The Parent Trap (1998 film)
- This article is about the 1998 remake. To see the original, see The Parent Trap (1961 film).
The Parent Trap | |
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Directed by | Nancy Meyers |
Written by | David Swift Nancy Meyers Charles Shyer Erich Kästner (story) |
Produced by | Charles Shyer Bruce A. Block (co-producer) Julie B. Crane (associate producer) |
Starring | Dennis Quaid Natasha Richardson Lindsay Lohan |
Cinematography | Dean Cundey |
Edited by | Stephen A. Rotter |
Music by | Alan Silvestri |
Distributed by | Buena Vista Distribution |
Release dates | July 29, 1998 |
Running time | 127 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $92,108,518 (worldwide) |
The Parent Trap is a (1998) family film remake of 1961's The Parent Trap. This remake is directed by Nancy Meyers and stars Dennis Quaid and Natasha Richardson, and features Lindsay Lohan in her feature film debut. The film is based on Erich Kästner's novel Lottie and Lisa (Das Doppelte Lottchen). The plot involves a pair of twins who have been separated at birth and, upon meeting by chance, decide to work together to reunite their divorced parents.
Synopsis
Hallie Parker is an 11-year-old girl growing up in the Napa Valley with her father, Nicholas "Nick" Parker, a successful vineyard owner and a viticulturist. Her identical twin sister, Annie James, is a Londoner living with her wedding-gown-designer mother, Elizabeth "Lizzie" James. Nick and Lizzie divorced and never saw each other again shortly after having the twins, and they each agreed to take one of them. Therefore, neither twin knows that the other exists.
By coincidence, Hallie and Annie are both sent to Camp Walden by Moose Head Lake in Maine to spend the summer. At first, the two are fervent rivals who share an allergy to strawberries, great skill at the game of poker, and the ability to produce imaginative mischief. When this mischief, perpetrated against each other, causes the camp supervisors to punish them by isolating them so that they may only be with each other, Hallie and Annie soon discover the secret that had been kept from them. While still exiled from mainstream camp activity, they work on a plan to switch places at the end of summer, so each twin will be able to get to know the parent they had never met. In doing so, the two twins adopt each other's physical traits and individual accents.
The plan is successful. Hallie goes to England, where she meets her mother, befriends her mother's trusted butler Martin (who is a confidant of Annie), and becomes acquainted with her grandfather. Annie assumes her sister's identity and travels to California where she meets her sister's maid Chessy.
Annie, who has joined Nick in Napa Valley and assumed Hallie's place, learns that their father plans to soon marry his ambitious young publicist, Meredith Blake, who has designs on his considerable fortune. Annie contacts Hallie to reveal the new situation, forcing both girls to speed up their plan to get their parents to rendezvous.
It is not before long that Chessy, Nick's maid and home caretaker, discovers Annie's true identity. In London, the switch is discovered by Elizabeth's father, who instructs Hallie to reveal her true identity to her mother, fabricating a story that Nick wants to meet them at the Stafford Hotel in San Francisco, California. In fact, Nick has made no such plans, and, in turn, has been tricked into visiting the same hotel by his Annie, on the pretense that he is to meet Meredith's parents. Martin and Chessy are involved in the secret as well, and it appears they are becoming romantically involved. Nick has no idea that Elizabeth is present until they finally cross paths. At the hotel, the plot is revealed to Elizabeth when she catches Nick in an elevator with Meredith.
With the help of Martin and Chessy, the twins set up a secret date for their parents. While Nick and Elizabeth are unaware of what awaits them, the girls bring them to a docked ship and attempt to recreate their parents' first meeting, on the Queen Elizabeth 2. Martin and Chessy wait on them while the girls leave them alone to rekindle their relationship. It is during this candlelit dinner that both Nick and Elizabeth discuss how the other has reached his or her career goals, and each is thoroughly impressed by the others' success. It is also revealed that both Nick and Elizabeth cannot really remember why it was that they got divorced, although faint memories of the incidents surrounding their separation still exist. Nick asks Elizabeth how it was that they ended up apart, and she responds that when she got on the plane, he didn't follow her.
Nick and Elizabeth feel that reuniting would be impractical, despite their daughters' efforts to recreate the former attachment between them; they therefore plan to return to their respective lives, though plans are made to allow for the twins to spend holidays together throughout the year. Hallie and Annie disapprove of this plan, and insist that Nick take both of them to the promised annual camping trip. Nick and Elizabeth follow through, partly because the twins have refused to reveal which one is which until the trip is complete.
