take the money and run

See All Dates

Next Page===>

This article or section has multiple issues. Please help improve the article or discuss these issues on the talk page. Its introduction may be too long. Tagged since February 2009.

It may require general cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Tagged since February 2009.

Sections should be added to this article,
to conform with Wikipedia's Manual of Style. Tagged since February 2009.

This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources (ideally, using inline citations). Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (August 2007) For the Steve Miller Band song, see Take the Money and Run (song). Take the Money and Run

original film poster Directed by Woody Allen Produced by Charles Joffe Written by Woody Allen

Mickey Rose Starring Woody Allen

Janet Margolin

Louise Lasser

Marcel Hillaire

Jackson Beck

Lonny Chapman

James Anderson Music by Marvin Hamlisch Editing by Paul Jordan

Ron Kalish Distributed by United Artists Release date(s) August 18, 1969 (USA) Running time 85 min. Language English

Take the Money and Run is a 1969 comedy film co-written by, directed by, and starring Woody Allen. It is a mockumentary, chronicling the life of Virgil Starkwell, a bungling petty thief. His entry into a life of crime at a young age, his crime spree, his first prison term and eventual escape, the birth and growth of his family, as well as his eventual capture at the hands of the FBI are some of the notable events depicted. Allen initially filmed a downbeat ending in which he
was shot to death, courtesy of special effects from A.D. Flowers. Allen's editor, Ralph Rosenblum (whose first work with Allen this was), convinced him to go for a lighter ending.

This film was the first to be directed solely by Allen. (He had wanted Jerry Lewis to direct originally; when that didn't work out, Allen got the notion to direct it himself). Woody Allen's decision to become his own director was partially spurred on by the chaotic and uncontrolled filming of Casino Royale, in which he had appeared two years previously. This film marked the first time Woody Allen would perform the triple duties of writing, directing and acting in a film. The hysterical and almost slapstick style is similar to that of Allen's next several films, including Sleeper and Bananas.

Allen discussed the concept of filming a mockumentary in an interview with Richard Schickel. "Take the Money and Run was a pseudo-documentary. The idea of doing a documentary, which I later finally perfected when I did Zelig was with me from the first day I started movies. I thought that was an ideal vehicle for doing comedy, because the documentary format was very serious, so you were immediately operating in an area where any little thing you did upset the seriousness and was thereby funny. And you could tell your story laugh by laugh by laugh... The object of the movie was for every inch of it to be a laugh."

Next Page===>