The Pick-up Artist

PG-13 5.3
1987 1 hr 21 min Comedy , Crime , Romance

A womanizer meets his match when he falls for the daughter of a gambling addict who is in debt to the mob.

  • Cast:
    Molly Ringwald , Robert Downey Jr. , Dennis Hopper , Danny Aiello , Harvey Keitel , Vanessa Williams , Mildred Dunnock

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Reviews

Claysaba
1987/09/18

Excellent, Without a doubt!!

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Contentar
1987/09/19

Best movie of this year hands down!

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Maidexpl
1987/09/20

Entertaining from beginning to end, it maintains the spirit of the franchise while establishing it's own seal with a fun cast

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Abbigail Bush
1987/09/21

what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.

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spencer-w-hensley
1987/09/22

I saw a preview for this movie and happened to find it on an old VHS while glancing the thrift stores. When I first saw the trailer with Molly Ringwald and Robert Downey Jr., I figured the movie had to be pretty good. I love Ringwald's work in the John Hughes films, and just like Downey in general so I thought I was in for a really funny, warm treat. Add to the cast Dennis Hopper, fresh off of an Oscar nod from the previous year's Hoosier's as well as Danny Aiello, Bob Gunton (warden Norton from my all time fave "The Shawshank Redemption) and Harvey Keitel, and you got what seems like a really fun comedy with a powerhouse cast. And it starts off that way, but it takes some seriously wrong turns after the first half-hour and just gets progressively worse to the point where I wanted to take my eyes off the TV set. The so called "story" is very lame once the premise is established. Downey plays his usual sarcastic, self-centered character, who happens to be a womanizer here, who tries to put all of his smooth moves on Ringwald (what guy in the 80's wouldn't have tried though?). She at first is uninterested but he is her only saving grace when gangster Keitel and his hit men, kidnap Hopper playing Ringwald's father, and Downey is forced to come up with the ransom money to save Hopper and ultimately Ringwald's lives. The problem here is with this fantastic cast, the story and characters should be much more interesting and likable, not bland and generic like it is here. The movie would have been better with Downey's character being the same and leaving more room for character development getting to know both he Ringwald's characters better and taking them on another crazy adventure rather than the stupid mob sub-plot that is the focus here. Ringwald also seems like she's trying too hard to be an adult actress here, and not be typecast-ed with her typical teen roles from her tenure with Hughes. Taking this approach however is not successful, as her character here is bland and unlikable. The movie would have been much better here, if she would have played a character similar to the ones she did in "The Breakfast Club," or "Pretty in Pink." When actors try hard to be different than their usual persona, they come across as unlikable and that's definitely the case with Ringwald here. Maybe if John Hughes would have directed this, it would have been a different, and certainly much better movie. Also, the supporting cast is entirely wasted and all characters are underdeveloped. Hopper seems like he is doing a much more comical version of his character from "Hoosiers" here, and it gets rather annoying quite quickly, especially considering he played the same character exactly a year before and did it much better then. He is also given very little to do, and the fact he receives screen credit is ridiculous, this could have easily been an extended cameo, and a bad one at that. What a waste of Hopper's fine talent. Fortunately we have better movies in his career before and after this to remember him by like "Easy Rider," "Hoosiers", "Blue Velvet" and "Speed". Keitel is also annoying here, playing his usual tough-guy role, and he forces it so much that after a while it just becomes plain laughable. That role works for other movies but doesn't cut it here. He is wasted here, and given a bad role. Even Joe Pesci or Danny De Vito would have been better suited for this part, and could have brought some humor and originality to the character. Keitel plays it so straight that it's just painful to watch. The character is irritating and extremely one-dimensional. Didn't the director tell him this was a comedy before he signed on? Gunton, a fine character actor is also wasted here and given nothing to do, same for Aiello. And then of course, there's Downey who puts a lot of effort into his character, but acts as if he knows the script stinks and aims to do his best with it. Downey does a generally good job, and gives the movie some saving grace, but this character would be suited better with another script and in another movie. All in all the movie is very forgettable and wastes it's fine cast, who deserved a much better script, story and direction than what they got.

