Contents

HOLY MAN


God's Gift To Home Shopping

1998



Holy Man (1998)  

Directed by 
Stephen Herek    
  
Writing credits 
Tom Schulman    
  
Cast (in credits order) 
Eddie Murphy ....  G.  
Jeff Goldblum ....  Ricky Hayman  
Kelly Preston ....  Kate Newell  
Robert Loggia ....  John McBainbridge  
Jon Cryer ....  Barry  
Eric McCormack ....  Scott Hawkes  
Sam Kitchin ....  Control Room Director  
Robert Small (I) ....  Assistant Director  
Marc Macaulay ....  Brutus  
Mary Stout ....  Laundry Lady #1  
Edie McClurg ....  Laundry Lady #2  
Kim Staunton ....  Grace  
Morgan Fairchild ....  Herself  
Betty White (I) ....  Herself  
Florence Henderson ....  Herself  
James Brown (I) ....  Himself  
Soupy Sales ....  Himself (glue gun ad)  
Dan Marino ....  Himself  
Willard Scott ....  Himself  
Nino Cerruti ....  Himself  
Barbara Barron ....  Sunbather #1  
Cristina Wilcox ....  Sunbather #2  
Clarence Reynolds ....  TV Host  
Mal Jones ....  Elderly Couple  
Jody Wilson ....  Elderly Couple  
Pamela West ....  Fresca, the Foot Model  
Tim Powell ....  Dr. Simons  
Lori Viveros Herek ....  Nurse #1  
Angel Schmiedt ....  Nurse #2  
Whitney Dupree ....  Laurie  
Jennifer Bini Taylor ....  Hot Tub Girl  
Robert Walker (V) ....  Farmer  
Elodia Riovega ....  Housekeeper  
Avrohom Horovitz ....  Rabbi  
Al Kamaar ....  Moslem Theologian  
Dan Fitzgerald (II) ....  Priest  
Mark Brown (II) ....  Grass Mat Salesman  
Mike Benitez ....  Bulletproof Vest Man  
Deborah Magdalena ....  Control Booth Technician  
Adriana Catano ....  TV Hostess #1  
Andrea Lively ....  TV Hostess #2  
Kim Alexis (I) ....  Keratin Girls - Amber  
Veronica Webb ....  Diandre  
Lee Bryant ....  Money "Meg"  
Nick Santa Maria ....  Sword Salesman  
Aaron Elbaz ....  Glue-Gun Boy  
Scotty Gallin ....  Jock Salesman #1  
John Boas ....  Jock Salesman #2  
Jeffrey Wetzel ....  Stage Manager  
rest of cast listed alphabetically  
Jay Amor ....  Stunt Driver  
John Archie ....  Detective #2  
Alex A. Brown ....  Stunt Driver  
Ricou Browning Jr. ....  Stunt Driver  
Maria Alejandra Carpio ....  Flamenco Dancer  
Jacqueline Chernov ....  Reporter #4  
Mike Christopher ....  Ricky's Stunt Double  
Dave Corey ....  Announcer  
Antoni Corone ....  Chain Saw Host  
Peter Paul DeLeo ....  Stagehand  
Nancy Duerr ....  Reporter #1  
Alejandro Acosta Fox ....  Flamenco Guitarist  
Willie Gault ....  Nordic Track Guy  
Marc C. Geschwind ....  GBSN Electrician  
Charles Haugk ....  Party Animal  
Dana Hawkins ....  Hair Chat Girl #1  
Denise Heinrich ....  Hair Chat Girl #2  
Alan Jordan ....  Marksman #1  
Mike Kirton ....  Marksman #2  
Amanda Lynn ....  Nordic Track Girl  
Anderson Martin ....  Stunt Driver  
Mark Massar ....  Set Dresser  
Daryl Meyer ....  Host #2  
Erin Morrissey ....  Host #1  
Margaret Muldoon ....  Attractive Party Guest  
Tonya Oliver ....  Reporter #2  
A.J. Alexander O. Parhm ....  UPS Guy  
Ronda Pierson ....  Host #3  
Armando Ramos ....  Grace's Little Boy  
Roger E. Reid ....  Reporter #5  
Brett Rice ....  Detective #1  
Gary A. Rogers ....  Cameraman  
Errol Smith ....  GBSN Staffer  
Toy Van Lierop ....  'G' Makeup Artist  
Laurie Wallace ....  Facial Mist Girl  
Glenn R. Wilder ....  Stunt Driver  
Fred Workman ....  Reporter #3  
T.J. Yezbak ....  Stand-In for Mr. Goldblum  
  
Produced by 
Roger Birnbaum    
Jeffrey Chernov   (executive)  
Jonathan Glickman   (executive)  
Stephen Herek    
Ray Murphy Jr.   (co-producer)  
Rebekah Rudd   (co-producer)  
  
Original music by 
Alan Silvestri    
  
Cinematography by 
Adrian Biddle    
  
Film Editing by 
Trudy Ship    
  
Casting 
Amanda Mackey Johnson    
Cathy Sandrich    
  
Production Design by 
Andrew McAlpine    
  
Art Direction 
James E. Tocci    
  
Set Decoration 
Chris L. Spellman    
  
Costume Design by 
Aggie Guerard Rodgers    
  
Assistant Director 
Jeffrey Wetzel ....  assistant director  
  
Sound Department 
Kevin Cerchiai ....  boom operator  
Tim Chau ....  sound designer
supervising sound editor  
Peter J. Devlin ....  sound mixer  
  
Stunts 
Rusty McClennon ....  stunt driver  
Alan Oliney ....  stunt co-ordinator  
Gar Stephen ....  stunt driver  
  
