Little Nicky
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Steven Brill
Adam Sandler
Patricia Arquette
Harvey Keitel
Reese Witherspoon
Jon Lovitz
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Nicky is just a guy who'd rather play heavy metal music in his bedroom sanctuary than climb the corporate ladder in his family's thriving business. Ruthless older brothers Adrian and Cassius are much more ambitious. When their aging father decides to postpone his retirement, the sinister duo defects, leaving home to set up shop in a new location -- New York City. This is about to become a big problem for the "Big Apple." Nicky's dad is the Devil, himself. Adrian and Cassius evade the Gatekeeper's efforts to stop them and make a hasty exit from Hades. As a result, the gates of hell freeze over and with no more evil souls able to enter, their dad starts to fall apart-- literally! It's up to Little Nicky to save him by finding his rotten brothers and bringing them home before his dad wastes away.
Director
Steven Brill
Cast
Adam Sandler
Patricia Arquette
Harvey Keitel
Reese Witherspoon
Jon Lovitz
Jess Harnell
Troy Brown
J Graysen Stubbs
Carl Weathers
Jodi Outman
Blake Clark
Eli Wolstan
Allen Covert
Luke Khanlian
Fred Wolf
Rhys Ifans
Michael Goldfinger
Gwendolyn G Yeager
Christopher Carroll
Rodney Dangerfield
Sal Cavaliere
Mary Diveny
Agustin Alvardo
John Witherspoon
Matthew Jackson
Michael Mckean
Michael Giarraputo
Leah Lail
Orlando Antigua
Kevin Grady
Todd Holland
Paul Tanskley
Clint Howard
David Michael John Castner
Joe Griffo
Mannie Jackson
Henry Winkler
John Farley
John White
Herbert Lang
Stephanie Chad
Sylvia Lopez
Sid Ganis
Reggie Mcfadden
Kimberly Velez
Lynn Wilson
Lewis Arquette
Cindy Sorenson
Mary Brill
Andrew L Mensch
Ruth Annesi
Tom Mcnulty
Vincenetta Gunn
Isaiah Griffin
Michael Charles Roman
Tom Winkler
Suzanne Frydman
John A Scott
Tim Young
Jake Mckinnon
Curley Johnson
Peter Linardi
William Stringfellow
Tiny Lister
Lillian Adams
Philip Bolden
Robin Koenig
Jana Sandler
Ellen Cleghorne
Erinn Bartlett
Robert Smigel
Gerard Bugge
Rob Schneider
John Kirk
Frank Sivero
David Wogh
Peter Tambakis
Kalie Stewart Conner
George Wallace
Jackie Sandler
Ng Thanh Nhan
Tracey Ostrand
Brandon Rosenberg
Kevin Nealon
Lou Dunbar
Dana Moir
Laura Elena Harring
Jeff Imada
Mike Deak
Ricco Bueno
Bill Walton
Peter Dante
John Osbourne
Quentin Tarantino
Dana Carvey
Regis Philbin
Jonathan Loughran
David Sardi
Stuart Rudin
Crew
Victor Abbene
Erik Akyutagawa
Tim Alatorre
Robert Alberga
Sande Alessi
Eric Alexander
Dana Anderson
Michael Anthony
Pete Anthony
Pete Anthony
Thomas Aquino
Harold Arlen
Mark Arnell
Chad Atkinson
James Atkinson
Alan Au
Kenneth Au
Diane Ault
Adam Devitt Austin
Ed Ayer
Russell Ayer
Linda C Azevedo
Bruce Babcock
David J Babcock
David Bach
Minh Bahnsen
Tom Baker
Kevin Baldes
Adam Baral
Cassandra Barbour
Mark Barry
John Basile
Linda Bastin
Rodney Bauer
Kelly Bechtle-woods
Francesco Belfiore
Jennifer K Bell
Robert Bell
Ronald Bell
Matthew Bellamy
Luis G Benavides
Tina Bennett
Garrett M Benson
Steve Berens
Greg Bergdorf
Howard Berger
Lee Berger
Ben Bernie & Orchestra
Kristan Berona
Liza Bigger
Jacqueline Bisbano
Kamar Bitar
Donald T Black
Perry Andelin Blake
Margot Boccia
Mark Boley
Keith Boucklet
Brandon Boyd
Greg Bradner
Dennis Bredow
Steven Brill
Jeff Brinker
Melissa Brockman Kalmus
Paul Broucek
George Brown
Troy Brown
Alexandra Kipani Browne
Michael C Brum
Paul Brush
Brink Brydon
Chris Buchinsky
David Buckley
Lauren Buckley
Amy Budden
Kelly Bumbarger
Sally Bunasawa
Milton Buras
Christian Burns
Tom Y Burns
Sam Burrell
Elvira Burton
Lori Bzura
Norman Cabrera
Robb Cadzow
Tino Caira
Dan Canamar
Anthony Cappello
Armando Cardenas
Matthew Carlisle
Tamara Carlson-woodard
Kimberly Carlton
Laurie Cartwright
Kenneth Casey
Johnny Cash
Pete Cassella
Teddy Castellucci
Teddy Castellucci
Teddy Castellucci
Randy Castillo
Hazel Catmull
Dale Caughey
Salvatore Cavalieri
Mauni Caves
James S Cawley
Robert Cawley
Christopher Cenatiempo
Chris Cera
Al Cerullo
Serena Chang
Kiki Chansamone
Ray Chen
Yeen-shi Chen
Chi Cheng
Paul Cheponis
Raymond Chih
Jack Chouchanian
Jeffrey Cilley
Benjamin I Cinelli
Glen Cliatt
James Clyne
Franklin Cofod
David Cohen
Harvey Cohen
John Coleman
Jason Collins
Rick Colosimo
Jim Colovin
Kathleen Comer
Craig Connoly
Kevin M Cortez
Shellaine Corwel
Tom Costain
Allen Covert
Jimmy Cozier
Gino Crognale
Demelza Cronin
Kate Crossley
Eugene Crum
Anita Cukurs
Christopher Cummings
