Last of the Red Hot Lovers (1972) Poster

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6/10
Middle-aged crisis times three
shino3 July 2004
Arkin gives a fine turn as a successful middle-aged middle-class fish restauranteur whose fingers smell of fish and who simply has to get in on this Sexual Revolution he's heard so much about. Thus follows three sequential trysts in his mother's apartment, the first with a the embittered Kellerman, the second with the flighty Prentiss and the final with the depressive Taylor, each ending in its own disastrous way. Arkin does a lot of his frustrated signature shouting and there's a lot of dialogue, but it is a Neil Simon play after all.

The Kellerman sequence is a bit tiresome and her many soliloquies bombastic and preachy. Taylor's vignette was more amusing--if you find bipolarism and melancholia amusing. Her demand that Arkin list three good people belabors the point.

But sandwiched between these two is the Prentiss episode, which is a gem. Prentiss plays the perky, quirky, dope-smoking character to a tee: "I know I'm a goofball but that's part of my charm." Those voice inflections changing 10 times a minute, those eye rolls, those downturned crooked smiles, teeter into the realm of self-parody but we're loving it. And it doesn't hurt at all that she simply looks like a million bucks.
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7/10
Mid-Life Crisis, NYC Style -- Film-Version Neil Simon Stage Hit
mdm-1110 September 2005
The fast-paced, witty script follows Neil Simon's stage play almost verbatim. Countless funny lines and come-backs make this a very entertaining comedy. Mid-life crisis seems to hit almost every character. Having an affair was the "in" thing, portrayed as a survival necessity. The "loverboy" is quite nervous about cheating on his wife of 22 years (with whom he has 3 children). Opportunities seem plentiful. Saying prayers for guidance is like a fetish to this man.

Somehow the production of this 1970s NYC setting and action feel like a French or Italian comedy. There definitely is a European flavor (of the 70s). The cover of the DVD promises a letterbox format, yet delivers only a VERY squeezed TV version. There are no added features whatsoever. Those are the only disappointments in an otherwise thoroughly enjoyable comedy. Fans of Neil Simon's work will have a great time.
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6/10
If at first you don't succeed, try, try again.
Hey_Sweden31 July 2019
Neil Simon scripted this film version of his play, in which an almost constantly flustered Alan Arkin plays Barney Cashman. Barney is a middle-aged owner of a fish restaurant who feels rather dissatisfied with his ordinary life. He mistakenly thinks that the way to inject some spice is to have an extramarital affair, and as fate would have it, his mothers' apartment is vacant one afternoon a week. He meets with a succession of women whom he tries his mightiest to seduce: Elaine (Sally Kellerman), a cynical, unemotional sexpot with a very direct approach, Bobbi (Paula Prentiss), an air head, obnoxious entertainer, and his own friend Jeanette (Renee Taylor), a cuckolded wife suffering from melancholia.

Directed by Gene Saks, this never really comes off as cinema but more a photographed play, even with a number of outside shots. As such, it's very reliant on characterization and dialogue, and it proves to be fairly watchable. The performances, especially from Arkin, are basically stage performances that come across as over the top on film. And it's kind of hard to care all that much about this average-Joe schmuck in the lead role, and why he feels so compelled to cheat on his wife. The sequence with Kellerman tends to be the most amusing; she's fantastic in her role. Prentiss is a little much; her character could definitely be annoying to some viewers. Taylor is fine, but this woman she's playing will likely be a matter of personal taste: can a miserable person with self-esteem issues be all that funny under these circumstances?

Simon, of course, does come up with some entertaining lines of dialogue, and admittedly, Arkins' reaction to getting "stoned" is a hoot as Prentiss convinces him to try marijuana.

Fans of Simon and the cast will likely be a lot more forgiving than the average viewer.

Six out of 10.
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Very Funny
Cashman20 August 1999
This is a classic in my eyes, Arkin couldn't have been better. I love the long takes and the sometimes senseless arguments between the characters. I also like the score, it fits the time nicely. This is the movie that made me an Alan Arkin fan.
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6/10
Great Dialogue & Characters, But Needed More For A Film Adaptation
D_Burke14 July 2010
From my many years of watching movies, I can easily tell when a film is originally a play. The way to tell is usually when the main characters either stay in one place, or walk around to many different locations while talking simultaneously. The movies that fall into the latter category appear to try too hard to make viewers forget the story was originally intended for stage, not screen. "Last of the Red Hot Lovers", to its credit, does not try to hide its theatrical roots.

