Be Cool

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Be Cool (film)
Image:Becool poster.jpg
Directed by F. Gary Gray
Produced by Danny DeVito,
Michael Shamberg,
Stacey Sher,
David Nicksay
Written by Peter Seinfeld
Starring John Travolta
Uma Thurman
Vince Vaughn
Cedric the Entertainer
André Benjamin
Steven Tyler
Robert Pastorelli
Christina Milian
Harvey Keitel
The Rock
Danny DeVito
Distributed by Metro Goldwyn Mayer
Release date(s) March 4, 2005
Running time 115 min.
Language English
Budget $53,000,000
Preceded by Get Shorty
IMDb profile

Be Cool is a 2005 movie which was adapted from a 1999 novel. The book was the sequel to the 1990 novel Get Shorty by Elmore Leonard (itself adapted into an acclaimed hit 1995 film) about mobster Chili Palmer's entrance into the movie industry.

The film version of Be Cool started production in 2003. It was directed by F. Gary Gray, produced by Danny DeVito (who produced and co-starred in the first film), and starred John Travolta, reprising his role from the first film. The movie opened in March 2005 to generally negative reviews, and was released to video and DVD distribution on June 7, 2005.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

Chili Palmer helps the widow, Edie, of an executed friend, Tommy Athens, resurrect a record company using the talents of young and talented female vocalist and songwriter, Linda Moon. The plot is complicated by several facts:

  • Russian Mafia are trying to kill Chili because he witnessed the execution of Athens.
  • Chili takes Moon despite her contractual obligations to Nick Carr and Raji.
  • Athens' record company owes money to a gangster-type producer, Sin LaSalle.

[edit] Plot

Chili Palmer (Travolta), sick of film making, enters the music industry when his friend, Tommy Athens (Woods) and owner of a record company, is executed by Roman Bulkin (Kubik), boss of the Russian Mob, which Chili witnesses. Chili uses the opportunity to help his friend's widow, Edie Athens (Thurman), manage the failing business, which owes $300,000 to the Hip Hop mogul Sin LaSalle (Cedric the Entertainer). Chili enters the music industry on the talents of a female entertainer, Linda Moon (Christina Milian). Moon convinces Chili to take on her cause, getting out of contractual obligations to Nick Carr (Keitel) and Raji (Vaughn), who has a gay Samoan bodyguard named Eliott (Dwayne Johnson), an aspiring actor and the butt of Carr and Raji's homophobic jokes. Carr and Raji take exception to Chili's intervention, and hire a hitman, Joe "Loop" Lupino (Robert Pastorelli) to kill Chili. In the meantime, Chili convinces Edie to produce Moon, hoping to resurrect Athens' failing record company through a live performance with Aerosmith and Steven Tyler.

The movie follows the downfall of each of these unscrupulous enemies of Chili. Sin LaSalle begins by threatening Chili and Edie for payment of the US$300,000; but Chili and Edie convince Sin to give them a few days to get the money with a vig. When the Russians attempt to kill Chili, Joe Loop mistakenly kills Ivan Argianiyev (Fischer), the Russian Mob hitman. Raji then kills the hitman (Joe Loop) with a bat after Loop "disrespects" him. Carr angers the Russian mobsters who make an untimely visit to Carr's office while Sin LaSalle is there. Insulted by the Bulkin, LaSalle kills him. In the meantime, Raji sends Elliot to kill Chili. However, Chili, in cool fashion, befriends the gay man and tells him that he can help him out with his acting career. When Carr threatens Chili, Chili slyly sends him to the hands of the police. Finally when Raji and Elliot threaten Chili, Chili again befriends Elliot, who turns on Raji in defense of Chili. For all his smooth talking and flamboyant wardrobe, Raji finds himself on the receiving end of fireworks which ends up roasting him live on camera. While on the other end, Carr ends up getting arrested by the police on murder charges.

During all of this befuddling Chili manages to squeeze in a dance scene with Edie (the awaited Travolta-Thurman reunion from Pulp Fiction), and Moon gets her debut with Aerosmith. In the end LaSalle becomes the producer for Moon and Elliot embarks on a successful acting career (his first film being with Nicole Kidman).

