Stir Crazy


1h 51m 1980
Stir Crazy

Brief Synopsis

Two innocents go to prison after being framed for a bank robbery.

Film Details

Also Known As
Dårfinkarna
MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Release Date
1980

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 51m

Synopsis

Two innocents go to prison after being framed for a bank robbery.

Crew

Glenn E. Anderson

Sound

Wayne Artman

Sound

John Ashby

Stunts

Sidney R. Baldwin

Photography

Tom Beckert

Sound

Marie Brown

Costumes

Jeff Bushelman

Sound Effects

Ron Carr

Location Manager

Richard Cobos

Makeup

Kerrie Cullen

Stunts

Kiki Dee

Song Performer

Francois Demenil

Associate Producer

Patricia Edwards

Costume Designer

Bruce Jay Friedman

Screenplay

Larry Fuentes

Special Effects

Leata Galloway

Song Performer

Mickey Gilbert

Stunt Coordinator

Leroy Gomez

Song Performer

Randy Goodrum

Song

Randy Goodrum

Song Performer

Mary Gregory

Song Performer

Chuck Henson

Stunts

Thomas Jingles

Assistant Editor

Michael Jiron

Sound

Harry Keller

Editor

Lola Kemp

Hair

Claire Mactague

Production Coordinator

Joe Marquette

Camera Operator

Michael Masser

Song

Mickey Mccardle

Unit Production Manager

Daniel J. Mccauley

Assistant Director

Larry Mckinney

Stunts

Jimmy Medearis

Animal Wrangler

Joe Moore

Assistant Director

Robert O Moore

Key Grip

Stoney Neufang Jr.

Stunts

Don Nunley

Props

Patricia J O'donohue

Research And Content Consultant

Arthur J Parker

Set Decorator

Rob Preston

Song

Ray Quiroz

Script Supervisor

Scott Raftery

Stunts

David Rawley

Costumes

Scott Salmon

Choreographer

Fred Schuler

Dp/Cinematographer

Fred Schuler

Director Of Photography

Tom Scott

Music

Tom Scott

Song

Dennis Smith

Camera Operator

Patrick Somerset

Sound Effects

Lynn Stalmaster

Casting

Alfred Sweeney

Production Designer

Melville Tucker

Executive Producer

Gene Walker

Stunts

Hannah Weinstein

Producer

Gene Wilder

Song Performer

Don Wilkerson

Assistant Director

Film Details

Also Known As
Dårfinkarna
MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Release Date
1980

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 51m

Articles

Stir Crazy


Richard Pryor had been around for years by the time Stir Crazy hit the screens in 1980. He had been doing stand up for almost two decades, had appeared on Ed Sullivan and The Tonight Show and had won Emmys and Grammys for his television writing and comedy albums. But this was Pryor's first million dollar movie, the first one where he was the big draw and the studios even threw in 10 percent of the gross (10 percent!) to sweeten the pot. One million dollars and ten percent and, frankly, Pryor couldn't have been more miserable.

Richard Pryor's success had been a slow, steady rise, one that made its way from stand-up comedy to co-writing such big screen hits as Mel Brooks' Blazing Saddles [1974]. In between he wrote for such classic television shows as Sanford and Son and The Flip Wilson Show and even made his way into movies as an actor, including such notable productions as the Oscar®-nominated Lady Sings the Blues in 1972. By 1975, he was popular enough among the counter-culture and youth market to host Saturday Night Live and did well enough to start thinking about getting his own show. Then, in 1976, something happened. He was cast in a supporting role in a wide-release comedy-thriller, Silver Streak, with Gene Wilder and Jill Clayburgh. The film was a huge hit and his exchanges with Gene Wilder during the last third of the movie were a big reason why. Richard Pryor, it seemed, had finally scored big with Middle-America. The rise was now complete: Richard Pryor was a star. Period.

Stir Crazy was to be Pryor's big reteaming with Gene Wilder and the studios were hoping for lightning to strike twice. If the two actors had performed so well together on Silver Streak for only a third of the movie, surely an entire movie of the two of them would be a blockbuster. Directing the film was Academy Award winning actor Sidney Poitier who had worked with Pryor before, in 1974, when he directed and starred in Uptown Saturday Night, in which Pryor had a supporting role. It seemed as if everything was set for an eventless shoot and a successful run at the box office. Richard Pryor, unfortunately, had other thoughts.