The movie is one of many to be adapted from a play by Neil Simon, who also wrote the script for this film and left very little out. Simon's big screen (writing) successes include "The Odd Couple" (1968), "The Sunshine Boys" (1975 with George Burns and Walter Matthau), and "The Goodbye Girl" (1977). His failures include "The Cheap Detective" (1978) and "The Marrying Man" (1991). Of the 34 films he has written screenplays for (including remakes), "Last of the Red Hot Lovers" falls somewhere in the middle leaning towards the top. It's not bad, but it wasn't quite as well-adapted as the aforementioned great Neil Simon movies that are still iconic. The writing is excellent, but there was something missing just from the film that could have strengthened it greatly.

Alan Arkin plays Barney Cashman, a slightly uptight but well-meaning 45-year-old restaurant owner who is fed up with the monotony of his life. He has been married for 22 years and appears to still love his wife. However, he feels an itch as a jaded aristocratic woman (Sally Kellerman) wishes to engage in an extramarital affair with him. He is overcome with mixed feelings about the ordeal, including the paranoia that comes with being caught. That fear is not helped by the fact that he chooses his mother's Upper East Side apartment as the location of his desired fling, which is also where most of the movie takes place. The same feelings emerge when he attempts affairs with an aspiring singer with a fully fleeting attention span (Paula Prentiss) and a friend's wife who is convinced her husband is also having an affair (Renee Taylor).

This is a smart comedy, but not one that you can enjoy by watching passively. There is no leaving your brain at the door, which may be why this film could be considered an acquired taste. It is dialogue-heavy with a hint of slapstick or physical humor from time to time. That physical humor comes mostly from Arkin's compulsive tics such as smelling his fingers (for traces of fish) or wiping off his potential fingerprints from whatever he touches in his mother's apartment. There were probably many actors who would overdo such actions, or intentionally fall over themselves to get a cheap laugh. Fortunately, Arkin resists these urges, and manages to appear realistically uptight instead of acting nerdy like a Jerry Lewis character.

The comedy mostly comes from the dialogue, which is why you will need a sharp attention span to catch most of the humor here. Of the three objects of Barney Cashman's artificial affections here, I thought Paula Prentiss did the best job. Not only does she look great in this film, but her character is over the top without being too in-your-face. She's just a notch below Gilda Radner's Judy Miller character from the early days of "Saturday Night Live". Men who are turned on by women's legs will also not be disappointed when seeing her on screen (hey, it's the guy in me talking).

I thought Kellerman did well for her part, although I still don't know why she wanted to have an affair with Barney Cashman yet still seem uninterested in him. Taylor made a great antithesis to both Kellerman and Prentiss as the suburban wife who feels wronged, but is not sure in the end if two wrongs actually do make a right. Her character especially works when Arkin realizes what he was trying to find in these artificial relationships, and what he actually did find.

The characters were flawless, and the dialogue, although sometimes firing at a speed that allowed little time for a laugh, was witty and interesting. The major weakness of the movie was the fact that Arkin's often-referred-to wife was never shown on film. You hear her voice, and see her figure under bed blankets, but never does the camera eye glance upon her. Such a gimmick has been done in other films before, but this is one of the many times it doesn't work. By not showing the wife, the audience doesn't have much of an idea of the guilt and sexual tension Barney Cashman feels. Cashman is a good guy about to commit an act that could ruin his marriage and his life, but the audience doesn't know on what exactly he's missing out. Such tension existed in films about extramarital affairs like "The Woman In Red" (1984) or "Jungle Fever" (1991) because you saw the wife and got a general feeling for what kind of person she was. In this movie, she's a wallflower.

With a title like "Last of the Red Hot Lovers", one would also think it would be a bit more risqué. Of course, the fact that there is no gratuitous sex is what makes the film's title so ironic, but there could have been a bit more enlightening dialogue about such topics. Even though it's rated PG, I doubt kids would want to see it, so why not make it more for adults?

