Jump to content

It Could Happen to You (1994 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 24.248.74.254 (talk) at 18:58, 26 January 2021. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

It Could Happen to You
Theatrical release poster
Directed byAndrew Bergman
Written byJane Anderson
Produced byMike Lobell
Gary Adelson
Starring
CinematographyCaleb Deschanel
Edited byBarry Malkin
Music byCarter Burwell
Joe Mulherin
Distributed byTriStar Pictures
Release date
  • July 29, 1994 (1994-07-29)
Running time
101 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$20 million[1]
Box office$37,939,757

It Could Happen to You is a 1994 American romantic comedy-drama film starring Nicolas Cage and Bridget Fonda. It is the story of New York City police officer (Cage) who wins the lottery and splits his winnings with a waitress (Fonda). This basic premise was inspired by a real-life incident.[2]

Isaac Hayes has a role as undercover reporter and photographer Angel Dupree, while also being the film's narrator.

The film was remade in Hindi as Bade Dilwala, which was released in 1999 and in Telugu as Bahumati in 2007.

Plot

NYPD officer Charlie Lang (Nicolas Cage) is a kind and generous man who loves his job in Queens, New York, where he lives. His wife, Muriel (Rosie Perez), works at a hair salon and, unlike him, is greedy, materialistic, and selfish, constantly complaining about their situation in life. Waitress Yvonne Biasi (Bridget Fonda) is bankrupt because her husband, Eddie (Stanley Tucci), whom she could not yet afford to divorce, emptied their joint checking account without her permission, while also leaving her with over $12,000 in credit card debt. Charlie meets her when she waits on him at the diner where she works. Since he doesn't have enough money to pay the tip, he promises to give her either double the tip or half of his prospective lottery winnings the next day using a ticket which has numbers he regularly plays. He wins $4 million ($8.2 million today) in the lottery the next day and keeps his promise, despite Muriel's protests.

He and Yvonne become stars almost immediately. She buys the diner and sets up a table with his name at which people who can't afford a meal can eat for free. In another development, he becomes a hero for foiling an attempted robbery at a grocery store but gets wounded in the process, forcing him to take a leave of absence from the police force. Meanwhile, Muriel goes on a shopping spree, and also contracts for disruptive renovations to their apartment without consulting him.

At a gathering on a chartered boat for the lottery winners and other members of high society, Muriel meets the newly rich Jack Gross (Seymour Cassel). She flirts with him, listens to his advice on financial investments, and develops a strong liking for him, which is mutual. Meanwhile, Charlie and Yvonne, accidentally left behind on the pier, spend a lot of time together, on one occasion paying for the train journeys of subway passengers, and on another treating the neighborhood children to a day out at Yankee Stadium, about which the media report. Muriel gets fed up with his constant donations and overall simplicity and throws him out of their apartment, asking for a divorce. That same evening, Yvonne leaves her apartment after Eddie shows up and threatens to stay until he gets $50,000 from her. Quite innocently, she and Charlie run into each other at the Plaza Hotel and, unintentionally, end up spending the night together.

During divorce proceedings between Muriel and Charlie, she demands all the money that he won for herself. He doesn't mind giving his share of it but she also wants the amount he gave Yvonne, and his steadfast unwillingness to do so causes her to take the case to court. Muriel lies in court about the numbers Charlie played to win the ticket, but doesn't get caught. The jury believing her narrative decides in her favor. Yvonne, feeling guilty at costing him all his money, runs out in tears and tries to keep away from him. But he, by now hopelessly in love with her, finds her at the diner and tells her that the money means nothing to him, and they declare their love for each other. While ruminating about their future at the diner and considering a possible move to Buffalo, they graciously provide a hungry and poor customer with some soup, which he eats at the special table. He is none other than disguised reporter Angel Dupree (Isaac Hayes), who takes photos of them and in the next day's newspapers publicly eulogises their willingness to feed a hungry and poor man even in their darkest hour. Just as they are moving out of town, the citizens of New York City, touched by their generosity, send them thousands of letters with tips totaling over $600,000 ($1,233,000 today), enough to help pay their debts.

After Muriel gets remarried to her new husband, Jack Gross, he flees the country with all the money from their checking account, revealing himself to be a con man. She then has no option but to move in with her mother in the Bronx and go back to her old manicure job. Eddie, now divorced from Yvonne, can only get a job as a taxi driver. Charlie happily returns to the NYC police force and Yvonne reclaims the diner. At the film's end, they get married and begin their honeymoon by taking off from Central Park in a hot air balloon that bears the New York Post headline "Cop Weds Waitress", just before the closing credits roll.

Cast

Reception

The film received generally positive reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes calculates a "Certified Fresh" rating with a score of 71% based on reviews from 34 critics.

Soundtrack

The soundtrack album was released by Columbia Records/Sony Records on July 19, 1994.

  1. "Young at Heart" - Tony Bennett and Shawn Colvin
  2. "They Can't Take That Away From Me" - Billie Holiday
  3. "Now It Can Be Told" - Tony Bennett
  4. "Swingdown, Swingtown" - Wynton Marsalis
  5. "She's No Lady" - Lyle Lovett
  6. "Always" - Tony Bennett
  7. "Overture" - Carter Burwell
  8. "I Feel Lucky" - Mary Chapin Carpenter
  9. "Round of Blues" - Shawn Colvin
  10. "The Search" - Carter Burwell
  11. "Young at Heart" - Frank Sinatra

Real-life incident

In 1984, Phyllis Penzo was a waitress at a pizzeria commonly frequented by Yonkers, New York police officers. In March of that year, Officer Robert Cunningham, a regular patron and longtime friend of Penzo, suggested that the two split a lottery ticket, each of them choosing three of the six numbers, in lieu of his leaving her a tip. Penzo agreed, and though she subsequently forgot about it, when Cunningham discovered that the ticket had won a $6 million prize, he honored their verbal agreement and split the money evenly with Penzo.[2]

Beyond this basic premise, the film is entirely fictional, with the backgrounds of the film's characters and the events depicted in the film subsequent to their lottery win bearing no resemblance to the actual lives of Penzo and Cunningham. As a result, neither Penzo nor Cunningham were required to authorize the film, nor were they entitled to collect royalties from its proceeds.[3] The closing credits of the film include a disclaimer stating that although the film was inspired by actual events, at the time of production both Penzo and Cunningham were happily married to their respective spouses.

Production

The diner where Yvonne works in the film was constructed in a parking lot at the corner of N. Moore St. and West Broadway in the Tribeca neighborhood of Manhattan. The film was called “Cop Gives Waitress Million Dollar Tip” when it was shot there.[4]

References

  1. ^ http://textfiles.com/media/film93.ans
  2. ^ a b Mark, Lois Alter. (1994, July 29). "Winning Personalities", Entertainment Weekly
  3. ^ David, Will. (2004, June 26). "Lottery spouse dies in roof fall", The Journal News
  4. ^ Boyle, Wickham, "Hollywood returns to Tribeca's 'Enchanted' corner", downtown express, June 16–22, 2006 (19:5). Retrieved 2019-03-31.