[edit] Cast


[edit] Cameos

[edit] Soundtrack

The film's soundtrack was released on March 1, 2005. The track listing is as follows:

  1. Fantasy - Earth, Wind & Fire
  2. Hollywood Swinging - Kool & the Gang
  3. Be Thankful for What You Got - William DeVaughn
  4. Roda - Elis Regina
  5. Sexy - Black Eyed Peas
  6. Suga Suga (Reggae Remix) - Baby Bash
  7. The Boss - James Brown
  8. Ain't No Reason - Christina Milian
  9. Believer- Christina Milian
  10. Brand New Old Skool - 777
  11. G's & Soldiers - Planet Asia featuring Kurupt
  12. Cool Chill (instrumental) - composed by John Powell
  13. A Cowboy's Work is Never Done - Sonny & Cher
  14. You Ain't Woman Enough - The Rock

Two songs featured prominently in the film but not included in the soundtrack are:

[edit] Box office totals

Ratings
United States:  PG-13
  • Production Budget: 53 million
  • Est. Marketing Costs: N/A (based on number of theatres that released it, possibly between 20 and 30 million dollars)
  • Domestic: $56,046,979 (58.8%)
  • Overseas: $39,169,077 (41.2%)
  • Worldwide: $95,216,056
  • Went to No.1 its opening weekend collecting over 23m.

[edit] Differences between the film and the novel

There are many differences between the novel Be Cool and the film adaption. Some of the most prominent are:

  • The film tends to focus on pop music, with Linda Moon being a pop artist. In the novel, Linda Moon is part of a rock band named Odessa, who are described as "AC/DC meets Patsy Cline".
  • In the novel, Sin LaSalle's name is Sin Russell. He is not sophisticated or intelligent like he is depicted in the film. He and his rap group do not play a large role in the plot of the novel either, barely appearing in it. Most of them are either killed or put in intensive care after a shoot-out with the Russians.
  • The Russians run a 1-Hour photo business, not a Pawn Shop.
  • The Russians play a smaller role in the novel's plot than the film's. Chili still manages to turn Sin and his rappers against the Russians, but it culminates in a shoot-out half way through the novel. Neither party returns later in the plot.
  • Raji is not a young, white man that acts black in the novel. In the novel, he is a short black man in his 50s. He's less humorous and more malevolent.
  • In the novel, Linda Moon is a non-Hispanic white and tends to use mildly racist terms, calling blacks "colored" throughout the book. In the movie, she is clearly Black American.
  • Sin's rap group is known as Ropa-Dope, not DubMDs.
  • The film totally excludes Chili's love interest Elaine, who was also left out of the film version of Get Shorty, as well. Chili does not pursue a relationship with Edie, as he does in the film.
  • Nick Carr's name is Nick Car, which is short for Nicky Carcaterra.
  • Nick Car has no involvement in Raji's plot to kill Chili Palmer, nor is he an antagonist.

[edit] The connections and similarities with the previous film

As a sequel, this movie connects or has similar plots to pay enough homage to its previous work. Of couse many of these connections and similarities are directly from their books.