"Last of the Red Hot Lovers" is good, but just need some more tweaking to make it great. Still, its strengths lay in its characters, especially the underrated Alan Arkin (before winning an Oscar, of course) and Paula Prentiss. Anyone bored with the dialogue can always rent a "Three Stooges" movie, but those willing to hold on to their brains while watching a comedy should keep this film in mind.
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7/10
Barney Cashman wants a fling!
Sylviastel7 September 2015
This Neil Simon comedy is about a middle aged Jewish man Barney Cashman who runs a seafood restaurant in New York City and lives in the suburbs with his wife Thelma. This comedy is typical Neil Simon. Barney tries to have an affair with three different women. Elaine played wonderfully by Sally Kellerman. There is Bobbi played by Paula Prentiss and suburban housewife Jeanette (played well by Renee Taylor). The film is about a married man having a midlife crisis. The film is based on the play but remains true to its intent. There is a lot more dialogue that action in the film. The film is set in New York City and an unknown suburb. The film is a delight for Neil Simon and Alan Arkin fans. Alan Arkin has become one of my favorite actors and this film highlights his charm and complexity as an actor.
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6/10
Much better than its rep
ofumalow7 November 2020
Liking this film was just about the last thing I'd expected, as I'd only been curious to watch it because it's very seldom seen these days, and has a reputation as one of the worst Neil Simon screen adaptations, or even worst early 1970s movies, period. I had never heard a good word about it. But though inevitably the dialogue has a feel of stage shtick, the film has a little more grit than the "better," glossier Simon films of that era (like Plaza Suite, The Odd Couple, etc.), and generally manages to avoid a sitcomish feel (unlike the prior year's atrocious Star-Spangled Girl). It's hardly a great movie, or even a great comedy, but it does have pretty great performances, and with this kind of material that's 80% of the battle.

The first of the three sections (in all of which Alda's nebbishy restauranteur unsuccessfully tries to have an affair) got the most of the limited praise at the time, and it's certainly the one with the most dramatic edge, since Sally Kellerman plays it pretty straight as a jaded married woman who picks up Arkin, then is exasperated by his skittishness about actully getting down to business. Perhaps this sequence comes off as a bit more serious because it's the one part in which the woman is the sane party, reading him the riot act for his neurotic self-consciousness.

The next part is with Paula Prentiss as a would-be actress he picks up in the park, but she turns out to be entirely too crazy for a quickie. She does muscle him into smoking a joint, and his worst-case-scenario reaction to getting high the first time is very funny. Prentiss really sinks her teeth into this ditz, and Arkin is in good farcical form, as he is in the final segment (after a brief ensemble party sequence) where he's trying to finally consummate his planned infidelity with somebody--this time his neighbor Renee Taylor. But it turns out she is even more uptight with her suburban values than he is. Her running up and down the scale of guilty-in-advance theatricality gets a bit screechy near the end, but again both performers are in crackerjack form. Anyway, this is hardly a neglected classic, but it's far more enjoyable than I ever would have expected.
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4/10
Good cast in shrill, cheaply-made Neil Simon comedy
moonspinner5525 November 2006
Married restaurant-manager (Alan Arkin, miscast but still charming) contemplates having an extra-marital affair, striking out three times with different women: Sally Kellerman as a jaded sexpot, Paula Prentiss as a pot-smoking flake, and Renee Taylor as a society wife with melancholia. If you're familiar with the Neil Simon play (a dinner-theater perennial), you know right off this stagy material is not suited for the screen. Director Gene Saks must've been raised in community theater--he has little visual imagination--however his pacing and rhythm are snappy. Kellerman's segment is the best (she and Arkin get some real repartee going), but Prentiss is sidelined by uneven writing and Taylor does too much shouting (noisier isn't funnier). The picture has a dull, washed-out look, and Arkin is really too young for this part (he's supposed to be a balding 45-year-old, but he appears to be in his mid-30s with a shaved head). Some amusing bits are scattered about. ** from ****
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10/10
R.I.P. Alan Arkin
ShadeGrenade2 July 2023
Warning: Spoilers
As I write this, the death has been announced of Alan Arkin. He was not a comedian per se, just an actor who happened to be hilarious. 'Last Of The Red Hot Lovers' cast him as 'Barney Cashman', a middle-aged, happily married ( we never see his wife, Thelma ) fish restaurant owner who sees sexual promiscuity all around him and wants a slice of the action. He takes three very different women ( not at the same time, I hasten to add! ) back to his mother's apartment ( she is away at work ) in the hope of having one-night stands. These women are swinger 'Elaine' ( the late Sally Kellerman ), neurotic would-be actress 'Bobbi' ( Paula Prentiss ), and emotionally overwrought ( she's found out her husband is cheating on her ) 'Jeanette' ( Renee Taylor. Each time, something goes wrong, and Barney finds himself back where he started.

