20 lines
2.1 KiB
Plaintext
20 lines
2.1 KiB
Plaintext
apparantly money talks .
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and uses quite a bit of obscenities doing so !
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i've always considered myself pretty open about the gratuity a film can possess , whether in language , violence , sex , or what have you .
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i find that this fact gives me a little more leverage to complain when a movie goes overboard , and money talks definitely does !
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it's not so much that the movie swore nearly constantly ( and i mean constantly ! ) , but it swore so much that it seemed overly prominent and way too staged .
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perhaps if one character were foul mouthed , but in this film , everybody swears nearly every other word .
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money talks is about a black ticket scalper named franklin hatchett ( played less annoyingly than expected by chris tucker ) .
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franklin is your typical con-man and ends up with more than one person out to get him .
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when the plot finally gets underway , there's no less than three people ( or groups ) that want him , dead or alive .
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the frenchman who's somewhat responsible for franklin's escape from a prisoner-packed bus , a hoodlum whom franklin owes seven grand , and the cops who wrongly suspect him of murder .
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franklin's only hope : james russell ( charlie sheen ) , an investigative reporter for the local news who's out to prove himself a worthy journalist .
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james offers to help clear franklin's name if franklin will just allow him an exclusive report to help channel 12 conquer sweeps week .
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both of these elements are completely lost along the way however , and never do reappear .
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as expected , the odd couple of franklin and james do wind up friends at the end , which is another wasted element seeing as how they show no signs of becoming friends at any point along the way .
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there is just nothing original or intriguing about this film , and so many developments are either non-relevant , or just plain forgotten about .
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money talks is a paint-by-numbers movie that lacks any real involvment with the audience .
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frivilous dialogue , a predictable , flat storyline , and two-dimensional characters make money talks a reason to save your money .
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