The plot of Stir Crazy concerns an actor, Harry Monroe (Richard Pryor) and his writer friend, Skip Donahue (Gene Wilder) who, after losing their jobs in New York, head to California to make their fortunes on the silver screen. They don't quite make it and end up in Arizona, dressed as woodpeckers doing a song and dance routine for a local bank. When two bank robbers steal their costumes and rob the bank, Harry and Skip are arrested and sentenced to 125 years in a maximum security prison. Inside prison, Harry and Skip must try to survive until they can escape. Joining Pryor and Wilder were Barry Corbin, Georg Stanford Brown as well as Craig T. Nelson and JoBeth Williams, two years before their teaming in Poltergeist [1982].

What everyone hoped would be a simple shoot turned out to be anything but. Pryor was constantly late to the set, sometimes showing up at noon, as much as four hours late. His bodyguard later admitted to Pryor's agent, David Franklin, that Pryor was freebasing cocaine every night during the shoot. This made the star's behavior erratic and paranoid. One infamous incident almost shut down the whole film although the views of what actually happened are different for each witness. According to the biography, If I Stop, I'll Die: The Comedy and Tragedy of Richard Pryor, by Dennis A. Williams and John A. Williams, Pryor "claimed that members of the crew were driving out to the house where he was staying, two hours away from the film's Arizona prison location, and shooting at him. One day, he said, a crew member dropped a watermelon from a ladder near him, and that was the last straw." He walked off the set and vowed not to go back.

Gene Wilder, on the other hand, tells a completely different version in his autobiography Kiss Me Like a Stranger. According to Wilder, after slices of watermelon had been handed out for a snack, "[s]ome members of the crew used a piece of watermelon as a Frisbee, and tossed it back and forth to each other. One piece of watermelon landed at Richard's feet. He got up and went home. Filming stopped." Wilder mentions that the cameraman did not return and, according to Pryor's manager Franklin, he and Pryor used the incident to get another half million out of the studio for Pryor to complete the film. Franklin knew if Pryor left the shoot and didn't return it could destroy his career so he negotiated the deal for Pryor but remarked later that the relationship was strained from that point on.

Eventually, Pryor returned, filming was completed and the studio anxiously released the finished product, hoping against hope that all the anxiety on the set wouldn't translate into an uneven film. They needn't have worried. Stir Crazy was a smash hit, thanks in no small part to the immeasurable comedic and acting talents of Richard Pryor. He and Gene Wilder would go on to make two more movies together but neither would be as big, or as good, as Stir Crazy. They would both see their careers take downturns in the decade to follow but it didn't matter. By 1980 both actors had reached the zenith of film stardom and Richard Pryor had gone from unknown stand-up to massive box-office draw in less than twenty years. The word "legend" was already being used to describe him and by the time of his untimely death in 2005 from a heart attack, after years of confinement to a wheelchair due to multiple sclerosis, Richard Pryor was considered one of the most important figures in the history of comedy.

Producer: Hannah Weinstein, Melville Tucker, Francois De Menil
Director: Sidney Poitier
Screenplay: Bruce Jay Friedman
Cinematography: Fred Schuler
Music: Tom Scott
Film Editor: Harry Keller
Production Design: Alfred Sweeney
Cast: Gene Wilder (Skip Donahue), Richard Pryor (Harry Monroe), Georg Stanford Brown (Rory Schultebrand), JoBeth Williams (Meredith), Miguel Ángel Suárez (Jesus Ramirez), Craig T. Nelson (Deputy Ward Wilson), Barry Corbin (Warden Walter Beatty).
C-112m. Letterboxed.

by Greg Ferrara

SOURCES:
If I Stop I'll Die: The Comedy and Tragedy of Richard Pryor, John A. Williams and Dennis A. Williams.
Kiss Me Like a Stranger, Gene Wilder
Wikipedia
IMDB
Stir Crazy

