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Mannequin (1987 film)

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Wikipedia article




'Mannequin' is a 1987 American romantic comedy film directed by Michael Gottlieb in his directional debut, and written by Edward Rugoff and Gottlieb. It stars Andrew McCarthy, Kim Cattrall, Estelle Getty, Meshach Taylor and G. W. Bailey. The original music score was composed by Sylvester Levay. A modern retelling of the Pygmalion myth, the film revolves around a chronically underemployed passionate artist named Jonathan Switcher who lands a job as a department-store window dresser and the mannequin he created which becomes inhabited by the spirit of a woman from Ancient Egypt, but only comes alive for Jonathan.

'Mannequin' received a nomination for an Academy Award for Best Original Song for its main title song, "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" by Starship, which reached number one on both the 'Billboard' Hot 100 and UK Singles Chart. In 1991, a sequel to the film called 'Mannequin Two: On the Move' was released. Though the sequel takes place in the same department store in Philadelphia, only actors Meshach Taylor and Andrew Hill Newman returned from the original film.

Plot





In Ancient Egypt, Ema "Emmy" Hesire takes refuge in a pyramid, pleading to the gods that she find true love rather than enter an arranged marriage. Emmy suddenly vanishes before her mother's eyes. In 1987 Philadelphia, Jonathan Switcher is a sculptor working at a mannequin warehouse and finishes a single female mannequin he considers a masterpiece. His boss fires him for spending time trying to make his mannequins works of art rather than assembling several each day.

Jonathan takes a number of odd jobs and is fired each time for working too slowly because he tries to make each project artistic. His girlfriend Roxie Shield, an employee of the Illustra department store, dumps him, criticizing him as a flake. After his motorcycle breaks down in the rain, Jonathan passes the Prince & Company department store. Seeing his mannequin in the display window, he remarks she is the first work that made him feel like a true artist. The next morning, he saves store owner Claire Timkin from being injured by her own shop sign. Grateful, Claire orders store manager Mr. Richards (who is secretly paid by Illustra to sabotage Prince & Company so it can be bought) to give Jonathan a job. Viewed with suspicion by security guard Captain Felix Maxwell, Jonathan works with and befriends window dresser Hollywood Montrose. When Jonathan is putting together a window display, the mannequin he made comes to life with Emmy's spirit. She says she has existed for centuries as a muse, sometimes inhabiting the works of an artist she admires and inspires. She has encountered amazing people but has never found true love. Emmy explains the gods allow her life when she and Jonathan are unobserved, otherwise she is a mannequin.

With Emmy's help, Jonathan's window display is a massive success. Now placed in charge of visual merchandising, Jonathan asks Emmy to continue helping with the displays. Over several weeks, they create several popular displays, attracting new business while also deepening their relationship. Montrose realizes Jonathan loves a mannequin he created but doesn't judge him. Illustra's chief executive B.J. Wert sends Roxie to poach Jonathan but he refuses, saying he now works for people who value him. Annoyed by Felix's ineptitude and Richards' attitude towards Jonathan, Claire fires them. Deeply impressed with his work, Claire makes Jonathan vice president of the department store. One night, Jonathan takes Emmy through the city on his motorcycle, despite how unusual this seems to bystanders. He is witnessed by Richards and Felix, who conclude he is deeply fixated on a female mannequin.

Richards and Felix (who now works for Illustra) steal the female mannequins from Prince & Company. The next morning, Jonathan confronts Wert about the theft, who makes another job offer. Furious over Jonathan caring so much about the mannequin he calls Emmy, Roxie storms off. Jonathan follows Roxie while being pursued by security guards including Felix. Wert and Richards demand the police be called. Roxie loads the stolen mannequins into the store's large trash compactor, then is knocked out by the debris. As Hollywood holds the pursuers at bay with a fire hose, a janitor watches Jonathan jump onto the compactor's conveyor belt to save the mannequin that is Emmy. As Jonathan risks his life for her, Emmy comes to life. Once safe, she realizes she is truly and permanently alive again. Emmy thanks the gods for uniting her with her true love and Jonathan promises to love her forever.

