Jack and Jill (2011 film)

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Jack and Jill
Jack and jill film poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Dennis Dugan
Produced by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Screenplay by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Story by Ben Zook
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Music by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Cinematography Dean Cundey
Edited by Tom Costain
Production
company
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release dates
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  • November 11, 2011 (2011-11-11)
Running time
91 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $79 million[2]
Box office $149.7 million[3]

Jack and Jill is a 2011 American comedy film co-written, produced by, and starring Adam Sandler, Katie Holmes, and Al Pacino, and directed by Dennis Dugan, who has collaborated with Sandler on many of his films. It was distributed by Columbia Pictures and released on November 11, 2011.[4]

The film was a success at the box office[5] with a worldwide gross over $149 million, but was heavily panned by film critics; it holds a score of 3% on Rotten Tomatoes and is considered by many to be one of the worst films of all time.[6] It became the first film to win in every category at the Golden Raspberry Awards,[7] in the process breaking the record held by Battlefield Earth for the most Razzie awards for a single film.[8]

Plot

The film opens with homemade videos of fraternal twins Jack and Jill Sadelstein growing up in New York City. As the videos progress, they reveal Jack as the gifted twin...while Jill constantly tries—and fails miserably—to get his attention by injuring him and/or driving others away from him.

In present day Los Angeles, Jack (Adam Sandler) is a successful advertising executive who lives with his beautiful wife Erin (Katie Holmes) and their two kids: Sofie (Elodie Tougne); Gary (Rohan Chand), a Hindu child they adopted at birth. Jill (also played by Sandler) never left the working-class neighborhood they grew up in; she recently inherited the Sadelstein home, having lived with their mother until her death one year ago.

As always, Jack is irritated by the upcoming Thanksgiving visit of his sister. First, he has to pick her up at 4:00am. (Never having understood the concept of time zones, Jill thinks she loses hours by travelling west - when actually she gains them.) Jill ruins Thanksgiving dinner by loudly embarrassing a homeless guest. Jack finally calls her out for making a fool of herself, of him, and of everybody else at the table. Stung, Jill runs off into the woods with her pet cockatoo Poopsie. Erin demands that Jack apologize to his sister, which he very unwillingly does. Jill has a list of things she wants to do while in Los Angeles: be on a game show (The Price is Right), which—despite her horrendous performance—gives Jill a carload of prizes simply to be rid of her); go horseback riding (she proves too big and heavy for the pony, which collapses under her); and do a studio tour. Since Jill has an open-ended plane ticket, she decides to stay until the end of Hanukkah - much to Jack's horror.

Jack's agency client, meanwhile, wants him to somehow get actor Al Pacino to appear in a Dunkin' Donuts commercial. Jack isn't sure how he's supposed to make that happen.

Jill tries online dating, even though she's never known a PC from a calculator. (She even mistakes "Skype" for an anti-Semitic slur!) She has no success until Jack poses as Jill and alters her profile, leading to more than 100 responses. Yet when Jill's date - "Funbucket" (Norm Macdonald) - meets her, he sneaks out of the restaurant through the men's room.

Jack takes Jill to a Lakers game where Pacino is supposed to be. Pacino (for some reason) blows off Jack but is taken with Jill. He gives her his phone number (on a hot dog, written in mustard and ketchup). Jack was hoping Jill would go back home by New Year's Eve, since the family is going on a cruise. Jack's friends and colleagues throw him a birthday party, extending the invite to Jill (Jack, for all the right reasons, never let it be known that he even had a sister). Again Jill loudly disgraces herself, Jack, and the various celebrities in attendance...to the point of getting herself forcibly ejected from her own party! Pacino invites Jill to his home, where she accidentally destroys his Oscar statuette. Abruptly, she becomes bored with him and leaves. Jack's Mexican gardener Felipe (Eugenio Derbez), who is also taken with Jill, invites her to meet his family at their annual fiesta. There she (somehow) hits it off with everybody—and also tries Mexican food for the first time, thus acquiring a horrible case of diarrhea which makes her even tougher to live with than usual.