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Scarecrow-88
1987/09/23

Robert Downey Jr. is a New York City Lothario who becomes smitten with a stunning red head(Molly Ringwald, given a chance to star in an adult drama for a change)throwing his whole swinging lifestyle into a tailspin. In actuality he's a schoolteacher who lives with his grandmother and keeps the phone numbers of girls he hits on while cruising streets in his ailing Camaro Convertible which loves to die on him at the most inopportune times. Ringwald is the daughter of a drunk (Dennis Hopper who remains in an incoherent stooper the entire film) with a huge gambling debt she's trying to somehow repay but his ill-tempered bookie (Harvey Keitel) offers her a chance to eliminate it by pleasing a rich foreigner he wants to keep in his favor. Danny Aiello is a pal of Downey's who likes to give him advice although he often doesn't take it(as you'd expect Aiello owns a diner—stereotyped much?). Keitel is his usual intense, dangerous self, having worked with director Toback previously in FINGERS, constantly pushing Ringwald to basically hooker herself to pay off papa's debt. Downey Jr. shows here that he was a star-in-the-making, even though his character is a bit off-putting the way he follows girls like a mutt in heat. Ringwald, I imagine, was happy to star in a film where she gets to portray an adult, her Randy Jensen trying with every fiber in her being to shake off Downey's Jack Jericho and come up with some sort of solution to her dad's situation. This movie has the tiresome trip to Atlantic City where Ringwald tries to win at Blackjack to secure the money needed while Downey, despite her demands to stay away, follows behind—and yes, there's the giant Roulette wheel spin with Hopper's life hanging in the balance, which I can guess you know the result. Ringwald is adorable as always, if a bit more complicated because she has a lot to deal with and doesn't know what to do about her feelings for Downey. Downey has that effortless charm and charisma which has kept him a movie star for quite some time.

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tedg
1987/09/24

What a lesson in film-making!Let me report that among date movies, very few age well. This one has improved remarkably with age. Part of the reason is the two main actors. Molly is her most striking here. She's absolutely at her peak in what she does, which is a sort of sassy, deliberately fostered innocent/wise cuteness. No one can do this today, and the attempts are depressing. Kate Hudson? We all die a little when she tries.And then we have Downey. He's already heavy into drugs and he doesn't have the drugged discipline he had in "Chaplin." But he has an energy that is so appealing. Undisciplined, druggy energy would usually be just dispersed effort, but this is a date movie, something that depends on misregistration of self.And look who surrounds them: Aiello doing his working class avuncular bit. Keitel being such a movie gangster they bleeped his every speech. And Dennis Hopper! That man who is a permanent token of intoxicated risktaking. Three solid marks in film characters, all portrayed by their inventors.You can see that the filmmaker is a writer. The script is actually very good. Very good indeed for what it is and the assets that are available. The direction is so inadequate it hurts. But it hurts in exactly the right way. This is a film about stretching, about yearning without touching. Its all about inadequacy in love, a sort of reality-tinged inadequacy overlain on the romantic comedy template.Because the camera is always in the wrong place, is always too tentative, is always unsure of itself, but still goes, still goes...It puts us in the thing as one of these kids, clumsy, bold without cause.I recommend this. I do. Its problems work for it.Molly has faded as a presence now. But that's inevitable because of how we all exploited her youth. We shouldn't think that she is a flake, like say Meg Ryan or Julia Roberts. This very year she starred in one of the most intellectually ambitious movies of all time, Godards "King Lear." And more recently, she was in a Greenaway film. No stupid actor would do that.Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.

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Keedee
1987/09/25

I found the chemistry between Ringwald and Downey, Jr. to be as scintillating as that of Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepard of Moonlighting fame. I do agree that this film was probably designed to showcase Ms. Ringwald's talent, but in the process, showcased the charisma and talent of Robert Downey, Jr.I first saw this film right after high school. It was light and entertaining. These days, the teen flicks bore me to tears, but I can honestly say that Downey's performance pulls me to the small screen time and time again. It's not a must see, but the sparks flying between these two stars make it quite enjoyable.

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