  • Chili Palmer acts as the same way as he did in the previous film in many ways in this sequel. Like the way he broke in, the way he punched people, the way he talked, keeping asking people to look at him, saying "It's an absolute pleasure to meet you." to both Karen and Linda in both movies, and repeating many featured lines from the previous one.
  • After Chili's first break-in in the first movie, its awaking the host by using sound of TV style is repeated by many intruders in both movies. Besides this awaking break-in, two movies also contain some awaiting break-in.
  • Tommy's intern testifies that Tommy punched the Russian mob in the eye just like the scene in Get Leo, which is actually based on the punch Chili did on Ray Barboni in the first movie. Chili gets chance to perform his punch on the same guy later.
  • Tom Hanks got the leading role of Mr. Lovejoy in the sequel. It's unannounced who produced it finally in movie but according to Chili's reaction after he sees the commercial board, he is not likely. And the name of his former partner, Harry Zimm from the first movie, appears on the commercial board like a director instead of a producer, though he could be both.
  • The gangster's crash took place in Harry's office retakes place in Nick's office in the sequel. Both times the later arrivals are bumped by the earlier visitors. And both scenarios occur after some similar smug anonymous phone calls.
  • Harvey Keitel's character, Nick Carr, ends up being busted by the cops after a series of setups. It echoes the fate of Ray Barboni based on whom Harvey played a cameo as an actor in the first movie. Although Ray's fate was not shown visually but was replaced by Harvey's acting instead, the plot apparently connects to the first movie.
  • Similar to the "Cadillac of minivans" remark about the Oldsmobile Silhouette in Get Shorty, the Honda Insight is referred to as the "Cadillac of gas-electric Hybrids".

[edit] Self-irony

As a comedy, this movie is full of self-ironies through messing up fictions with facts, as the previous film did.

  • At the beginning of the movie, Chili sees the commercial of Get Lost which is the sequel to Get Leo he produced in the first movie, and shows the unwillingness to produce a sequel despite the fact he is a character being played as in this sequel.
  • Tommy proposes the idea of making a movie about a young singer who wants to make herself big with the help of a record mogul who makes it happen which becomes the main plot of this movie. Almost every factor Tommy mentioned in his brief plays the role in this movie such as Gangsta rappers and the Russian mafia, only without the part of himself.
  • When the idea is brought up to Steven Tyler, he clearly turns down the possibility of being in a movie and declares that he is not one of those singers who shows up in movies, despite the fact he is playing himself in this movie.
  • The one time the word "fuck" is used in the move is talking about the MPAA's policy that "fuck" can be only be said once in a PG-13 movie without bumping the rating up to R.

[edit] Trivia

  • The character played by Cedric the Entertainer, Sin LaSalle, is seen by many as a parody of Suge Knight.
  • The book is dedicated to the Stone Coyotes who inspired Elmore to write about committed and truly talented songwriters. Lyrics used in the book are written by the Stone Coyotes.
  • Despite what Chili suggests in movie, Steven Tyler says the song Sweet Emotion was written about Elissa Perry, the first wife of Joe Perry, with whom Tyler had an acrimonious relationship.
  • Sin's monologue, in the scene when he confronts Nick, who he believes has his 300,000 dollars and the leader of the Russian Mafia calls him a nigger, was not in the book or original script. F. Gary Gray wanted the Sin character to be liked but wants him to be serious as well.
  • The number of "G. Gray" shows on the screen of Sin's mobile phone when he is checking the number of bold anonymous incoming call.
  • Robert Pastorelli, who plays Joe Loop, died during the making of the movie due to a heroin overdose.
  • When Vince Vaughn's character walks into is walking through a record label office, and he comes across an ICP Wraith standup, and then there's some Milnko and Zug Izland posters in the background.
  • There are many Pulp Fiction references spread throughout the movie: Tarantino's trademark trunk shot is used twice (as in Pulp Fiction) and Travolta and Thurman reenact the infamous dancing scene in the restaurant; also, a homage to Travolta's character Vincent Vega in Pulp Fiction is paid early on in the movie, when he goes to the bathroom and his associate is gunned down (everytime Vega went to the bathroom, something bad happened outside). Additionally, Pulp Fiction stars John Travolta, Uma Thurman and Harvey Keitel share leads; Danny DeVito, who produced Pulp Fiction, also stars and produces Be Cool. Lastly, the many plots and subplots, arranged with an occasional flashback, correspond to Tarantino's style.

[edit] External links

da:Be Cool de:Be Cool – Jeder ist auf der Suche nach dem nächsten großen Hit fr:Be Cool hr:Sve je cool it:Be Cool hu:Csak lazán! nl:Be Cool no:Be Cool pl:Be Cool pt:Be Cool ru:Будь круче! (фильм) fi:Be Cool sv:Be Cool

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