Stir Crazy

Richard Pryor had been around for years by the time Stir Crazy hit the screens in 1980. He had been doing stand up for almost two decades, had appeared on Ed Sullivan and The Tonight Show and had won Emmys and Grammys for his television writing and comedy albums. But this was Pryor's first million dollar movie, the first one where he was the big draw and the studios even threw in 10 percent of the gross (10 percent!) to sweeten the pot. One million dollars and ten percent and, frankly, Pryor couldn't have been more miserable. Richard Pryor's success had been a slow, steady rise, one that made its way from stand-up comedy to co-writing such big screen hits as Mel Brooks' Blazing Saddles [1974]. In between he wrote for such classic television shows as Sanford and Son and The Flip Wilson Show and even made his way into movies as an actor, including such notable productions as the Oscar®-nominated Lady Sings the Blues in 1972. By 1975, he was popular enough among the counter-culture and youth market to host Saturday Night Live and did well enough to start thinking about getting his own show. Then, in 1976, something happened. He was cast in a supporting role in a wide-release comedy-thriller, Silver Streak, with Gene Wilder and Jill Clayburgh. The film was a huge hit and his exchanges with Gene Wilder during the last third of the movie were a big reason why. Richard Pryor, it seemed, had finally scored big with Middle-America. The rise was now complete: Richard Pryor was a star. Period. Stir Crazy was to be Pryor's big reteaming with Gene Wilder and the studios were hoping for lightning to strike twice. If the two actors had performed so well together on Silver Streak for only a third of the movie, surely an entire movie of the two of them would be a blockbuster. Directing the film was Academy Award winning actor Sidney Poitier who had worked with Pryor before, in 1974, when he directed and starred in Uptown Saturday Night, in which Pryor had a supporting role. It seemed as if everything was set for an eventless shoot and a successful run at the box office. Richard Pryor, unfortunately, had other thoughts. The plot of Stir Crazy concerns an actor, Harry Monroe (Richard Pryor) and his writer friend, Skip Donahue (Gene Wilder) who, after losing their jobs in New York, head to California to make their fortunes on the silver screen. They don't quite make it and end up in Arizona, dressed as woodpeckers doing a song and dance routine for a local bank. When two bank robbers steal their costumes and rob the bank, Harry and Skip are arrested and sentenced to 125 years in a maximum security prison. Inside prison, Harry and Skip must try to survive until they can escape. Joining Pryor and Wilder were Barry Corbin, Georg Stanford Brown as well as Craig T. Nelson and JoBeth Williams, two years before their teaming in Poltergeist [1982]. What everyone hoped would be a simple shoot turned out to be anything but. Pryor was constantly late to the set, sometimes showing up at noon, as much as four hours late. His bodyguard later admitted to Pryor's agent, David Franklin, that Pryor was freebasing cocaine every night during the shoot. This made the star's behavior erratic and paranoid. One infamous incident almost shut down the whole film although the views of what actually happened are different for each witness. According to the biography, If I Stop, I'll Die: The Comedy and Tragedy of Richard Pryor, by Dennis A. Williams and John A. Williams, Pryor "claimed that members of the crew were driving out to the house where he was staying, two hours away from the film's Arizona prison location, and shooting at him. One day, he said, a crew member dropped a watermelon from a ladder near him, and that was the last straw." He walked off the set and vowed not to go back. Gene Wilder, on the other hand, tells a completely different version in his autobiography Kiss Me Like a Stranger. According to Wilder, after slices of watermelon had been handed out for a snack, "[s]ome members of the crew used a piece of watermelon as a Frisbee, and tossed it back and forth to each other. One piece of watermelon landed at Richard's feet. He got up and went home. Filming stopped." Wilder mentions that the cameraman did not return and, according to Pryor's manager Franklin, he and Pryor used the incident to get another half million out of the studio for Pryor to complete the film. Franklin knew if Pryor left the shoot and didn't return it could destroy his career so he negotiated the deal for Pryor but remarked later that the relationship was strained from that point on. Eventually, Pryor returned, filming was completed and the studio anxiously released the finished product, hoping against hope that all the anxiety on the set wouldn't translate into an uneven film. They needn't have worried. Stir Crazy was a smash hit, thanks in no small part to the immeasurable comedic and acting talents of Richard Pryor. He and Gene Wilder would go on to make two more movies together but neither would be as big, or as good, as Stir Crazy. They would both see their careers take downturns in the decade to follow but it didn't matter. By 1980 both actors had reached the zenith of film stardom and Richard Pryor had gone from unknown stand-up to massive box-office draw in less than twenty years. The word "legend" was already being used to describe him and by the time of his untimely death in 2005 from a heart attack, after years of confinement to a wheelchair due to multiple sclerosis, Richard Pryor was considered one of the most important figures in the history of comedy. Producer: Hannah Weinstein, Melville Tucker, Francois De Menil Director: Sidney Poitier Screenplay: Bruce Jay Friedman Cinematography: Fred Schuler Music: Tom Scott Film Editor: Harry Keller Production Design: Alfred Sweeney Cast: Gene Wilder (Skip Donahue), Richard Pryor (Harry Monroe), Georg Stanford Brown (Rory Schultebrand), JoBeth Williams (Meredith), Miguel Ángel Suárez (Jesus Ramirez), Craig T. Nelson (Deputy Ward Wilson), Barry Corbin (Warden Walter Beatty). C-112m. Letterboxed. by Greg Ferrara SOURCES: If I Stop I'll Die: The Comedy and Tragedy of Richard Pryor, John A. Williams and Dennis A. Williams. Kiss Me Like a Stranger, Gene Wilder Wikipedia IMDB

