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Films on the to-do list

  • Armageddon Time
  • Black Widow
  • Chimes at Midnight
  • The Killing of a Sacred Deer
  • Last Christmas
  • Remember Sunday
  • Shazam! 2
  • Thor: Love and Thunder
  • Spy Guys

Raising Arizona (1987)

Film review: Raising Arizona (1987), directed by Joel Coen and Ethan Coen

This is a film I saw years and years ago and seemed to remember it being quite funny. Funny how memory plays tricks on you like that, isn’t it?

In Raising Arizona, we meet H.I. McDunnough (Nicolas Cage with a haircut inspired by Albert Einstein), a small-time good-for-nothing crook who keeps robbing convenience stores and getting thrown in jail. There, he falls in love with the beautiful police woman Ed (Holly Hunter), and after a few bouts of getting in and out of jail, he proposes to her. They marry and don’t exactly live happily ever after.

They want a baby, and after many tries the doctors discover that Ed is barren. Because it’s unlikely they’ll ever get an adoption through, the intended father being in and out of jail like a yo-yo, they have to find another solution. When local furniture tycoon Nathan Arizona (Trey Wilson) and his wife (Lynne Kitei) end up on the news as proud parents of not one but five little babies … opportunity knocks. The McDunnoughs decide to help themselves to a baby, Robin Hood style.

Everything would be fine, if it wasn’t for the Snoats brothers (John Goodman and William Forsythe) breaking out of jail and coming to visit their old pal, a creepy bounty hunter (Randall “Tex” Cobb) coming to look for the baby – and of course there being a $25k reward for the person who can return little Nathan Jr to his rightful parents.

In general, I rather enjoy movies by the Coen brothers. I love The Big Lebowski and O Brother, Where Art Thou? for instance. Their style of comedy is familiar in Raising Arizona, which is one of their earliest works, but I found it too … shouty. You know, where people are travelling toward something they know they’re going to hit and they keep screaming at each other for what feels like hours before they actually hit something? That’s the sort of thing I’m talking about. Just made it cringeworthy and headache-inducing rather than being funny.

The actors are very good, but it’s Holly Hunter, John Goodman and Nicolas Cage we’re talking about, so I wouldn’t expect bad acting, at least not on their parts. Cobb creeps me out. If you saw him, you’d know why. The stuff that nightmares are made out of.

The idea that you’d be so desperate to have a baby that you’d steal one from someone who “has so many so they wouldn’t really miss one” is really alien to me, but then again, I’ve never been into babies in my entire life. Anyway, moving on, as a fellow human being, I just can’t imagine leaving a baby’s car seat on the top of the car and then driving off. That’s not funny, even for comedy purposes.

Overall, this film was disappointing. I enjoyed the carefree, playful style of it, but not the contents. It wasn’t really all that funny, even though it was a typical farce (hmm, maybe you need screaming people for one of those?) and I think I’d be happier to re-watch one of the other aforementioned Coen Brothers films.

2 stolen babies out of 5.

Traxy

An easily distracted and over-excited introvert who never learns to go to bed at a reasonable time. Enjoys traveling (when there's not a plague on), and taking photos of European architecture. Cares for cats, good coffee and Boardwalk Empire. A child of her time, she did media studies in school and still can't decide what she wants to be when she grows up.

2 thoughts on “Raising Arizona (1987)

  1. Oh wow, I remember this movie. I am not really in comedy, especially comedy on this level. The part in the grocery store, just imaging the shops owners with guns shooting at thieves was hilarious, can you imagine this nowadays? lol, bet shoplifting would not occur.

  2. Haha, yeah! If it was in the UK, I bet you could claim compensation for “having had an accident at work that wasn’t your fault”!

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