| The Jerk | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Carl Reiner |
| Screenplay by | |
| Story by |
|
| Produced by | |
| Starring |
|
| Cinematography | Victor J. Kemper |
| Edited by |
|
| Music by | Jack Elliott |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 95 minutes[1] |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $4 million[2] |
| Box office | $100 million[2] |
The Jerk is a 1979 Americancomedy film directed byCarl Reiner and written bySteve Martin,Carl Gottlieb, andMichael Elias (from a story by Martin and Gottlieb). This was Martin's first starring role in a feature film. The film also featuresBernadette Peters,M. Emmet Walsh,Catlin Adams,Maurice Evans, andJackie Mason. Critical reviews were mostly positive, andThe Jerk was a major financial success.
Navin Johnson, a homeless person sleeping in a stairwell inLos Angeles, addresses the camera directly to tell his life story.
The white adopted son of blacksharecroppers inMississippi, Navin grows to adulthood naïvely unaware of these circumstances. He is unable to dance in rhythm to thespirited folk songs played by the family, but finds that he can do so perfectly to achampagne-style song on the radio. Seeing this moment as a calling, he excitedly decides to leave home and travel toSt. Louis, where the broadcast originated. Along the way, he adopts a dog and names it "Shithead" after angering the guests at a motel by waking them up in the middle of the night, having misinterpreted the dog's barking at his door as a warning of a fire.
Navin finds a job as a gas station attendant, where he attempts to detain some thieves but accidentally destroys a nearby church. Later, a madman chooses his name at random from the telephone book and decides to kill him. As the gunman waits for an opportunity, Navin solders a brace to a customer's eyeglasses to stop them from slipping down his nose. The customer, Stan Fox, is an inventor who promises to try to market the device and split any profits with Navin. The gunman opens fire at Navin but misses, and Navin flees to the grounds of a traveling carnival.
Navin is hired as a weight guesser and is brusquely seduced by Patty Bernstein, an intimidatingdaredevil motorcyclist. Later, while operating aminiature railway, he meets acosmetologist named Marie Kimble and arranges a date with her. When a jealous Patty interrupts and starts to beat Navin, Marie easily knocks her unconscious. The two begin a relationship, and Navin decides to ask Marie to marry him. Before he can do so, though, she leaves him because he cannot provide financial security. Devastated, Navin takes Shithead and travels to Los Angeles. There, the gunman who tried to kill him—now sane and working as aprivate investigator—tracks him down and gives him a letter from Stan requesting a meeting.
Stan has been able to market Navin's device, now branded as the Opti-Grab, and gives him a check for $250,000 as the first installment on his share of the profits. Navin finds and marries Marie, and the two adopt a life of extravagant spending as his wealth continues to grow. However, Navin is soon named as defendant in aclass action lawsuit brought by directorCarl Reiner and millions of other Opti-Grab customers who have become permanently cross-eyed after using the device. Navin loses the suit and is ordered to pay $10 million in damages, leaving him broke, and he storms out into the street after an argument with Marie.
Having finished his story, Navin resigns himself to living in poverty, only to be found by his adoptive family, who have brought Marie and Shithead with them. The family has become wealthy by investing the money Navin sent them from time to time, and they take him and Marie home to live in their new house, which is nearly identical to their old shack but larger and sturdier. Once again Navin dances on the porch to folk songs, this time with perfect rhythm.
DirectorCarl Reiner, credited as "Carl Reiner, the Celebrity", plays himself. Former Playboy PlaymateSharon Johansen plays Mrs. Hartounian, whileAlfred Dennis has a small role as Irving. In addition there are uncredited appearances by Reiner's sonRob Reiner as the truck driver who picks up Navin and character actorLarry Hankin briefly appears as a circus hand.