Richard Pryor (1940-2005)


The scathing, brilliantly insightful African-American comic who proved himself on many occasions to be a highly competent screen actor, died of a heart attack on November 10 at his Encino, California home. He was 65. He had been reclusive for years after he publicly announced he was suffering from multiple sclerosis in 1992.

He was born Richard Thomas Pryor III on December 1, 1940 in Peoria, Illinois. By all accounts, his childhood was a difficult one. His mother was a prostitute and his grandmother ran a brothel. His father was rarely around and when he was, he would physically abuse him. From a young age, Pryor knew that humor was his weapon of choice to cut through all the swath he came across and would confront in his life.

After high school, he enlisted in the Army for a two-year stint (1958-60). When he was discharged (honorably!) he concentrated on stand-up comedy and worked in a series of nightclubs before relocating to New York City in 1963. In 1964, he made his television debut when he was given a slot on the variety program On Broadway Tonight. His routine, though hardly the groundbreaking material we would witness in later years, was very well received, and in the late '60s Pryor found more television work: Toast of the Town, The Wild Wild West, The Mod Squad ; and was cast in a two movies: The Busy Body (1967) with Sid Caesar; and Wild in the Streets (1968) a cartoonish political fantasy about the internment of all American citizens over 30.

Pryor's career really didn't ignite until the '70s. His stand up act became raunchier and more politically motivated as he touched on issued of race, failed relationships, drug addiction, and street crimes. His movie roles became far more captivating in the process: the piano man in Lady Sings the Blues (1972); as a wise-talking hustler in a pair of slick urban thrillers: The Mack (1973) and Uptown Saturday Night (1974); the gregarious Daddy Rich in Car Wash; his first pairing with Gene Wilder as Grover, the car thief who helps stops a runaway train in his first real box office smash Silver Streak (both 1976); and for many critics, his finest dramatic performance as a factory worker on the edge of depression in Paul Schrader's excellent working class drama Blue Collar (1978).

On a personal level, his drug dependency problem worsened, and on June 9, 1980, near tragedy struck when he caught fire while free-basing cocaine. Pryor later admitted that the incident, was, in fact, a suicide attempt, and that his management company created the lie for the press in hopes of protecting him. Fortunately, Pryor had three films in the can that all achieved some level of financial success soon after his setback: another pairing with Gene Wilder in the prison comedy Stir Crazy (1980); a blisteringly funny cameo as God who flips off Andy Kaufman in the warped religious satire In God We Tru$t (1980); an a ex-con helping a social worker (Cicely Tyson) with her foster charges in Bustin' Loose (1981). He capped his recovery with Live on the Sunset Strip (1982), a first-rate documentation of the comic's genius performed in front of a raucous live audience.

In 1983, Pryor signed a $40 million, five-year contract with Columbia Pictures. For many fans and critics, this was the beginning of his downslide. His next few films: The Toy, Superman III (both 1983), and Brewster's Millions (1985) were just tiresome, mediocre comedies. Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life is Calling (1986), was his only attempt at producing, directing, and acting, and the film, which was an ambitious autobiographical account of a his life and career, was a box-office disappointment. He spent the remainder of the '80s in middling fare: Condition Critical (1987), Moving; a third pairing with Gene Wilder in See No Evil, Hear No Evil; and his only teaming with Eddie Murphy in Harlem Nights (1989).