While the janitor wonders if other mannequins will come to life, Hollywood arrives and realizes Emmy was alive the entire time. Felix and his fellow guards rush in, followed by Wert and Richards who demand the police arrest Jonathan. Claire arrives, revealing she has security video of Richards and Felix breaking and entering, and committing theft. She accuses Wert of conspiracy, and Jonathan adds the man also kidnapped Emmy. Wert fires Roxie as he is arrested and hauled away alongside Richards and Felix. Jonathan realizes the security footage may have shown him being romantic with a mannequin, but Claire coyly suggests he shouldn't worry about that. Some time later, Jonathan and Emmy are married in the store window of Prince & Company, with Claire as maid of honor and Hollywood as best man. Numerous pedestrians outside the store window applaud the wedding.

Cast



* Andrew McCarthy as Jonathan Switcher

* Kim Cattrall as Ema "Emmy" Hesire

* Estelle Getty as Claire Timkin

* James Spader as Mr. Daryl Richards (His first name is never mentioned in the film)

* G. W. Bailey as Captain Felix Maxwell

* Meshach Taylor as Hollywood Montrose

* Carole Davis as Roxie Shield

* Steve Vinovich as B.J. Wert

* Christopher Maher as Armand

* Phyllis Newman as Emmy's Mother

* Phil Rubenstein as Mannequin Factory Boss

* Andrew Hill Newman as Compactor Room Janitor

Production



Development

The idea for the film came when director Michael Gottlieb was walking down Fifth Avenue and thought he saw a mannequin move in the window of Bergdorf Goodman. Others observe the similarities to the plot of the film 'One Touch of Venus' (1948) and to the myth of Pygmalion, who sculpted a statue that came to life when he fell in love.[http://www.vicpine.co.uk/One-Touch-Of-Venus.htm 'One Touch of Venus' review], Vicpine
[http://www.stagescenela.com/2011/02/one-touch-of-venus/ 'One Touch of Venus' review], Steven Stanley, StageSceneLA, 7 February 2011
There's also a song from the TV series 'Fame' that sees a dancer singing with a mannequin that comes to life.

The film was made based on the marketing principles of noted Hollywood market researcher Joseph Farrell, who served as an executive producer. The film was specifically designed to appeal to target demographics. Though not a star, McCarthy was cast after tests of his films showed that he strongly appealed to girls, the target audience.

Filming

The producers contacted various state film commissions across America looking for an elegant center city department store in which to shoot the movie. They visited stores across the country before settling on John Wanamaker's in Philadelphia (now Macy's Center City). The store was given the name Prince and Company for the film. Interior filming at Wanamaker's took about three weeks, with shooting usually beginning around 9 pm and going until 6 am the next day.

Additional scenes were filmed in the formal gardens behind The Hotel Hershey. Scenes taking place at the fictitious department store Illustra were filmed at the Boscov's department store in the former Camp Hill Mall (now Camp Hill Shopping Center) near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

Philadelphia mayor Wilson Goode estimated the film injected $3 million into the city.

Prior to the start of filming, Cattrall spent six weeks posing for a Santa Monica sculptor, who captured her likeness. Six mannequins, each with a different expression, were made. Cattrall recalled (1987), "There's no way to play a mannequin except if you want to sit there as a dummy [...] I did a lot of body-building because I wanted to be as streamlined as possible. I wanted to match the mannequins as closely as I could." The actress also said that doing the film made her feel "grown up":

I've become more of a leading lady instead of, like, the girl... All the other movies that I've done I played the girl, and the plot was around the guy. I've never had anybody to do special lighting for me, or find out what clothes look good on me, or what camera angles are best for me... In this movie, I learned a lot from it. It's almost like learning old Hollywood techniques... I've always been sort of a tomboy. I feel great being a girl, wearing a dress.


Music

Featured in the film, "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" was a song co-written by Albert Hammond and Diane Warren and recorded by the American rock band Starship in 1986. It is a duet featuring Starship vocalists Grace Slick and Mickey Thomas. It reached number one on the 'Billboard' Hot 100 on April 4, 1987, and topped the UK Singles Chart for four weeks the following month, becoming the UK's second-biggest-selling single of 1987.

Reception



Box office

The film debuted at number three at the US box office behind 'Platoon' and 'Outrageous Fortune', grossing $6 million over the four-day President's Day weekend, surpassing the other opener, 'Over the Top' starring Sylvester Stallone. The film grossed a total of $42.7 million in the United States and Canada.