By 1977, comedianSteve Martin was experiencing wild success. He wanted to cross over to a film career, believing it promised more longevity.[3] Basing his film proposal on a line from his act — "It wasn't always easy for me; I was born a poor black child" — he fleshed out his ideas into a series of notes he intended to deliver to studios. With confidence in his budding standup career, he imagined it would not be difficult to break into Hollywood. Instead, he found it more difficult than expected.[3] Bill McEuen was acquainted withParamount Pictures presidentDavid Picker, and convinced Picker to sign Martin for a three-year contract at the studio after showing him one of his routines at the Boarding House comedy club in San Francisco.[4]
Martin passed along his notes, which the studio read carefully. It described a series of odd jobs lead character "Steve" would hold in his saga. Martin developed this concept into the first draft ofThe Jerk, but Paramount passed on the project after Picker left the studio.[5] However, Picker convinced his new employer Universal Studios to sign a distribution deal for the film, which would leave Martin in creative control of the project. Martin was able to pick which director he wanted to work with. Martin initially choseMike Nichols, but Nichols then "bowed out" of the project in 1978. Martin's next choice wasCarl Reiner, famous for his work onThe Dick Van Dyke Show.[4][6]
The duo met constantly, and the film's title grew out of their conversations. Martin recounts in his memoir:
It needs to be something short, yet have the feeling of an epic tale. LikeDostoyevsky'sThe Idiot, but not that. LikeThe Jerk.[6]
Martin wrote the part of "Marie" withBernadette Peters in mind.[7] He adapted several bits of his standup act to fit within the film, such as a monologue in which he emotionally exits a scene, remarking "I don't need anything", but nevertheless picking up each object he passes on his way out.[6] In co-writing the script withCarl Gottlieb andMichael Elias, their goal was to provide a laugh on each page of the screenplay.[8]
Principal photography took 45 days using 85 locations inGreater Los Angeles, on a $4.6 million budget. This includedMohammed al Fassi's mansion inBeverly Hills,Pasadena,Westlake Village andDevonshire Downs inNorthridge.[4] In shooting the film, Reiner "ran a joyful set", according to Martin, with the cast and crew eating lunch together each day.[9] Martin's favorite moment of the film, as he detailed in his 2007 memoirBorn Standing Up, was the scene in which he and Peters sing "Tonight You Belong to Me". Martin felt the moment was touching, and waited in anticipation at the film's premiere screening inSt. Louis. Unfortunately, much of the audience left during the scene to buy more popcorn.[9]
A scene in whichBill Murray was to have made a cameo was cut from the final film.[10][11]
An alternate, comic introduction of Marie (Peters), near the train ride Navin was running at the carnival, was shot. When her nephew takes off on the train, Navin rescues him, and in returning the boy to Marie, has the bill of his engineer's cap pulled down over his eyes so he cannot see the toy village he (Navin) destroys like a lunatic. This scene might have been edited due to a reference toGodzilla.[citation needed]
Another scene that was cut featuredGailard Sartain as a Texas oil millionaire who tearfully begs Navin for money to replace the cracked, dried-out leather seats on his private jet. Navin grants his request and he gratefully states: "Now I can fly my friends to theSuper Bowl like a MAN, and not some damned BUM!"[12]
The television version features a scene in which a forlorn Navin, trying to forget Marie, spends six hours on theRound Up carnival ride. The boss orders the ride stopped, and Navin is removed by two carnival workers, who sit him down on the ride's stairs. "What are you looking at?", he asks them. "Haven't you seen a man so broken he needed to spin?".
The film was a hit, earning over $73 million domestically,[13] (making the movie theeighth highest-grossing of 1979) and $100 million worldwide, having been produced on a relatively low budget of $4 million.[2]
Onreview aggregatorRotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 82% based on 44 reviews, with an average rating of 6.9/10. The site's critical consensus reads: "Crude, crass, and oh so quotable,The Jerk is nothing short of an all-out comedic showcase for Steve Martin."[14] OnMetacritic, the film received a score of 61 based on 14 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[15]
Janet Maslin ofThe New York Times wrote thatThe Jerk "is by turns funny, vulgar and backhandedly clever, never more so than when it aspires to absolute stupidity. And Mr. Martin, who began his career with an arrow stuck through his head, has since developed a real genius for playing dumb ... Even when it's crude—which is quite a lot of the time—it's not mean-spirited ... Mr. Martin and his co-star, Bernadette Peters, work very sweetly together, even when they sing a duet of 'Tonight You Belong to Me,' carrying sweetness to what could easily have become an intolerable extreme."[16]
BBC film review rated the movie two out of five stars and described the film as an "early watered-down version of the crude comedy the Farrelly Brothers would later take to new extremes" and made references to it having similar themes to the early 1980s parody filmAirplane![17]Roger Ebert ofThe Chicago Sun-Times also gave the film a mixed review, statingThe Jerk was "all gags and very little comedy" and built of "gag situations [which] are milked for one-time laughs. They don't grow out of his character, or contribute to it."[18]
VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever reviewed the film for its book and rated the movie as being two and a half stars. The author of the review referred to Steve Martin's silly, exaggerated acting as complementary to the early comedianJerry Lewis.[19]
The Jerk has been praised as not only one of Martin's best comedic efforts, but also one of the funniest films ever made. In 2000, readers ofTotal Film votedThe Jerk the 48th greatest comedy film of all time. This film is No. 20 onBravo's100 Funniest Movies[20] and No. 89 on theAmerican Film Institute listAFI's 100 Years...100 Laughs.[21]IGN ranked the film as the tenth top comedy film of all time.[22]Premiere voted Steve Martin's performance of Navin Johnson No. 99 on their list, "The 100 Greatest Performances of All Time".[23] A BBC poll of more than 250 critics rated the film as the 99th greatest comedy of all time.[24]
Christiane Kubrick hailed it as one ofStanley Kubrick's favorite films of all time. It led to Kubrick meeting with Martin to discuss working together on his filmEyes Wide Shut.[25]
In a 2015 interview withThe Hollywood Reporter, Steve Martin was asked if the film would be accepted in this day and age with all of the "heightened racial sensitivity." His response was that he had not watched the movie himself in a very long time, but when he reflects on his experience with making the movie he recalls everyone being treated "with such respect" throughout the filming process.[26]
The Jerk had atelevision filmsequel,The Jerk, Too (1984), starringMark Blankfield as Navin and co-starringStacey Nelkin. Steve Martin was executive producer, but did not write the screenplay.[27]