Other crew 
Nigel Arscott ....  assistant location manager  
Chris Bangma ....  spacecam assistant  
Samantha Berger ....  assistant production co-ordinator  
Hans Bjerno ....  spacecam operator  
Laureen Clarke ....  art department co-ordinator  
David R. Ellis ....  second unit director  
Richard Fojo ....  set designer  
Stephanie Girard ....  set designer  
Craig Hayes ....  additional editor  
Patric Kenly ....  optical line-up  
Dave Knight ....  locations production assistant  
Sarah Moore ....  digital artist  
Charles Rapp ....  assistant to Mr. Chernov  
Michael T. Ryan ....  supervising music editor  
Nicholas Scott (II) ....  scenic artist  
Barbara S. Shelton ....  scenic painter  
Karen Virgin ....  art department buyer  
Rebecca White (I) ....  accounting assistant  
Howard Young ....  construction accountant  
  
 


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HOLY MAN
A film review by Steve Rhodes
Copyright 1998 Steve Rhodes
RATING (0 TO ****):  * 1/2

As G (Eddie Murphy), the mysterious guru dressed in ubiquitous white robes, has his first moments before the cameras at the Good Buy Shopping Network (GBSN), he says nothing for what seems like an eternity. The audience for HOLY MAN will undoubtedly be just as nonplussed as G's fictional television viewers since little happens for interminably long periods of time in the movie.

After successes as widely varied as MR. HOLLAND'S OPUS and THE MIGHTY DUCKS, director Stephen Herek has a losing hand in HOLY MAN. The script by Tom Schulman doesn't know where it wants to take the movie. There isn't nearly enough humor for a comedy, and the attempts at poignancy are awkward at best. Schulman's last script, 8 HEADS IN A DUFFEL BAG, was awful enough to earn the picture prominent positions on many of last year's lists of the worst films. Still, Schulman has had his successes too, including HONEY, I SHRUNK THE KIDS and THE DEAD POETS SOCIETY.

The story starts with GBSN producer Ricky Hayman (Jeff Goldblum) down on his luck. The head of the network, played by Robert Loggia, is threatening to fire him for GBSN's 27 months of flat sales. As is popular today, Ricky argues word definitions in an attempt to keep his job. "It depends on what you call 'flat,'" he reasons.

The network chief brings in a hotshot new producer named Kate Newell, played by Kelly Preston from JERRY MAGUIRE, to work alongside him. The movie tries to create a romantic angle between the two of them, but this subplot goes up a dead-end street like the rest of the story.

Through a lucky breakdown on the highway, Ricky and Kelly meet G. Later G manages to walk into a shopping network show with instant positive results. Product sales skyrocket. Before long he has his own program named -- what else -- "The G Spot," whose tag line is "a higher state of consciousness and non-stop shopping." His mixture of pop religion and soft-sale capitalism fascinates viewers. Would you rather be a "Bay Watch" babe or the Dalai Lama? is one of the tough questions he poses to his audience.

The movie is peppered with a series of cameos by everyone from football players to old stars in television shopping parodies. These comedic softballs are missed left and right. Only the one with Morgan Fairchild is anything thing close to a homerun. As G walks onto the set, Morgan is demonstrating the "Insta Touch" which consists of a car battery and a dozen probes attached to her face. When he turns up the juice, her toothy smile gets eight inches wide, thanks to special effects.

Eddie Murphy, although he is given some raunchy lines totally inappropriate in a PG rated movie, is remarkably restrained. He creates a smiling Buddha of a figure with the liveliness of stone. One can have vigor in a role without being obscene, but Eddie's brand of humor seems to work best only if it is relatively unhampered.

In a movie that is generally as mild as milquetoast, there are nevertheless many parts that parents will find objectionable. The frequent profanity and sexual humor are not appropriate in a PG movie likely to attract kids. And why do we have a joke with the word "penis" mentioned three times in about as many sentences?

Since most of the jokes are laced with sexual innuendo, the movie really isn't for kids. On the other hand, there isn't enough humor in the movie for teenagers or adults so the target audience is questionable. Sometimes, as in Jeff Goldblum's long monologue on his father's failure as a salesman, the movie tries hard, too hard, to be touching. Never does it succeed as anything other than a comedy, but it is a comedy with remarkably little laughter.

Although the movie has a long elapsed time of almost two hours, the director spends most of it trying to run out the clock. When the film's corny ending finally arrives, it is as unbelievable as it is predictable.

Surely, the test screening audiences must have warned them that the movie contained long stretches of humorless and pointless material. Why didn't they do massive surgery to trim this celluloid fat? In its place some truly funny home shopping sequences could have easily been added.

HOLY MAN runs 1:54. It is rated PG for profanity and sexual humor, but parents should treat it as PG-13. The film is acceptable for kids around 10 and up.

My son Jeffrey, age 9, gave the movie ** ½. He liked the television commercials and the "cute" woman who played Kate. His buddy Alan, age 9, gave it **. His favorite part was Morgan Fairchild's "electrocution" scene. Both boys seemed restless and relatively uninterested during the movie.

Email: Steve.Rhodes@InternetReviews.com Web: www.InternetReviews.com


Have I Seen This Movie: Yes
And What Did I Think?: This film is a complete waste of Eddie Murphy's talents and goes nowhere. I don't know if he is supposed to be funny here or not, but he definately isn't. Poor acting by everyone involved and a stupid and dull story takes this film nowhere fast. It's supposed to be a comedy, but ends up as a poor drama. The only somwhat amusing parts here were the different infomercials throughout. Jeff Goldblum and Kelly Preston had mediocre roles, and while Eddie Murphy probably had the best character, its definately not up to par with his better stuff. Only rent it if you are desperate to see a movie, and you've seen all the other new releases. I give it 2 out of 5 stars
Review written June 3, 1999

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