New York Minute (film)
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New York Minute | |
---|---|
Directed by | Dennie Gordon |
Screenplay by | Emily Fox Adam Cooper Bill Collage |
Story by | Emily Fox |
Produced by | Denise Di Novi Ashley Olsen Mary-Kate Olsen Robert Thorne |
Starring | Ashley Olsen Mary-Kate Olsen Eugene Levy Andy Richter Jared Padalecki Riley Smith Andrea Martin Bob Saget |
Cinematography | Greg Gardiner |
Edited by | Roderick Davis Michael Jablow |
Music by | George S. Clinton |
Production companies | Dualstar Productions Di Novi Pictures |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 91 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $30 million |
Box office | $23.4 million |
New York Minute is a 2004 American comedy film starring Mary-Kate Olsen, Ashley Olsen, and Eugene Levy, while Andy Richter, Jared Padalecki, Riley Smith, Andrea Martin, and Bob Saget are featured in supporting roles. It was directed by Dennie Gordon and released on May 7, 2004. In the film, Mary-Kate and Ashley play twins with opposing personalities who have a series of adventures around New York City. New York Minute reunited Mary-Kate and Ashley with Saget since they all starred together on the ABC original TV series Full House, which ran from 1987 to 1995. It was the Olsen twins' second theatrical film release after 1995's It Takes Two. The film received generally negative reviews from critics and was a box office bomb. Because of this, it is the last film featuring both Olsens to date. It was also the last film released by Dualstar Entertainment before it went into dormancy.
Plot
Seventeen-year-old twin sisters Jane (Ashley Olsen), an uptight overachiever, and Roxy Ryan (Mary-Kate Olsen), a laid-back punk-rock rebel, are completely different and never see eye to eye. They live with their widower father in Syosset, a suburban Long Island town. The two journey into New York City so Jane can deliver a speech for a prestigious college scholarship and Roxy can give her demo tape to a music group.
Jane and Roxy board the train into New York but are thrown off after Roxy is found without a ticket. Jane flirts with Jim (Riley Smith), and a chip device is mistakenly planted in Roxy's bag. Bennie Bang (Andy Richter), the man behind the device, offers Roxy a limousine ride, and she accepts, dragging Jane along. He locks them inside, but they escape through the sunroof into the subway. Meanwhile, Max Lomax (Eugene Levy), an overzealous truant officer, is on the hunt for Roxy.
Jane realizes she's left her day planner in the limo, which has money and the prompt cards for her speech. She and Roxy break into a posh hotel room to freshen up, where they receive a phone call from Bennie who offers to exchange the chip for the day planner. They meet Trey (Jared Padalecki), the son of a powerful senator staying at the hotel, and his dog, Reinaldo, who swallows the chip.
Roxy heads to the video shoot, Max on her tail, while Jane meets Bennie for the exchange. When he finds out the dog has swallowed the chip, Max tries to attack Jane, goes to find Roxy, and kidnaps Trey. Jane, Roxy, and Reinaldo the dog end up in the underground sewer with Jane's speech in less than two hours.
In the House of Bling, Big Shirl (Mary Davis Bonde) gives the girls makeovers, although Max hunts them down and they escape in a cab and later argue. Jane feels that Roxy has never been there for her and never takes life seriously, leaving Jane in charge after their mother’s death. Conversely, Roxy believes Jane doesn't need to take control of everything and feels she's being pushed away.
Jane goes to meet Bennie, who takes her to his mother, the head of a DVD and CD pirating operation. Roxy finds Bennie's limo, retrieves Jane's day planner, and frees Trey, who is locked in the trunk. They both rush to the building where Jane will give her speech. When they arrive, Roxy pretends to be Jane so she can give the speech, but drops the prompt cards and has to ad lib. Jane turns up and explains why she wasn't there. Suddenly, Max and Bennie arrive, Bennie’s illegal doings are exposed, and he is arrested by Max.
As Jane leaves with Roxy, one of the judges catches up to Jane after finding her prompt cards and gives her a college scholarship to Oxford, because she "didn't just want to win, she absolutely refused to fail." Months later, Roxy is in the studio recording with the band, watched by Jane, Trey, Jim, and even Max (now an official cop) as they celebrate all together.
Cast
- Ashley Olsen as Jane Ryan
- Mary-Kate Olsen as Roxanne "Roxy" Ryan
- Jared Padalecki as Trey Lipton
- Riley Smith as James "Jim", the bike messenger
- Eugene Levy as Maximillion "Max" Lomax
- Andy Richter as Benjamin "Bennie" Bang
- Drew Pinsky as Dr. Ryan
- Darrell Hammond as Hudson McGill
- Andrea Martin as Senator Anne Lipton
- Alannah Ong as Ma Bang
- Mary Bond Davis as Big Shirl
- Bob Saget as himself
- Jack Osbourne as Justin
- Joey Klein as Truant at Pool
- Neil Crone as Officer Strauss
- Garen Boyajian as Manju
- Jonathan Wilson as Train Conductor
- Boyd Banks as Ticket Window Guy #1
- Silver Kim as Asian guy with chip
- H. John Benjamin as I Love NY Vendor
- Frank Welker as Reinaldo's vocal effects
- Simple Plan as Themselves
- Naked Cowboy as Himself (uncredited)
- Thomas Gleadow as Himself (uncredited)
Reception
New York Minute was not a critical success. Roger Ebert and Richard Roeper gave the film a "two thumbs down" on the television show Ebert & Roeper; in selecting the film as one of the worst of 2004, Ebert remarked that the film "not only should have gone straight to video but should have gone straight through video and kept on going to the end of the universe and never looked back." He added: "New York Minute was obviously generated entirely as a vehicle for the Olsen twins, but what kind of a vehicle has no idea where to go, or what to do when it gets there? This movie should have put on the brakes."[1] In his print review, he further commented:
The Olsen twins are not children any longer, yet not quite poised to become adults, and so they're given the props and costumes of 17-year-olds but carefully shielded from the reality. That any 17-year-old girl in America could take seriously the rock band that Roxy worships is beyond contemplation. It doesn't even look like a band to itself.[2]
Aggregate movie review web site Rotten Tomatoes listed a critic score of 11%.
Box office
New York minute earned $5.96 million over its North American opening weekend, setting a new record low for a film playing in over 3,000 theatres.[3] The film eventually went on to gross $14.07 million at the North American domestic box office and $7.22 million internationally.[4]
References
- ^ "Ebert & Roeper - The Worst Movies of 2004". Archived from the original on 2006-05-04. Retrieved 2021-01-09.
- ^ Ebert, Roger (May 7, 2004). "New York Minute". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on June 30, 2004. Retrieved January 9, 2021.
- ^ "Worst Wide Openings". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2020-06-27.
- ^ "New York Minute". Boxofficemojo.com. 2012. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
External links
- 2004 films
- 2000s teen comedy films
- American films
- American teen comedy films
- English-language films
- Films about twin sisters
- Films directed by Dennie Gordon
- Films produced by Denise Di Novi
- Films scored by George S. Clinton
- Films set in New York City
- Films shot in New York City
- Films shot in Toronto
- Warner Bros. films
- American children's comedy films
- 2000s children's comedy films
- 2004 comedy films