leaving a mark. The veterans are horrified by his Hitler-esque slurred speech and appearance, and one attempts to kill him. Later at a diner when his family insist they end the trip, Randy slips sleeping pills into their milkshakes and bundles them into a semi-truck heading for Silver City. Nick chooses not to participate, but changes his mind when he meets Tracy, an independent pilot who gives him a lift in her helicopter. She decides to visit her boyfriend, Shawn, on the way, who she finds cheating on her with another woman, Charleen, in his backyard, so she attacks him by using the helicopter to chase him into the desert. Now having damaged her helicopter and with police on the way to arrest them, she and Nick steal her ex-boyfriend's truck together and form a romantic relationship on their journey. Enrico is more excited by the race than the money, but falls asleep standing up in the hotel lobby, only waking hours later. He gets a ride from Zack, an ambulance driver delivering a transplant heart, who offers Enrico a lift in order to avoid a lawsuit from Gloria Allred, who witnessed Zack hit him with his van. Enrico inadvertently drops the heart out of the window, whereupon it is stolen by a stray dog, which is then electrocuted on an electric fence. Deeming the heart unusable, Zack plans to kill Enrico, who has no family or friends, to replace the missing heart. However, Enrico escapes by jumping onto a passing train, where he drops his locker key in a baby's diaper and, while retrieving it, is mistaken for a pedophile by the parents. He is thrown out at Silver City Station and is the first to reach the locker, only to fall asleep before opening it. The racers reunite in Silver City and fight to open the locker, only to find it empty. Outside, Sinclair's assistant, Harold Grisham, and call girl, Vicki, are making off with the money. The locksmith, still attached to the runaway balloon, suddenly appears and maneuvers it to drop the cow on Grisham and Vicki. He then ties the money bag to the balloon, but it slips out of his grip and into the sky. The racers chase the balloon to a charity concert where Smash Mouth is performing, and the band and crowd mistake the money for a donation. Once the racers see what a global difference the money could make, they have a change of heart and decide to donate it all. Sinclair and his patrons arrive at the scene and Nick horrifies them by announcing they will match the money raised. Sinclair is distraught as the donations total shoots past $19 million, and the racers celebrate by dancing and crowd-surfing to "All Star". ==Cast==
Cast
MainJohn Cleese as Donald P. Sinclair, an eccentric Las Vegas billionaire and gambling mastermind. (Donald Sinclair was the name of the former joint owner of the Gleneagles Hotel, Torquay and provided the inspiration for the eccentric Basil Fawlty (John Cleese), joint owner of the fictional Torquay hotel Fawlty Towers). • Breckin Meyer as Nicholas "Nick" Schaffer, a strait-laced young attorney • Amy Smart as Tracy Faucet, an experienced helicopter pilot and Nick's love interest • Cuba Gooding Jr. as Owen Templeton, a disgraced football referee, recently infamous for a bad call on account of bad judgement • Seth Green as Duane Cody, a ne'er do well looking to make money off insurance scamsVince Vieluf as Blaine Cody, Duane's brother who is unintelligible due to an infected tongue piercingWhoopi Goldberg as Vera Baker, Merrill's superstitious mother, who gave Merrill up for adoption and is now reuniting with her • Lanai Chapman as Merrill Jennings, Vera's biological daughter, a high-strung businesswoman with anger issues • Jon Lovitz as Randy Pear, a sneaky, irresponsible and recklessly opportunist tourist • Kathy Najimy as Beverly "Bev" Pear, Randy's wife • Brody Smith as Jason Pear, Randy and Bev's older son • Jillian Marie Hubert as Kimberly Pear, Randy and Bev's younger daughter • Rowan Atkinson as Enrico Pollini, a simple-minded, narcoleptic Italian tourist from NaplesDave Thomas as Harold Grisham, Sinclair's attorney who was tragically born without a personality • Wayne Knight as Zack Mallozzi, a medical supply driver • Silas Weir Mitchell as Lloyd, a locksmithPaul Rodriguez as Gus, a taxi driver • Dean Cain as Shawn Kent, Tracy's cheating boyfriend • Brandy Ledford as Vicki, a call girl • Tristin Leffler as Pierced Girl, Blaine's girlfriend MinorColleen Camp as Rainbow House Nurse • Deborah Theaker as one of the Lucille Ball cosplayers • Charlotte Zucker as an elderly Lucille Ball cosplayer • Rance Howard as Feed the Earth Spokesman • Gloria Allred as herself • Smash Mouth as themselves • Kathy Bates (uncredited) as a roadside squirrel seller • Kevin Rothery as an air traffic controllerDiamond Dallas Page and Kimberly Page (deleted scenes) as themselves • Manoj Sood as a Saudi high rollerLucy Lee Flippin as Feed the Earth spokesperson ;Fox Sports commentators • Chris Myers as himself • Kevin Frazier as himself ==Production==
