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Take the Money and Run

(1969, 1h 25min, PG)
7.3

(1969, 1h 25min, PG)7.3

Take the Money and Run

(1969, 1h 25min, PG)

(1969, 1h 25min, PG)
7.3

7.3

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WHERE TO WATCH

THIS TITLE IS NOT AVAILABLE FOR RENT OR PURCHASE

Add this title to your Watchlist and we will let you know when it is available on one of your preferred services.

Genre

Comedy, Crime, Old movies

Synopsis

When Woody Allen's fans refer to his "earlier, funnier" pictures, they often cite his directorial debut as a shining example. Co-written by Allen and Mickey Rose, this side-splitting takeoff of crime documentaries stars Allen as Virgil Starkwell, a sweetly inept career criminal. The film's most celebrated sequence involves Virgil's inability to write coherent holdup notes ("I have a gub"), but others include Virgil's losing battle with a recalcitrant coke machine and his misguided effort to emulate John Dillinger by carving a gun out of a bar of soap (his weapon disintegrates in a heavy rain). As was often the case in Allen's early films, not all the gags work, but for the most part, Take the Money and Run is a delight, enhanced by the on-target supporting performances of Janet Margolin, Marcel Hillaire, and (uncredited) Louise Lasser, as well as the energetic musical score of Marvin Hamlisch.
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