Paulie

Paulie is a 1998 American adventure comedy-drama film directed by John Roberts and written by Laurie Craig. The film is about a wisecracking and disobedient talking parrot named Paulie, who has been locked in a cage in a basement. He shares his adventurous story to the janitor. It stars Tony Shalhoub, Cheech Marin, Gena Rowlands and Jay Mohr, the latter who performs both the voice of the title character and the on-screen supporting role of Benny, a character who has a lot of dialogue with him.

Paulie
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJohn Roberts
Written byLaurie Craig
Produced byMark Gordon
Gary Levinsohn
Allison Lyon Segan
Starring
CinematographyTony Pierce-Roberts
Edited byBruce Cannon
Music byJohn Debney
Production
company
Distributed byDreamWorks Pictures
Release date
  • April 17, 1998 (1998-04-17)
Running time
91 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$23 million
Box office$26.9 million[1]

It received mixed to positive reviews and was a box office disappointment, grossing $26.9 million domestically against a $23 million budget. However, in the years after its release, Paulie would find a larger audience on home media sales. The film marked Buddy Hackett's last feature film appearance before his death in 2003.

Plot

While working as a janitor at an American institute, Russian immigrant Misha Belenkoff encounters Paulie, a Blue-crowned conure who can speak as clearly as a human. Subsequently, he doesn't speak a word when Misha brings Dr. Reingold, the head of the institute, and other scientists to witness him.

Frustrated with Paulie at first, Misha relents and opens up about his homesickness. Paulie warms up to Misha, and he tells him his story about his original owner, a little girl named Marie who stutters. The story transitions to a flashback when he was gifted to her in his infancy. As Marie works on speech therapy, he begins to speak. Paulie also had a case of acrophobia, compelling his refusal to learn to fly. Marie's father, Warren, a soldier, returns home from Vietnam and decides that Paulie is not helping her, believing their bond is disillusioning Marie’s reality due to her claims of his ability to talk; Paulie never spoke to her parents out of fear towards them. After a dramatic event in which she falls off the roof in an attempt to teach Paulie to fly, Warren sends him away, devastating Marie.

Paulie is passed down to various owners, and eventually ends up in a pawn shop where he spends his time insulting the customers. One day, a shady customer named Benny shows interest in purchasing him, thinking he could profit from his speaking abilities. However, a widowed artist named Ivy purchases him first with the intent of reforming his ill-behavior after he insults her. She befriends him and agrees to help him find Marie, who has moved to Los Angeles. They begin traveling using her mobile home, but when she loses her sight in the middle of their trip, Paulie decides to stay and take care of her. She eventually passes away, and Paulie, having finally learned to fly, continues his journey.

In East Los Angeles, Paulie joins a group of performing conures owned by migrant musician Ignacio, temporarily forgetting about Marie as he develops feelings for a female conure named Lupe. At one of his performances, Benny, having also moved to Los Angeles, recognizes him and attempts to purchase him from Ignacio. When Ignacio refuses, Benny makes a phony police call at one of his performances. As the police show up, Benny kidnaps Paulie amidst the chaos. Under Benny's influence, Paulie begins a life of crime. In a botched jewel theft, he flies down through the chimney of a house, where he gets caught by the home’s owner. Benny flees the scene, abandoning Paulie.

Paulie is brought to the institute, where Dr. Reingold, the head of the institute, his employees and fellow scientists are stunned by his ability to speak to humans. They subject him to speech testing, and Reingold promises that he will be reunited with Marie once finished. However, he overhears Reingold privately revealing that, though Marie has been found, the institute has instead decided to keep him as their property. A resentful Paulie humiliates Reingold in front of his scientific peers by acting like an ordinary parrot, insulting him and his assistants while refusing to cooperate with more tests. He then calls out Reingold's deception, and tries to make a break for it when the door opens. As a result, his wings are clipped, and eventually imprisoned in the basement when he starts pecking the researchers.

Moved by Paulie's story, Misha decides release him and take him to Marie. They find Marie’s contact information in Reingold’s office, only to be caught by him. Misha stands up to Reingold for his heinous deeds to Paulie, and gladly resigns. They narrowly escape the institute, just after releasing the other caged animals in the testing lab. The duo reach Marie’s address, and find her as a beautiful young woman unrecognizable to Paulie. After singing a song her mother sang to her as a child, Paulie realizes it truly is Marie and they happily reunite. Paulie realizes he can fly again as his feathers have regrown. Misha prepares to depart, but Paulie and Marie offer him to stay. Misha, evidently infatuated with Marie, decides to accept. The film ends with the trio happily entering her house.

Cast

Production

Directed by John Roberts and written by Laurie Craig, the film's production budget was $23 million.[2]

Craig mentioned in an interview, "Paulie was an original story of mine.  I was inspired by seeing a lone parrot in a cage and I wondered what it would be like if he could actually tell me his life story.  Then I read about the amazing African Grey parrot named Alex who had a large vocabulary and was very bonded with his researcher."[3]

During the production of the film, 14 trained blue-crowned conures were used to portray the titular character, with other conure species such as nanday, jenday and cherry-headed conures appearing in supporting roles.[4]

Exterior shots of young Marie's house were filmed in Azusa, CA, on the corner of N. Soldano Ave. and Sixth St. Unfortunately, the house was demolished a couple of years after production, and the lot was split up for smaller homes. The production team mailed thank you letters to the residents along the street for the inconvenience.

Reception

Box office

Box office receipts grossed $5,369,800 on the opening weekend, and $26,875,268 total.[5] It was released in 1,812 North American theaters.[2]

Critical response

The film scored a 62% approval rating at Rotten Tomatoes from 37 reviews, with an average rating of 6.2/10.[6] It was distributed in 24 countries and 10 different languages between 1998 and 1999.

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Times gave the film two stars out of four and said, "Dogs and cats, horses and monkeys and even bears make charismatic movie stars, but "Paulie", I think, suggests that birds are more decorative than dramatic."[7] Tracey Moore of Common Sense Media gave the film a four stars out of five and said, "Talking bird on a coming-of-age journey with some peril."[8]

Awards and nominations

Award Category Result
ALMA Award Outstanding Actor in a Feature Film - Cheech Marin Nominated
ALMA Award Outstanding Actress in a Feature Film - Trini Alvarado Nominated
British Academy Children's Awards Best Children's Feature Film Won
Bronze Gryphon Early Screens - John Roberts Won
Young Artist Award Best family feature - Comedy Nominated
Young Artist Award Best performance in a feature film - Young Actress aged ten or under - Hallie Kate Eisenberg Nominated
Young Artist Award Best performance by a young actress in a comedy film - Hallie Kate Eisenberg Nominated

References

  1. "Box Office Mojo". IMDB.com. 2015. Retrieved 2015-04-23.
  2. "PAULIE". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2009-04-11.
  3. Rodrz, Gaby (2015-06-26). "Interview with Laurie Craig; scriptwriter for Paulie (1998)". SoundCinemas (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-07-24.
  4. "Paulie (1998)". Humane Hollywood. Retrieved 4 January 2023.
  5. "Angels Stays Aloft in Top Spot". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-07-08.
  6. "Paulie". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. 2015. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
  7. Ebert, Roger (April 17, 1998). "Paulie movie review (1998)". Retrieved October 3, 2023.
  8. "Paulie - Movie Review". June 20, 2023. Retrieved October 3, 2023.
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