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 20% based on 40 reviews and an average rating of 3.9/10. The site's consensus states: "'Mannequin' is a real dummy, outfitted with a ludicrous concept and a painfully earnest script that never springs to life, despite the best efforts of an impossibly charming Kim Cattrall." On Metacritic, the film has a score of 21 out of 100 based on reviews from 13 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews". Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade B+ on scale of A to F.

It was savaged by Leonard Maltin, who called it "absolute rock-bottom fare, dispiriting for anyone who remembers what movie comedy should be." In his print review, Roger Ebert awarded it a half star and wrote, "A lot of bad movies are fairly throbbing with life. 'Mannequin' is dead. The wake lasts 1 1/2 hours, and then we can leave the theater."

Rita Kempley of 'The Washington Post' called the film "made by, for, and about dummies." Janet Maslin of 'The New York Times' puts the blame on the writer-director: "as co-written and directed by Michael Gottlieb, 'Mannequin' is a state-of-the-art showcase of perfunctory technique."

Dan McQuade, writing in 'Philadelphia Magazine', referencing the film's use of Philadelphia as a setting, after panning the film itself wrote, "The message of 'Mannequin', clumsy as it is, is that the greatest place and time in recorded history is 1980s Philadelphia... Truly, this is the most uplifting film ever made about the city."

David Cornelius of 'DVD Talk' wrote: "'Mannequin' is one of the stupidest movies ever conceived, and one of the worst. Which makes it, in its own lousy way, mesmerizing. To watch it is to get sucked in by its hypnotic ways; its very off-the-wall shoddiness is astounding. Spader alone is worth the price of admission surely aware of the movie's badness, the actor hams it up with a deliriously over-the-top performance." He called it "a Bad Movie Essential" but warned viewers with a lower pain threshold for bad films to "obviously skip it" as it is a dreadful film.

Awards and nominations

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Award

! Category

! Nominee(s)

! Result

|-

| Academy Awards

| Best Original Song

| rowspan="2"| "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now"
Music and Lyrics by Albert Hammond and Diane Warren

|

|-

| ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards

| Most Performed Songs from Motion Pictures

|

|-

| rowspan="3"| Fantafestival

| Best Film

| rowspan="2"| Michael Gottlieb

|

|-

| Best Director

|

|-

| Best Actor

| Andrew McCarthy

|

|-

| rowspan="2"| Fantasporto

| Best Film

| rowspan="2"| Michael Gottlieb

|

|-

| Best Screenplay

|

|-

| Golden Globe Awards

| Best Original Song

| rowspan="2"| "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now"
Music and Lyrics by Albert Hammond and Diane Warren

|

|-

| Grammy Awards

| Best Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or Television

|

|}

Sequel and remake



Despite being savaged by critics, the film made a strong profit (see above). In 1991, a sequel called 'Mannequin Two: On the Move' was released and was directed by Stewart Raffill. The sequel was dubbed as "one of the worst follow-ups ever made." The second film featured different main characters but with the same department store setting and with Meshach Taylor reprising his role. Andrew Hill Newman, who played the Compactor Room Janitor in the first time, returns in the sequel as a security guard named Andy Ackerman. It is not explicitly said whether this is a new character entirely or is the original character (who was not named), now working in a different capacity for the same store.

In 2010, Gladden Entertainment executives were said to be in the "early development" stage of the remake, envisioning a plot of the man crushing on a "laser display hologram" as opposed to a mannequin. However, no further details were made public about its development.

Home media



'Mannequin' was released on VHS, Betamax, and digital stereo LaserDisc format in September 1987 by Cannon Films through Media Home Entertainment. The film was released on DVD by MGM Home Entertainment on October 7, 2004, in a widescreen Region 1 DVD, and was later re-released to DVD on January 16, 2008, in a new double feature edition with 'Mannequin Two: On the Move' as the second disc. 'Mannequin' was released on Blu-ray for the first time by Olive Films (under license from MGM) on November 3, 2015.

Cultural references



Kenickie/Rosita bass player Emmy Kate Montrose (born Emma Jackson, 1978) took her stage name from the characters Emmy and Montrose in the film."'To Hell With Teen Spirit'" Kenickie interview by Simon Price, Melody Maker 11 January 1997

References




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