If the film looks like a photographed stage play, its not surprising. That's what it was. Producer Howard Koch and director Gene Saks were clearly hoping to emulate the success of 'The Odd Couple', also based on a Neil Simon play. Arkin is brilliant. Some of his observations about life, sex and death are wonderfully profound. Of the three women, Kellerman gives the best performance. Her hacking smokers' cough indicates she is terminally ill, and is trying to end her days by sleeping with as many men as possible. Prentiss' character is too not different to the one she played in 'What's New Pussycat'. Taylor is also impressive. 'Jeanette' wants an affair to get over her husband's infidelity, but then finds she cannot go through with it.

So, definitely a film worth tracking down. Just like all of Arkin's other movies. Thanks for all the laughs, Alan.
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7/10
Very underrated......very funny,,,,,,,,
merklekranz9 July 2007
Alan Arkin is at his best, and his three prospective affairs produce plenty of laughs. Several of the lines are equal to Woody Allen's best neurotic outbursts. I did not find the movie too play-like because the rapid exchanges of often hilarious conversation keeps it moving along. Sally Kellerman, Paula Prentiss, and Renee Taylor offer three distinct and quite challenging opportunities for Barney Cashman to stray. The point that is made throughout is that life is passing Barney by and he needs to do something to break out of his dreary existence. His Mother's apartment will never be the same, and neither will Barney. I recommend this movie for only one reason. It is funny. - MERK
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5/10
Mildly amusing N. Simon Tale!
shepardjessica10 July 2004
Although Neil Simon material was already dating itself by the early 70's, Alan Arkin is a consummate pro as usual and the 3 women are perfect (even with the stale jokes). Paula Prentiss as Bobbi is the standout (as she often is), Sally Kellerman is majestically neurotic, and Renee Taylor has her usual funny voice. Arkin is beating a dead horse with his intent to use his mother's apartment for dalliances, but he's so in tune with this poor working stiff, you have to feel for him.

This material was going South by the release of this and there's not much to say about it (THE 70's HAD ARRIVED)! If you're an Arkin, Prentiss, or Kellerman fan you'll enjoy this on some level. A 5 out of 10. Best performance = Prentiss.
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7/10
"Name three decent people!"
MissSimonetta19 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
LAST OF THE RED HOT LOVERS is the definition of a minor film. The play seems to be one of Neil Simon's less celebrated works as it is. Alan Arkin's turn as the restless square seafood restaurateur Barney Cashman is not one of his more celebrated performances either, with some critics even feeling he was miscast. However, minor does not equal not worth seeing or mediocre in this case and the movie is entertaining in its modest way.

Count me in as one who thinks Arkin did the movie proud. It must be noted I am a huge fan of his, but I thought his approach was great, neurotic and uptight without turning the character into a one-dimensional clown. His eccentric tics (such as smelling his fingers to make sure they don't smell like fish) and fine use of props reminded me of Buster Keaton more than once, actually. Though he's visibly too young (and for my tastes anyway, too handsome) to pass as a schlubby middle aged schmuck, he does a good job and comes off as quite sympathetic.

Sally Kellerman, Paula Prentiss, and Renee Taylor all do great work as well as Arkin's would-be conquests. Kellerman is cynical and aloof, though I do think her episode runs its course early and goes on longer than I would have liked. Prentiss is the best of the three, a cheerful "psycho singer" who gets Barney to smoke some pot with her. Taylor is the most serious of the three, a depressed housewife looking to get revenge on her philandering spouse by sleeping with Barney, but not attracted enough to Barney and possessing too much of a conscience to go through with it.

Despite the game cast and clever dialogue, the movie never quite nails the landing. For one thing, a play this talk-heavy was never going to seem cinematic, no matter how much the filmmakers try to open up the story by using a few locales beyond the apartment. The episodic narrative lumbers along, even if each episode is entertaining. Lastly, the play feels rather dated, even by the standards of the early 1970s-- I could see this same basic script being used ten years earlier and seeming more risque in an IRMA LA DOUCE manner. Modern audiences might also find certain elements of this story uncomfortable too, particularly in the Renee Taylor episode, where depression is treated rather lightly and Arkin all but forces himself on her in a slapsticky manner that might offend.