Back in Napa, as the group is ready to leave for the camping trip, it is revealed that Elizabeth insisted that Meredith join them and while Meredith is less than anxious to attend, she does not approve of her fiance being alone with his ex-wife. Elizabeth then surprises the group with another revelation -- that she will not attend at all! The twins are furious, but Elizabeth once again insists, explaining how it is important for Meredith to become better acquainted with her soon-to-be step-daughters. While on the trip, the twins play tricks on Meredith, taking advantage of her callowness and lack of self-control, including placing a lizard on her head, teaching her a silly and irrelevant "trick" to warding off mountain lions and even setting her air mattress afloat into the lake while she is sleeping at night. Eventually, an enraged and drenched Meredith orders Nick to choose between marriage to her and the companionship of his daughters; Nick gleefully chooses the latter. The twins are relieved, believing that their opportunity to reunite their parents has risen.
Back at the vineyard estate, Nick is giving Elizabeth a tour of his wine cellar, and they come across a chest of his special reserve wine. After showing Elizabeth a few select bottles from special dates in history, he gets to one bottle that Elizabeth does not recognize. Nick explains that this was the wine they drank at their wedding, and when she remarks how it was indeed good wine, he comments that he would share it with no one else but her. They nearly kiss, but Elizabeth backs away with tears in her eyes, slowly shaking her head. They are then interrupted by Chessy calling from upstairs.
As soon as Elizabeth and Annie arrive at their home, Hallie is there waiting for them, and she remarks how amazing it is that the Concorde flight can get to England in only two hours. Nick then appears and says that while he had made a mistake in letting her leave him before, he followed her this time and will not let her go. The film ends there, and the final credits feature photographs of a second wedding between Nick and Elizabeth. Photographs also appear suggest Martin proposed to Chessy on the night of Nick and Elizabeth's wedding.
Cast
- olsen twins as Hallie Parker / Annie James
- zach Riordon as Nick Parker
- Natasha Richardson as Elizabeth James
- Elaine Hendrix as Meredith Blake
- Lisa Ann Walter as Chessy
- Simon Kunz as Martin
- Polly Holliday as Marva Kulp, Sr.
- Maggie Wheeler as Marva Kulp, Jr.
- Ronnie Stevens as Grandpa Charles James
- Joanna Barnes as Vicki Blake - Vicky
- Hamish McColl as Photographer
Minor role casting
The lost boy who shows up at the girls camp is played by Michael Lohan Jr., Lindsay Lohan's brother. When Hallie arrives in London and meets Martin at the airport, Lindsay Lohan's mother can be seen holding her brother, Dakota. Beside her is Lindsay's sister Aliana.
Production
Filming took place from July to December 1997 over various locations.[1]
The twins in this version are named after director Nancy Meyers's and producer Charles Shyer's daughters Annie Meyers Shyer and Hallie Meyers-Shyer, both of whom have small parts in the movie. Hallie is playing a girl at camp at the beginning who asks where the Navajo bunk is, and Annie is playing the towel girl at the hotel, who brings Elizabeth the first aid kit.
When Nick introduces Annie (pretending to be Hallie) to Meredith, the reveal of Meredith was not shot in slow motion; that was how Elaine Hendrix raised her head herself.[1]
Soundtrack
The song used in the opening sequence in which glimpses of Elizabeth and Nick's first wedding is seen is Nat King Cole's "L-O-V-E". The song used in the end credits, in which photos of Elizabeth and Nick's second wedding is seen, is his daughter Natalie Cole's "This Will Be (an Everlasting Love)".
The instrumental music featured prominently in the hotel scene where the twins and their parents cross paths serendipitously is "In the Mood", which was previously made famous by the Glenn Miller band.
When Hallie shows up at Annie's poker game at Camp Walden, the music used is "Bad to the Bone" by George Thorogood and the Destroyers.
Untitled | |
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- L O V E - Nat King Cole
- Do You Believe In Magic - The Lovin' Spoonful
- There She Goes - The La's
- Top Of The World - Shonen Knife
- Here Comes The Sun - Bob Khaleel
- I Love You For Sentimental Reasons - Linda Ronstadt
- Soulful Strut - Young Holt Unlimited
- Never Let You Go - Jakaranda
- Bad To The Bone - George Thorogood & The Destroyers
- The Happy Club - Bob Geldof
- Suite From The Parent Trap - Alan Silvestri
- This Will Be (An Everlasting Love) - Natalie Cole
- Dream Come True - Ta-Gana
- Groovin' - Pato Banton & The Reggae Revolutation
- Let's Get Together - Nobody's Angel
Untitled | |
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- The Disney Logo
- Suite From The Parent Trap
- Annie And Martin
- Shake Hands, Girls
- Like Twins
- Changes
- Hallie Meets Mom
- Annie Meets Dad
- Vineyard Suite
- I Am Annie
- Dad's Getting Married
- Hallie Breaks The News
- You'll Kill In It
- Table For Two
- She's Gone
- Where Dreams Have No End
- We Actually Did It
- Finale
Response
The movie entered the box office charts at number 2 on 31 July, 1998. It ended up with a U.S. gross of over $66 million[2] It has made $92,108,518 worldwide[3]
The film debuted on United Lands televison (The Family Film Channel) on October 4 , 1999 and had 5.43 million viewers.