Pacino refuses to do the Dunkin' Doughnuts commercial unless Jack gets him a date with Jill; to that end, Jack invites Jill on the cruise with his family. At sea, while Jill continues making a jackass of herself and everyone around her, Jack disguises himself as his own sister and goes on her date with Pacino. Jill suspects that Jack invited her on the cruise just so Pacino would do the commercial; such is confirmed when she phones Jack, he answers as Jill, and then she hears Pacino in the background. Pacino, still believing Jack to be Jill, spells out that he (Pacino) sees much more in her than just a pathetic half-wit...which is what Jack always took her for. Feeling unspeakably guilty, Jack returns to the ship—only to learn that Jill has gone back home to The Bronx. At a restaurant on New Year's Eve, toting a picture of her and Jack's late mother, Jill comes across a group of former classmates who always made fun of her; these classmates, led by Monica (David Spade), pick up directly where they left off...until Jack, his wife and their kids show up. Jack and Jill converse in their made-up twin language (which even Jack finds incomprehensible). Then Monica attacks Erin and is coldcocked by Jill. Pacino also turns up at the party, dressed as the Man of La Mancha, and asks Jill to marry him. She declines and goes home, where Felipe also proposes marriage. Being Jill, she joyously agrees (read: turns down a wildly-wealthy, successful, and famous actor in favor of a lowly Spanish-American gardener who barely made ends meet when he was a bachelor).

The television commercial is made, with Pacino starring and singing as he promotes a new coffee—"Dunkaccino"—with a rap song. But when Jack shows it to him, Pacino hates it and tells him to destroy every copy of this film. Pacino even threatens death to all those who have seen it.

Cast

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Cameo

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Reception

Box office

The film opened in 3,438 theaters at #2 with $25,003,575, behind Immortals, which debuted in the top spot with $32,206,425.[12] The film closed on February 26, 2012 with a total gross of $74,158,157 in the North America. It also made $75,515,631 in other territories, for worldwide gross of $149,673,788 against its $79 million budget.[3]

Critical reception

Jack and Jill received overwhelmingly negative reviews from critics, with many citing it as one of the worst films of all time. Salon stated that Jack and Jill "received some of the worst reviews of any movie ever" upon its release.[13] Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a rating of 3%, based on 105 reviews, with a rating average of 2.6 out of 10. The site's consensus reads: "Although it features an inexplicably committed performance from Al Pacino, Jack and Jill is impossible to recommend on any level whatsoever."[14] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 23 out of 100, based on 26 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[15]

Mary Pols of Time magazine ranked the film #1 on the Top 10 Worst Movies of 2011.[16] The A.V. Club ranked it #1 on "The Worst Films of 2011" list (along with Just Go with It).[17] TV Guide included the film on its "The Worst of 2011" list.[18] Andrew Barker of Variety said that the film's "general stupidity, careless direction and reliance on a single-joke premise that was never really funny to begin with are only the most obvious of its problems."[19] Internet review show Half in the Bag criticized Jack and Jill for recycling gags from Sandler's previous films, incessant product placement, and laziness in terms of both writing and production quality; going so far as to characterize the entire production as a sinister embezzlement scam.[20] They would later call it "the worst thing in the world".[20] The film won a total of 10 Razzies in 2012, setting a record and displacing 2000's Battlefield Earth which had garnered 9 awards.[21]

Despite generally scathing reviews, the film did receive some positive reception. However much of this was seen as a "one-off" or a surprise in comparison to the rest of the film. Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle stated that while he found the character Jill annoying, "...almost everything else in this comedy succeeds. The central situation...has comic energy...[the film has] successful bits and big moments of satisfying comedy."[22] Tom Russo of the Boston Globe gave the film two and a half out of a possible four stars, writing "What's more genuinely wacky is what a kick this movie can sometimes be, completely in spite of its big, flat stunt."[23]

Accolades

In the Razzie Awards, Jack and Jill was nominated for every single category, and twice for Supporting Actor and Supporting Actress, and won all 10 awards.

List of awards and nominations
Award Category Recipient(s) and nominee(s) Result
Kids' Choice Awards Favorite Movie Actor Adam Sandler Won
Razzie Awards Worst Actor Won
Worst Actress Won
Worst Supporting Actor Nick Swardson Nominated
Al Pacino Won
Worst Supporting Actress David Spade (in drag) Won
Katie Holmes Nominated
Worst Picture Adam Sandler, Jack Giarraputo, and Todd Garner Won
Worst Director Dennis Dugan Won
Worst Screenplay Adam Sandler, Ben Zook, and Steve Koren Won
Worst Screen Couple Adam Sandler and either Al Pacino, Katie Holmes or Adam Sandler Won
Worst Ensemble Won
Worst Prequel, Remake, Rip-off or Sequel Ripoff of Glen or Glenda Won

Home media

Sony Pictures Home Entertainment released Jack and Jill on DVD and Blu-ray on March 6, 2012.

Notes

  1. Bruce Jenner changed her first name to Caitlyn after her gender transition in 2015.[11]

References

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  5. http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/celebritology/post/jack-and-jill-analyzing-its-box-office-revenue/2011/11/14/gIQA9JH8KN_blog.html
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  9. Al Pacino, Katie Holmes Join ‘Jack and Jill’. News in Film. Retrieved December 6, 2010.[dead link]
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External links