Trading Places
Dir: John Landis
1983
*****
Trading
Places is fast becoming a favourite alternative Christmas film among fans but
first and foremost, it's a classic American comedy of the highest order. Based
on Mark Twain's The
Prince and the Pauper, and incorporating ideas from The
Million Pound Bank Note and The Marriage of Figaro (indeed, music from
Mozart's opera can be heard throughout the film), Trading Places is a 1980s New York update of the classic
tale. Randolph and Mortimer (played by the brilliant and sorely missed Ralph
Bellamy and Don Ameche) are a couple of wealthy brothers and owners of a
successful commodities brokerage. They are both as dastardly as they are rich
and decide to place a wager with each other in a social experiment. They swap
the lives of one of their most loyal directors (Dan Aykroyd) and a
homeless beggar they encounter on the streets (Eddie
Murphy). Aykroyd's Louis Winthorpe III is sheltered by
local prostitute Jamie Lee Curtis and Murphy's Billy ray Valintine is helped
by Winthorpe's ex-butler Denholm Elliott and rags to riches (and riches to rags) hijinks soon follow. It's
full of great comedy performances and some brilliant one liners. The conclusion
is as funny as it is rewarding. Its 80s American comedy at its best
and probably my favourite film by everyone involved. Timeless is an
overused word but I think it's a suitable one to describe this great film.
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