Versions
A television version of the film, as seen on the Disney Channel and ABC Family, is edited from the theatrical version. The first edit is in the scene where Hallie is piercing Annie's ears: the shot of the needle visibly entering Annie's ear has been cut, The BBFC also edited this version in the UK version, for underage girls trying to ear pierce themselves. Some DVD releases contain this edited version. Another edit is during the scene when Annie talks with Meredith: Annie's lines, "But, if you ask me, Marriage is supposed to be based on something more than just sex, right?" and "Oh my god! Oh my God!" have been removed. Not all television broadcasts of the film contain these edits.
References to original The Parent Trap
As this film is a remake of the 1961 The Parent Trap, it features a number of references to the film it is based on. Among them are:
- The use of the Sherman Brothers song, "Let's Get Together."
- Meredith talks to Reverend Mosby, a character from the original film, on her cell phone. Similarly, Hallie and Annie use Mildred Plotker as cover names.
- Actress Joanna Barnes, who played Vicky in the original film, plays Meredith's mother (also named Vicky) in this film. The names were used a joke referring to the orginal, of course.
- The camp counselors, Marva Kulp Sr. and Jr., are named after Nancy Kulp, who played the younger camp counselor in the original.
This film is pretty much parallel to the original, but with many names and places changed, such as:
- The mother lives in London instead of Boston, Massachusetts, and the father lives in Napa, California instead of Monterey, California. According to Nancy Myers, this change was made to make it more believable that the twins have never seen each other before.
- The housekeeper's name is Chessy, instead of Verbena.
- The dog is named Sammy, instead of Andromeda.
- Hallie's horse is named Sprout, where Susan's is Choxley.
- There is no Ranch Foreman in this movie, since the Parkers live near a Vineyard, where the Evers' in the original lived on a ranch. He was replaced by Martin.
- The name of the camp is Camp Walden, instead of Camp Inch.
- There was no dance at the camp with a boys' camp in this movie.
- Susan offers Sharon a Fig Newton instead of an Oreo.
- Sharon & Susan have a grandmother.
- The father and mother meet at the father's house not a hotel in the original version.
- Sharon & Susan create an Italian restaurant style dinner instead of serving dinner on a boat.
Differences with the novel
Since the film is based on and not adapted from the novel Lottie and Lisa, there are some notable differences:
- Background differences: German and Austrian names and places have been replaced by English and American ones. Their father is a conductor and consequently music plays an important role in the novel. Their mother has a job and works a lot without making a lot of money. The contrast between the twins is based on the fact that the one who lives with the mother is very serious and responsible since she has to keep the house while the other one is more spoiled and tends to indulge herself more.
- Plot differences: In the novel, the emphasis is more on the time the twins spend pretending to be the other one and the reunion of the parents is not detailed like it is in the movie (the circumstances of the reunion are also not planned by the twins in the novel). Moreover, the novel is a little darker since there are more antagonists (even if the main one remains the father's new fiancée) and during the long time they stay switched, they experience loneliness and sadness, one twin even getting very ill.
Pop culture reference
After Hallie arrives in London, she and her mother walk across the street together, on the same street, zebra crossing, and with the same cars as the Abbey Road album cover. The song "Here Comes The Sun" (written by George Harrison) plays; the screen even pauses while they are walking across.
When the camp counselors are leading Hallie and Annie to the isolation cabin, the music playing over the scene is the march from The Great Escape.
External links
- The Parent Trap at IMDb
- The Parent Trap at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Parent Trap Double Trouble Edition DVD Review
References
- ^ a b Nancy Myers, Charles Shyer. Audio commentary, The Parent Trap Special Double Trouble Edition (DVD). Disney DVD.
- ^ The Parent Trap (1998) at TheNumbers.com
- ^ The Parent Trap (1998) at BoxOfficeMojo.com