Plot
A man in a legal but hurtful business needs an escort for some social events, and hires a beautiful prostitute he meets... only to fall in love.
Release Year: 1990
Rating: 6.7/10 (90,142 voted)
Critic's Score: 51/100
Director:
Garry Marshall
Stars: Richard Gere, Julia Roberts, Jason Alexander
Storyline Edward is a rich, ruthless businessman who specializes in taking over companies and then selling them off piece by piece. He travels to Los Angeles for a business trip and decides to hire a prostitute. They take a liking to each other and he offers her money if she'll stay with him for an entire week while he makes the "rich and famous" scene (since it doesn't do for a man of his stature to be alone at society parties and polo matches). Romantic comedy (and complications) ensue.
Cast: Richard Gere
-
Edward Lewis
Julia Roberts
-
Vivian Ward
Ralph Bellamy
-
James Morse
Jason Alexander
-
Philip Stuckey
Laura San Giacomo
-
Kit De Luca
Alex Hyde-White
-
David Morse
Amy Yasbeck
-
Elizabeth Stuckey
Elinor Donahue
-
Bridget
Hector Elizondo
-
Barney Thompson
Judith Baldwin
-
Susan
Jason Randal
-
Magician
Bill Applebaum
-
Howard
Tracy Bjork
-
Female Guest
Gary Greene
-
Male Guest
Billy Gallo
-
Carlos
(as William Gallo)
Taglines:
Who knew it was so much fun to be a hooker?
Release Date: 23 March 1990
Filming Locations: Ambassador Hotel - 3400 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, USA
Box Office Details
Budget: $14,000,000
(estimated)
Opening Weekend: $11,280,591
(USA)
(25 March 1990)
(1325 Screens)
Gross: $463,406,268
(Worldwide)
Technical Specs
Runtime:|
USA:
(director's cut)
Did You Know?
Trivia: Kristin Davis did an audition for the role of Vivian but turned it down.
Goofs:
Errors in geography:
Supposedly flying north from Los Angeles to San Francisco, the plane is shown with the sun setting off the starboard wing.
Quotes:
[first lines]
Magician at party:
No matter what they say, it's all about money. So let's imagine, ladies, that you're a savings and loan officer. Watch - one, two, three; see, you've got it all, and we've got nothing. You've got all four, take a look.
User Review
Such a dream, just you DO NOT think
Rating:
Obviously similar to Shaw's "Pygmalion", but updated, more modern.
A lovely dream, one very old: rescuing a prostitute from the street.
(Not in Woody Allen's sickish-moody way.)
However, if you wish to dream this one, be sure you do NOT start to
think very logically . . . She is healthy, not on drugs, not on
alcohol, not even a smoker; no syphilis, no gonorrhea, no AIDS wounds
on her legs, nothing, she is just perfectly absolutely healthy. Body
and mind. She is not a criminal, not inclined to steal anything, she
even values love and dignity more than money. Oh, she has no pimp, who
would be the other man (other than Richard Gere) in her life; nobody to
protect her from smart types who walk off without paying; the pimp
would explode the whole romance instantly. (Instead, a girl friend.)
She has a golden soul, full of goodness, and loves art, and feels for
art. High-society types around them appear silly, artificial, stuffy.
(Different forks.) She is natural. She even was a good student (!) and
. . . might be again? She loves to bathe, and half the time we see her
happy in the bath tub (which is a powerful signal and symbol for CLEAN,
CLEAN; she even sings so super-ultra-charmingly in the bath; she wants
to wash off the foolishness of her previous few months of street. And
she can do it.
But with all those qualities, WHY would she ever become a prostitute in
the first place? Don't think, don't think. Just dream, it is lovely.
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