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| Pocket Money | |
|---|---|
Theatrical poster | |
| Directed by | Stuart Rosenberg |
| Screenplay by | Terrence Malick |
| Adaptation by | John Gay |
| Based on | Jim Kane 1970 novel by J.P.S. Brown |
| Produced by | John Foreman |
| Starring | Paul Newman Lee Marvin Strother Martin Hector Elizondo |
| Cinematography | László Kovács |
| Edited by | Bob Wyman |
| Music by | Alex North |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | National General Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 102 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $2,444,000[1] |
Pocket Money is a 1972 American buddy-comedy film directed byStuart Rosenberg, from a screenplay written byTerrence Malick and based on the 1970 novelJim Kane by J. P. S. Brown. The film starsPaul Newman andLee Marvin and takes place in 1970s Arizona and northern Mexico.
It was filmed mostly in the small town of Ajo, Arizona. Portions of the film were shot at Southwestern Studios in Carefree, Arizona, a facility built by cast memberFred Graham.
According to co-star Wayne Rogers, in an episode ofPop Goes the Culture, Newman and Marvin did not get along especially well during production.[2] This movie was one of three films that Newman, Rogers, and Rosenberg made together; the others beingCool Hand Luke (1967) andWUSA (1970).
The song "Pocket Money" is composed and performed byCarole King.
Broke and in debt, an otherwise honest cowboy known as Jim Kane gets mixed up in some shady dealings with Stretch Russell and Bill Garrett, a crooked rancher. Russell tells Kane to escort 250 head of cattle from Mexico to the United States for a good sum of money. Kane agrees and brings along his friend Leonard to aid him. Unfortunately, the two come upon many unexpected events that often deter them from completing their job.
Roger Ebert of theChicago Sun-Times gave the film two stars out of four and wrote, "The movie seems to be going for a highly mannered, elliptical, enigmatic style, and it gets there. We don't."[3] Gene Siskel of theChicago Tribune gave the film zero stars out of four and called the performances by the two leads "completely self-indulgent," suggesting that "Maybe Newman and Marvin made it because they wanted to go slumming in Mexico for two weeks. On that basis, 'Pocket Money' can be considered a 35-millimeter home movie of what Paul Newman and Lee Marvin did last summer."[4]Vincent Canby ofThe New York Times called it "a fragmented, far-from-great movie, and it won't change cinema history, but in its own odd fashion it celebrates humdrum lives without ever resorting to patronizing artifice."[5] Kevin Thomas of theLos Angeles Times wrote that Newman and Marvin had "found precisely the right material to enable them not only to play off each other but also to shine individually. This delightful contemporary comedy-western in fact is that most precious of commodities these days: a movie that actually cheers you up and leaves you feeling better when you come out than when you went in."[6]
TV Guide wrote in a retrospective review, "Paul Newman,Sidney Poitier,Barbra Streisand,Steve McQueen, andDustin Hoffman formedFirst Artists, and this was their premier offering. It wasn't as terrible a movie as the first reviews of it indicated, but since so much was expected, anything less than brilliance was a letdown."[7] On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a 50% rating based on reviews from 8 critics.[8]