Adam's perky rib

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Movie
German title Adam's perky rib
Original title And God Created Woman
Country of production United States
original language English
Publishing year 1988
length 94 minutes
Age rating FSK 16
Rod
Director Roger Vadim
script RJ Stewart
production George G. Braunstein ,
Ron Hamady
music Thomas Chase ,
Steve Rucker
camera Stephen M. Katz
cut Suzanne Pettit
occupation

Adam's kesse rib (original title: And God Created Woman ) is an American comedy film by director Roger Vadim from 1988 . It is a remake of the comedy And Always The Wife of Roger Vadim and Brigitte Bardot from 1956.

action

Robin Shea escapes from prison and meets the politician James Tiernan. But this causes them to go back. He advises her to find a man to look after her so that she can be paroled.

Shea agrees and seduces the jail handyman Billy Moran, whom she offers $ 5,000 if he marries her. Moran agrees, and she is released on parole. At first she turns away from Billy and is more interested in Tiernan. After some back and forth, the couple come closer and end up in the bed of a museum where Billy is currently working. When this is discovered by visitors, the responsible authorities are informed. She has to go back to prison for violating her probation requirements. Her husband offers her his savings so that she can go into hiding. Robin refuses that and instead appears at the election event of Tiernan, for whom she sings a newly composed song.

In the last scene you see Robin and Billy intimately united in bed.

Locations

The comedy was shot in New Mexico .

Reviews

The critic of Chicago Sun-Times , Roger Ebert wrote that the film had little in common with the original. He praised the "convincing" game by Rebecca De Mornay and Vincent Spano. The lexicon of international film expresses itself less graciously: "Irrelevant and boring remake [...]."

Awards

Rebecca De Mornay in 1989 for the Golden Raspberry as worst actress nomination.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Roger Ebert : Critique. In: Chicago Sun-Times (English).
  2. ^ Lexicon of international film (CD-ROM edition), Systhema, Munich 1997.