In 1986, Pryor was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, a degenerative disease of the nervous system that curtailed both his personal appearances and his gift for physical comedy in his latter films. By the '90s, little was seen of Pryor, but in 1995, he made a courageous comeback on television when he guest starred on Chicago Hope as an embittered multiple sclerosis patient. His performance earned him an Emmy nomination and he was cast in a few more films: Mad Dog Time (1996), Lost Highway (1997), but his physical ailments prohibited him from performing on a regular basis. In 1998, The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington gave Pryor the first Mark Twain Prize for humor. It was fitting tribute for a man who had given so much honesty and innovation in the field of comedy. Pryor is survived by his wife, Jennifer Lee; his sons Richard and Steven; and daughters Elizabeth, Rain and Renee.

by Michael T. Toole

Richard Pryor (1940-2005)

The scathing, brilliantly insightful African-American comic who proved himself on many occasions to be a highly competent screen actor, died of a heart attack on November 10 at his Encino, California home. He was 65. He had been reclusive for years after he publicly announced he was suffering from multiple sclerosis in 1992. He was born Richard Thomas Pryor III on December 1, 1940 in Peoria, Illinois. By all accounts, his childhood was a difficult one. His mother was a prostitute and his grandmother ran a brothel. His father was rarely around and when he was, he would physically abuse him. From a young age, Pryor knew that humor was his weapon of choice to cut through all the swath he came across and would confront in his life. After high school, he enlisted in the Army for a two-year stint (1958-60). When he was discharged (honorably!) he concentrated on stand-up comedy and worked in a series of nightclubs before relocating to New York City in 1963. In 1964, he made his television debut when he was given a slot on the variety program On Broadway Tonight. His routine, though hardly the groundbreaking material we would witness in later years, was very well received, and in the late '60s Pryor found more television work: Toast of the Town, The Wild Wild West, The Mod Squad ; and was cast in a two movies: The Busy Body (1967) with Sid Caesar; and Wild in the Streets (1968) a cartoonish political fantasy about the internment of all American citizens over 30. Pryor's career really didn't ignite until the '70s. His stand up act became raunchier and more politically motivated as he touched on issued of race, failed relationships, drug addiction, and street crimes. His movie roles became far more captivating in the process: the piano man in Lady Sings the Blues (1972); as a wise-talking hustler in a pair of slick urban thrillers: The Mack (1973) and Uptown Saturday Night (1974); the gregarious Daddy Rich in Car Wash; his first pairing with Gene Wilder as Grover, the car thief who helps stops a runaway train in his first real box office smash Silver Streak (both 1976); and for many critics, his finest dramatic performance as a factory worker on the edge of depression in Paul Schrader's excellent working class drama Blue Collar (1978). On a personal level, his drug dependency problem worsened, and on June 9, 1980, near tragedy struck when he caught fire while free-basing cocaine. Pryor later admitted that the incident, was, in fact, a suicide attempt, and that his management company created the lie for the press in hopes of protecting him. Fortunately, Pryor had three films in the can that all achieved some level of financial success soon after his setback: another pairing with Gene Wilder in the prison comedy Stir Crazy (1980); a blisteringly funny cameo as God who flips off Andy Kaufman in the warped religious satire In God We Tru$t (1980); an a ex-con helping a social worker (Cicely Tyson) with her foster charges in Bustin' Loose (1981). He capped his recovery with Live on the Sunset Strip (1982), a first-rate documentation of the comic's genius performed in front of a raucous live audience. In 1983, Pryor signed a $40 million, five-year contract with Columbia Pictures. For many fans and critics, this was the beginning of his downslide. His next few films: The Toy, Superman III (both 1983), and Brewster's Millions (1985) were just tiresome, mediocre comedies. Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life is Calling (1986), was his only attempt at producing, directing, and acting, and the film, which was an ambitious autobiographical account of a his life and career, was a box-office disappointment. He spent the remainder of the '80s in middling fare: Condition Critical (1987), Moving; a third pairing with Gene Wilder in See No Evil, Hear No Evil; and his only teaming with Eddie Murphy in Harlem Nights (1989). In 1986, Pryor was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, a degenerative disease of the nervous system that curtailed both his personal appearances and his gift for physical comedy in his latter films. By the '90s, little was seen of Pryor, but in 1995, he made a courageous comeback on television when he guest starred on Chicago Hope as an embittered multiple sclerosis patient. His performance earned him an Emmy nomination and he was cast in a few more films: Mad Dog Time (1996), Lost Highway (1997), but his physical ailments prohibited him from performing on a regular basis. In 1998, The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington gave Pryor the first Mark Twain Prize for humor. It was fitting tribute for a man who had given so much honesty and innovation in the field of comedy. Pryor is survived by his wife, Jennifer Lee; his sons Richard and Steven; and daughters Elizabeth, Rain and Renee. by Michael T. Toole

Quotes

Trivia

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States December 1980

Released in United States on Video June 2, 1993

Released in United States Winter December 12, 1980

Released in United States on Video June 2, 1993

Released in United States December 1980

Released in United States Winter December 12, 1980