Take the Money and Run (1969) USA
Take the Money and Run Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Woody Allen
Studio:Anchor Bay
Producer:Charles H. Joffe, Edgar J. Scherick, Jack Grossberg, Jack Rollins, Sidney Glazier
Writer:Woody Allen, Mickey Rose
Rating:4.5
Rated:R
Date Added:2006-03-27
ASIN:6305474826
UPC:0013131083590
Price:$14.98
Awards:3 nominations
Genre:Comic Criminals
Release:2004-07-05
IMDb:0065063
Duration:85
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.66:1
Sound:Dolby
Languages:English, Dolby Digital 1.0
Subtitles:English, Spanish, French
Features:Full Screen
Letterboxed
Woody Allen  ...  (Director)
Woody Allen, Mickey Rose  ...  (Writer)
 
Janet Margolin  ...  Louise
Woody Allen  ...  Virgil Starkwell
Marcel Hillaire  ...  Fritz
Jacquelyn Hyde  ...  Miss Blair
Lonny Chapman  ...  Jake
Jan Merlin  ...  Al
James Anderson  ...  Chain Gang Warden
Jackson Beck  ...  The Narrator (voice)
Howard Storm  ...  Fred
Mark Gordon  ...  Vince
Micil Murphy  ...  Frank
Minnow Moskowitz  ...  Joe Agneta
Nate Jacobson  ...  The Judge
Grace Bauer  ...  Farm House Lady
Henry Leff  ...  Mr. Starkwell, Virgil's Father
Ethel Sokolow  ...  Mother Starkwell
Dan Frazer  ...  Julius Epstein - The Psychiatrist (as Don Frazier)
Comments: crime lives!

Summary: Woody Allen's feature-film debut, Take the Money and Run, a mockumentary that combines sight gags, sketchlike scenes, and standup jokes at rat-a-tat speed, looks positively primitive compared to his mature work. Primitive, but awfully funny. Allen plays Virgil Starkwell, a music-loving nebbish who turns to a life of crime at an early age and, undaunted by his utter and complete failure to pull off a single successful robbery, continues his unbroken spree of bungled heists and prison breaks even after he marries and raises a family. Narrator Jackson Beck, whose stentorian voice of authority makes a perfect foil for Starkwell's absurd exploits, lobs one droll quip after another with deadpan seriousness. Though spotty, Allen tosses so many jokes into the mix that it hardly matters and when they hit they are often hilarious: the chain gang posing as cousins to their old-woman hostage ("We're very close," Virgil explains to a dim cop), arguing with a dotty movie director who is supposed to be their cover for a bank robbery, Virgil's escape attempt with a bar of soap. Allen spoofs decades of crime films, everything from I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang to Bonnie and Clyde, but you don't have to know the movies to enjoy this goofy, sometimes clumsy, but quite clever comedy. --Sean Axmaker