Mad Money | 
enlarge | Director: Callie Khouri Actors: Diane Keaton, Ted Danson, Katie Holmes, Adam Rothenberg, Queen Latifah Studio: Anchor Bay - ITN Category: DVD
List Price: $29.97 Buy Used: $3.45 You Save: $26.52 (88%)
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Rating: 71 reviews Sales Rank: 815
Format: Color, Dolby, Dts Surround Sound, Dvd-video, Ntsc, Widescreen Language: English (Original Language) Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 103 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.5 x 0.6
MPN: DV80000 UPC: 013138000095 EAN: 0013138000095 ASIN: B0013ERFGE
Theatrical Release Date: January 18, 2008 Release Date: May 13, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: DVD in great condition! Original box and artwork included. Ex-rental, 100% Guaranteed! Machine buffed and resurfaced before shipment! Fast shipping!!! Item #30932
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Product Description Academy Award winner Diane Keaton Academy Award nominee Queen Latifah and Katie Holmes are all in for the crime of their lives! Deep inside the most secure bank in America three desperate women from very different worlds cook up the most unlikely heist of the century: Smuggle out millions of dollars in worn-out currency headed for a Federal Reserve shredder every day. Taking the cash is going to be easy but getting away with it will be insane! Ted Danson Christopher McDonald (HAPPY GILMORE) Roger Cross (24) and Stephen Root (OFFICE SPACE) co-star in this wild comedy caper from the creator of THELMA & LOUISE about chasing your dreams beating the system and paying the price for MAD MONEY!System Requirements:Running Time: 104 minutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: COMEDY/COMEDY OF ERRORS Rating: PG-13 UPC: 013138000095 Manufacturer No: DV80000
Amazon.com Take three women in need of cash, a slew of money about to be shredded, and a plot that nicks a bit from 2005's Fun with Dick and Jane and you've got Mad Money. Diane Keaton stars as Bridget, a stay-at-home wife whose life as she knows it ends when her husband loses his cushy, high-paying job. Her college degree in literature turns out to be useless, so she accepts a janitorial position at the local bank. There she meets Nina (Queen Latifah) and Jackie (Katie Holmes), who could use some spare scratch as well. Suddenly, it dawns on Bridget that the bank has plenty of what they need: money! Because the gals are so cute and nice, it's clear they're not really going to rob the bank. What they will do, though, is take the old bills headed for the shredder and recycle it back into the economy by spending it. (Oh heck, they're basically stealing the money.) Played for laughs, the movie doesn't bother to discuss the economic ramifications of what would happen if too much money was recirculated, but that's neither here nor there. The trio of personable actors--particularly Keaton--does a good job of making the characters likable, even in some unbelievable situations. But Keaton deserves better than Mad Money, which isn't really funny enough to be a comedy and doesn't have enough romance to qualify as good chick flick. Still, Keaton, Latifah and Holmes share warm camaraderie. It'd be fun to see them reunited in a film that had a little more weight to it. Ironically, Mad Money was directed by directed by Callie Khouri, who wrote Thelma & Louise and Something to Talk About--movies that had all the key components (compelling storyline and characters worth cheering on) that Mad Money is lacking. --Jae-Ha Kim
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| Customer Reviews: Read 66 more reviews...
It's not a loser, but it isn't breaking any new ground either. July 25, 2008 Intentional or not, this crime caper film has an air of immediacy to it as it deals with issues arising from our current state of (shhhh!) recession. Opening with the layoff and subsequent depression of newly unemployed Don Cardigan (Ted Danson), we see the turmoil of a middle-aged couple having to come to grips with suddenly not being able to maintain their status of living. As such, Bridget Cardigan (Diana Keaton) decides she will need to join the workforce for the first time in her life. The opening segments of the film setting this up and showing her series of job interviews immediately draws you in. We are quickly on Keaton's side as she struggles to find a place to just make a buck or two!
Finally she lands a job at the Federal Reserve as a janitor. Not so glorious - but before long she begins to wonder about all that money around her! She soon learns about the daily destruction of inactive money, and hatches a scheme to steal it. In her mind, the money is going to be destroyed anyway, so it "technically" isn't stealing - it's just removing something from the trash! That little moral issue aside, she begins looking for accomplices, which ultimately leads to Nina Brewster (Latifah) and Jackie Truman (Holmes). The three figure out a way to lift the money right out from under the noses of their employers. All this leading up to the first heist is intriguing and enjoyable to watch.