So do I recommend the movie? Yes, though only to those who enjoy the cast and don't mind talky movies. The film is clever and has a good heart beneath its oddball characters and talk of indecency and mid-life crisis.
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4/10
A filmed play
JasparLamarCrabb23 November 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Not bad, but a few funny one-liners is hardly enough to sustain a movie. Neil Simon's stage hit makes a decidedly non-cinematic film directed by Gene Saks. Alan Arkin is a restaurateur facing a mid-life crisis who tries to prove something to himself by conquering three different women. The three women turn out to suffer from various degrees of insanity. Sally Kellerman is a tough talking New Yorker with a nasty cough and a caustic tongue. Paula Prentiss is a flaky struggling actress and Renee Taylor is the hopelessly morose family friend who runs Arkin ragged with her sad sack routine. Director Saks brings very little creativity to this so it's essentially a filmed play. Simon's dialog is occasionally funny, but consists mostly of grim observations of modern life. Arkin tries mightily and gets a few laughs and the always interesting Prentiss steals her scenes.
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Character Study And Hilarious Comedy - The Neil Simon Way
Tirelli5 June 2000
Barney Cashman, a middle-aged fish restaurant owner, is starting to contemplate the idea of dying for the first time - faithfully devoted to his wife of several years, he decides to have an affair. Something beautiful, something decent... an interlude of romance and beauty to reassure him that his by the numbers existence was in fact, worthwhile.

Well, somebody should have told him what Ellen Burstyn said to Alan Alda towards the end of 'Same Time, Next Year'... 'There Is No Such Thing, My Love.'

Instead, he arranges encounters with three different women in his mother's apartment - Sally Kellerman, a cold, callous and unemotional woman whose notions of realism clash violently with Barney's eagerness to be gentle; Paula Prentiss, a drug addict actress whose only feature film was intitled 'I Married An Ape' ( The Same Story As 'Wuthering Heights', But With Some Gorillas And Some Surf Riders... ) and Renée Taylor, a seemingly fiery woman who, in fact, suffers from a deep state of melancholia.

Like any other Neil Simon gem, this is an in-depth commentary on one main character's psyche intertwined with hilarious bits and one-liners. Being no exception, 'The Last Of The Red Hot Lovers' is about one man's quest to free himself from the drearyness of every day life. The unsuccesful attempt he makes to free himself from Barney Cashman and become 'the last of the red hot lovers'. The deconstruction of Barney Cashman comes through those three woman, whose extreme life styles make him realize how there is no such thing as a pure and decent extramarital affair.

Sounds depressing? Well, it isn't. Simon blends character study with comedy in rare fashion, and makes this as delightful as any comedy can be, and as profound as any drama can be.
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6/10
Middle Age
JoanWaterfield14 May 2020
Receding youth, looming age and caught in the squeeze is Barney Cashman, Last of the Red Hot Lovers, a man most husbands will recognize. You know the guy... married more thane 20 years but with a roving eye for a pretty pair of legs...the reluctanyt and somewhat innocuous lecher. On Broadway, James Coco became a star as Barney, but true to Hollywood form he wasn't stabbed for the movie role --that went to Alan Arkin. Coco was more than comphensated by being signed to play Sancho Panza to Peter O'Tooles "Man of La Mancha". Alan Arkin scores as the movie Barney, bumbling his way through sexual games with three willing women. His special comedic talents are perfectly mated to ythe part; the 40ish Lothario dreaming of "just one more time" out of wedlock. Sally Kellerman, Paula Prentice and Rene Taylor give adiquate support in the "Quarry Quandary" though they night have been more believable had they been less attractive, but the other players give solid performances. Barney may be a failure, but the movie succeeds happily.
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4/10
The fly in the Simon soup.
mark.waltz12 July 2022
Warning: Spoilers
For the most part, the film versions of Neil Simon's plays are successful, but there have been a few disappointments and this one is the biggest. After "Barefoot in the Park", "The Odd Couple" and "Plaza Suite", there was high hopes for the film version of this play, and outside of its star Alan Arkin as a typical neurotic New Yorker and Sally Kellerman as the first of three attempted flings (reminding me more of Brenda Vaccaro or Lainie Kazan than Margaret J. Houlihan from "M*A"S"H") who sharply tells him that she can't smoke water after asking for a cigarette during a coughing spell. Kellerman is deliciously critical and controlling of everything, qualities I normally don't find appealing, but Kellerman's delivery of each of her lines is delicious.

