Three brothers (Nicolas Cage, Jon Lovitz, Dana Carvey) with a streak of lawbreaking in them head to a small town in Pennsylvania called Paradise, intending to rob a ripe bank there. But the people in the community turn out to be so nice that the thought of ripping them off proves difficult to imagine. The three leads each get to do their uniquely comic shticks, and that makes this film marginally watchable. But the pace is enervating and the story’s main idea isn’t all that well developed. –Tom Keogh
Archive for 1994 Releases
Inspired by an actual incident, this unassuming, wonderfully good-natured romantic comedy tells the story of a New York City street cop named Charlie (Nicolas Cage) who makes a promise to a coffee-shop waitress named Yvonne (Bridget Fonda) that will change both their lives. One day after coffee, Charlie is embarrassed to discover he doesn’t have money for a tip, so he tells Yvonne that he’ll share half of his winnings if the lottery ticket he’s holding comes up a winner. Sure enough, he wins the jackpot–a whopping $4 million payoff–and Charlie’s wife, Muriel (Rosie Perez), goes ballistic when he tells her about his deal with Yvonne. From this point, It Could Happen to You follows Charlie’s dilemma as he is forced to decide the proper course of action, and director Andrew Bergman smoothly incorporates a gentle love story into this amusing crisis of conscience. Fonda and Cage have an easygoing chemistry that adds a pleasant touch to the movie’s fairy-tale plot, and the story’s kindhearted sentiment is never so thick that it becomes sticky-sweet or artificial. As feel-good comedies go, this one’s a class act. –Jeff Shannon
Nicolas Cage stars in this drama-comedy about a Secret Service agent unable to get out of his assignment watching over an exasperating former first lady (Shirley MacLaine). The two get along like oil and water, but when MacLaine’s bored widow ends up kidnapped, Cage’s agent becomes a determined avenger. While the pairing of these two actors in a movie isn’t something most audiences would ever have considered, that’s what makes it so much fun. Cage and MacLaine are brilliantly focused in their respective parts, and filmmaker Hugh Wilson brings an unusually solid and urgent feeling to a story that might have become a dismissible light comedy in another director’s hands. –Tom Keogh