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Dirty Rotten Scoundrels |
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One day he meets Freddy Benson (Steve Martin), another scam artist on the way to Jamison’s home turf on the French Riviera to make a few easy bucks. While not afraid of the contender himself, Jamison is afraid the obvious small-time fraud might get caught, cause some fuss within the rich society, and ultimately make his own work considerably harder. Thus he quickly plans to lure Freddy away to Italy. But before long, the pretender is back - and with new information about his “friend”, he now poses a real thread to Jamison’s royal cover. |
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“Dirty Rotten Scoundrels” bases its humor mostly on the interaction of the two main characters, Jamison and Freddy. “Counteraction” might be the better word to fit it, because every time one of them pulls ahead, the other will desperately try his |
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It takes a lot of skill to create a comedy that walks the line as well as this one, and I cannot think of a single scene in the movie that did not work. This is partly due to the excellent script and Frank Oz’s purposeful direction, but mostly through Steve Martin’s and Michael Caine’s sizzling chemistry and their convincing and charming portrayal of the two rivaling characters. |
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or overly exaggerating certain scenes. It is very well balanced and perfectly matches the film. It is presented in a Dolby Surround soundtrack on this disc, with only an English language track and English captions. A French or Spanish soundtrack and subtitles are sorely missing on this disc, which I personally think will be a big drawback to the release’s otherwise huge appeal. I think it is inexcusable to release any DVD in the North American territory without either French or Spanish soundtracks and at least some |
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