The problem, however, is that this first heist occurs midway through the film, and once it has come and gone, the screenwriters suddenly seem out of ideas. The second half of the film basically just bides it's time with the girls repeatedly pulling off the heist until it reaches the 90- minute mark. I found myself preparing for any number of certain twists and turns, but none of these ever came. The second half of the film plays out by the numbers and ends on a less than thrilling note. In the end, what's on the screen is fine, but it's what is missing that could have been so much more!
Performances are largely on track. Keaton's usual lovable yet slightly neurotic style is in full force - Latifah continues to find roles that let her play wise and likable - and Holmes is essentially the airhead of the troupe. Danson is mainly a side character here. Yet even with a female led cast, the film never quite feels like a simple chick-flick or made for Lifetime movie - I'll give it that. But in the end, it was missing a certain attitude or bite that made director Callie Khouri's screenplay for THELMA AND LOUISE so memorable.
Bottom Line: You won't hate yourself for watching it, but you will quickly forget about it once it is over.
Mad Money a Mad Cap Comedy July 18, 2008 What hppens when a desperate housewive, struggling with an unemployed husband, mounting bills, and imminent foreclosure, gets a new job? What if that job was at a federal reserve bank where faded and worn bank notes are destroyed?
Mad Money employs such a scenario. In addition there is the aspect of an overly confident manager who is so sure his security is drum tight that no one could possibly sneak money out of his facility.
Diane Keaton plays the housewife with an unemployed husband (Ted Danson) who gets a job at the federal reserve. There she meets the struggling single mom (played by Queen Latifah) and the young druggie (played by Katie Holmes--I hope th Scintologists approved). Together they concoct a plan to sneak money out despite the security efforts (random body checks, special keys and locks that should only be opened in the presence of guards, etc.) Of course there are tense moments, such as snap inspections by the manager. And when a security guard gets suspicious, soon he's part of the gang.
But the druggie's boyfriend starts investing huge sums of money and the feds are on their case. If one person talks, they all go down--all except the one who should talk and get an easier sentence. So, who talks? Will the feds get their criminals? Or will an ego let the gang go free?
This movie captures the spirit of the Americam psyche that cheered John Dillinger on during the Depression, that sense that powerful forces are keeping the small people down and they have found a way to get even. It is a humorous and light-hearted comedy. No, it won't win any Academy Awards, but it will let you chuckle watching it some night.
star power barely carries weak plot July 16, 2008 This movie just didn't keep me. The star power alone carried the weak, difficult to believe plot. IMO the purpose of a "heist movie" (like ocean's 11) is to make you think that you really could do something like that and get away with it, this movie didn't pull that off. I never got used to seeing Diane Lane in a janitor's jumpsuit. Katie Holmes was plays a looney tune, probably the only type of character that she would be good at nowadays. There is no moral to the story. No "come to Jesus" moment at the end. Instead you're left with the feeling that if you can steal from the government, everything's gravy. Not terrible, but worth a little less than face value.
Lotta Laughs & Tension in this Feel Good Movie July 16, 2008 With our economy in the dumps, gas going through the roof, people losing their homes, can you blame a girl if she wants to skirt the law and steal a few bucks? Well, a lotta bucks in this case.
Bridget Cardigan (Diane Keaton) is forced to go into the work place because her unemployed husband (Ted Danson) isn't looking like he's going to find work anytime soon. They are knee deep in debt and about to lose their home.
Bridget gets a janitorial job at the Federal Reserve Bank and immediately falls in love with all that money, especially the cash that gets burned. She devises a scheme to steal some of the loot, it's untraceable after all. However, she needs to involve a couple other clean up girls in on her plot and they are played by Queen Latifah and Katie Holmes.
Much of the movie revolves around the girls stealing the cash and it's pretty funny, at least I laughed a lot. I like Diane Keaton and Katie Holmes, but I absolutely love Queen Latifah, so perhaps I was programed to like the movie, which is good, because I really did.
Plenty of laughs and tension in this film and it's got a feel good ending that surprised me and if you see this movie it might surprise you, it's very good and I highly recommend it.
Reviewed by Vesta Irene, Number One fan of Ken Douglas, writer of Tangerine Dream, Desperation Moon & Running Scared.
This Movie Should Definitely "Tip" Now! July 15, 2008 Hey, since now we're all talking about Freddie Mac and Ginny Mae, this is a movie whose time has come! Are more banks gonna close now?
I have long been a Diane Keaton fan, and here she is in all her glory. It almost brings you back to "Annie Hall." In fact, this film could sort of be "Annie Hall Hits the New Millenium."
Money comes to money, they say. When you've had money and then had to do without it, there can either be rare introspective personal insights and a transformation of the individual's existential position.
Or it can be this movie! Viewed from that perspective, it's delightful.
Say, it's two a.m. - do you know where your money is?
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