Production
Development Rat Race was initially written as a spec script by Darryl Quarles in November 1998. By February 1999, the script had been sold to Hollywood Pictures and producer Jerry Bruckheimer. In August 1999, Jerry Zucker was in negotiations to direct the film for Paramount Pictures from a screenplay written by Andy Breckman that would be set in Las Vegas, Nevada and in New Mexico. The filmmakers initially considered having the film's characters race from Las Vegas, Nevada, to Las Vegas, New Mexico, but the idea was rejected following concerns that it might confuse viewers. Location scouting in southern Nevada was scheduled for May 2000, while filming in the area was delayed until the fall of 2000, to avoid shooting the film in one hundred degree summer heat. Breckin Meyer and Amy Smart were cast in the film in June 2000, while Dean Cain also joined the cast in October. Actor John Cleese praised the script as one of only two scripts during his career that he enjoyed: "It's so unusual to get a top class script. Twice in my life I've had the experience of reading a script and simply saying, 'I'm going to do this. Filming Filming began in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, in August 2000. Filming took place primarily along Calgary's highways, which stood in as highways that the characters travel on in Nevada, Arizona, and New Mexico. Desert scenes were shot in the Canadian town of Drumheller. Scenes involving Gooding and the group of Lucy impersonators were shot in the Canadian Rockies. Jerry Zucker, who had a tradition of including his mother Charlotte in each of his films beginning with Airplane!, had her portray one of the Lucy impersonators. Jerry Zucker said, "It's like the Alfred Hitchcock signature. Instead of me, it's mom." Filming in Las Vegas concluded on September 29, 2000, and production moved to Ely, Nevada, which stood in as Silver City, New Mexico. Ely's Nevada Northern Railway Museum stood in as the Silver City train station. After concluding in Ely, production crews relocated to southern California for the final six weeks of filming, mainly for exterior scenes. Smart's helicopter scenes were filmed at 3118 Carnation Street in Rosamond. Additional filming in California occurred at Big Sky Ranch and El Mirage Lake. Sinclair and the gamblers' eccentric habits are further exaggerated in deleted scenes, where they partake in many more ridiculous bets, including playing Monopoly with real money. In another scene, a high roller pretends to find what they are doing immoral. Professional wrestler Diamond Dallas Page and his then wife, Kimberly, had a cameo that was cut when test audiences failed to give his appearance any reaction. The scene is available on the DVD release. ==Reception==
Reception
Box office Rat Race was released in both the United States and Canada on August 17, 2001, and grossed US$11,662,094 in its opening weekend at the North American box office, ranking third behind American Pie 2 and Rush Hour 2. The film ultimately grossed $56.6 million domestically and $28.8 million overseas for a worldwide total of approximately $85.5 million based on a budget of an estimated $48 million, making it commercially successful. The film was released in the United Kingdom on January 11, 2002, and opened also at number three behind the non-comedic The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring and ''Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone''. For the next two weekends, the film retained the spot, before moving down one place and then four places down before finally ending up on No. 10 on February 10, 2002. Critical response On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 44% based on 129 reviews, with an average rating of 5.00/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Rat Race moves from one sight gag to another, but only a handful of them are genuinely funny." On Metacritic, the film received a score of 52 based on 26 reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an above average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale. Jo Berry of Empire gave the film three stars out of five and wrote, "Ex–Saturday Night Live writer Breckman piles on the gags for this daft chase movie. It's incredibly silly, but also rib-ticklingly funny." ==See also==
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