I wish I could say the same in appeal for Paula Prentice and Renee Taylor who are the second and third flings (attempted at least), probably ready to make Kellerman's character all the more desirable. Arkin, playing a lot older than his actual age, is very funny walking through the streets making observations, his insecurities overwhelming, and certainly not the red hot lover that he's trying to be. Prentiss, whose character seems sane when he first meets her outside Central Park, ultimately turned into a screeching mess that I just wanted him to push over the balcony, and Taylor's character really serves no purpose, especially in being there to help him wrap up the conflict of Arkin"s desires.

There's nothing wrong with a film version of a play seeming like a film version of a play, but there needs to be better camera work down there is here, definitely a deficiency of director Gene Saks. I saw this film years ago in my early twenties long before getting to know New York, and it's definitely meant for people who know New York. I did not like the film then at all, and many years later, that dislike has turned to a moderate ambivalence. This just ranks as a play that probably just should have stayed on the stage, although I don't think it has been revived since it's original production.
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Deeply human
ivan-223 October 2001
What do you expect from Neil Simon except everything! He turns dialogue into chamber music. He is the consummate artist of speech. Yes, he can do plot too - and that's an understatement - but at his best, he is a COMPOSER. This movie is about a homely middle aged man TRYING to have a romance. It is most poignant and painful, with little comic relief. The critics thought it deserved only one star. Critics seem to regard awkward, homely characters as not worthy of depiction, except in comedy. They are also very partial to big budgets with lots of excitement, car chases, etc. Talk is not cinematic? Who said cinema should be cinematic? Life is cinematic enough!
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Fun for a while and then.......
Poseidon-36 July 2004
Based on one of many Neil Simon plays that occur within a single room with varied vignettes, this one concerns a man (Arkin) who wakes up and decides that his life is too dull and safe and needs some spark in it. So he daringly and trepidatiously uses his mother's one-room apartment to set up a series of afternoon liaisons with women he finds desirable and each of the trysts has unexpected and mostly comic results. First he meets up with Kellerman, a jaded, sophisticated bitch who has lost most of her feelings, but still enjoys the sensation of sex. Next up is wacky Prentiss, who babbles on endlessly while displaying signs of what this generation calls ADHD and inventing all sorts of possibly-imagined drama for herself. Finally, he invites troubled, married Taylor, who is enduring her own husband's infidelity and wants to pay him back. By the time Arkin has dealt with this trio of misfits, he discovers things about himself that he hadn't originally realized. It goes without saying that the production is stagy in the extreme. The set even contains the ever-present (and much loathed by experienced theatre critics) couch DEAD CENTER in the playing area. Attempts have been made to "open up" the story slightly and extend the ladies' parts a bit, but this only draws attention to the main playing area and the repetition of it all. Arkin gives a fully-committed, deeply thought-out performance in a role that really showcases the female roles more than his own. He, however, isn't always delightful to listen to as he pontificates and screams with regularity. Kellerman is perfect for her part and has some funny throwaway lines (notably after she coughs for an eternity and then asks for something besides water afterwards.) Prentiss also performs admirably in a role that requires a particular brand of nuttiness. Her unusual vocalisms probably would be better suited to the stage, but the whole project is better suited to the stage. Taylor is probably the least endearing of the three, even though her character is likely meant to be the most sympathetic. She, like everyone in the cast - right down to the bit players - seems to be portraying the most strident and grating aspects of a New Yorker. It would almost count as an insult to the people of NYC were it not a project written and directed (and mostly acted!) by true blue New Yorkers! So it had to be intentional. Arkin's voice often sounds exactly like Jerry Seinfeld's. There's a reason that "Seinfeld" was just a half hour long and that he never starred in any films. A person can only take so much. That may be why a little of this film, even though it has some very amusing content at times, goes a long way. By the time Taylor shows up, it's already overstayed its welcome.
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Wildly funny and entertaining
mntwister18 June 2007
Another of the great Paramount Neil Simon versions of his stage plays, and this one is a winner. Arkin is hilarious and perfect for the role, Kellerman is perfectly cast, as is Prentiss. This is a funny, enjoyable comedy that has been very under-rated. I can't imagine a better casting that Alan Arkin in the lead role. Actually, each of the 3 women he tries to have an affair with are also perfectly cast. If you are looking for a light, very funny comedy with a lot of winning one-liners,this is the movie.

I Mmight also recommend the other Neil Simon greats of the 60's, Barefoot in the Park, The Odd Couple, and Plaza Suite.
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