Lou Cundiff
Abe Cunningham
Brian Cuscino
Bob Daisley
Christian Davis
Erik De Boer
Sandy De Crescent
Michael De Luca
Aladino V Debert
Jacopo Debertoldi
Michael Degtjarewsky
Ralphie Del Castillo
Mike Delaney
Andy Denicholas
Dale Destefani
Scott Destefano
Alex Diaz
Frank Didio
Michael Dilbeck
Seong Dilg
Rich Dodson
James Dolan
Robert Dolan
Therese Dolan
Peter Donahue
James Donaruma
Dan Donegan
Tommy Dorsett
Terri Douglas
Brian Dowrick
Dave Draiman
Charles Drake
Linda Draves
Quantum Drives
Tony Duchesne
Sean M Dugan
Jerry Duplessis
Doug Durose
Antoine Durr
Rose Echeverria
Jack Edjourian
Allen Edwards
Paul A. Edwards
Edward James Egan
Jeff Egan
Kevin Egan
Mike Einziger
Ross Ellis
Robert E. Engelman
Ken Estes
Michael Peter Fabbri
Russell Farmarco
Melissa A. Feinberg
Liz Feldbauer
Deak Ferrand
Mike Ferrite
Kevin Finegan
Kevin Fisher
Kristi Fitts
Rachel Flackett
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Rodney Dangerfield, (1921-2004)
He was born Jacob Cohen in Babylon, Long Island, New York on November 22, 1921. His father was a vaudevillian performer who played professionally as Phil Roy. Known as something of a cut-up in high school, he started performing comedy when he was 20, and spent the next 10 years working alongthe Atlantic coast under the name Jack Roy.
His career was temporarily sidelined with family responsiblities - he married Joyce Indig in 1949 and she soon gave birth to two children: Brian and Melanie. With a family to support, he sold aluminum siding and lived in New Jersey, yet still held onto his dream of being a stand-up comic. In 1961, he divorced his wife (by all accounts his marriage had been an unhappy one), and he hit the road again as Rodney Dangerfield. By the mid-60s, Rondey was hitting his stride, following a some successful nightclub appearances in Manhattan and Atlantic City. At this point, he had developed his stage persona as a harassed schmo, always tugging at his tie and padding down his sweated brow. His persistancy paid off when he made his first television appearances in 1967: The Ed Sullivan Show and The Merv Griffin Show both raised his profile, but what really made Rodney was his July 29, 1969 debut on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. With his flurry of one-liners, goggle eyes and, of course, "I don't get no respect!" plea, audiences loved him and Rodney would make over 70 appearances over the next 30 years on The Tonight Show for both Johnny and eventual host, Jay Leno.
Around this time, Rodney garnered his first film role, as an irritable theater manager in The Projectionist (1971), but he would have to wait almost 10 years later before he struck box-office gold. The film was Caddyshack (1980), and as Al Czervik, the loudly dressed, obnoxious but lovable millionaire who crashes a snotty Golf Club, Rodney may not have displayed great acting skills, but his comic personality was vibrant and engaging, and with the comedy being one of the biggest hits of the year, he was now a star.
His follow-up to Caddyshack, Easy Money (1983), followed the same formula (he played a baby photgrapher who inherits money), but the tone was much nastier, and the crirtics panned it. He rebounded though with the biggest hit of his career, Back to School (1986). The plot was simple, a self-made millionaire goes back to college to prove his son his worth only to fall in love in the process, grossed over $100 million. Indeed, it looked like Rodney Dangerfield had all the respect in the world.
His career kept taking surprise turns in the '90s: he was an in-demand "guest voice" on such animated projects like Rover Dangerfield, The Simpsons, and Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist. Yet, the biggest surprise by far was his dramatic turn as an abusive, alcoholic father in Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers (1994). For his performance, he received glowing reviews, but ill-health was becoming an issue for him, and Rodney had to curtail his schedule considerably after this.
He returned to the screen as the Devil in the Adam Sandler comedy Little Nicky (2000), but on his 80th birthday (November 22, 2001), he suffered a mild heart attack, and in the Spring of 2003, he underwent brain surgery to improve his blood flow in preparation for an upcoming heart-valve replacement surgery. This year started off brightly for him: he made another film appearance, Angles with Angles; released his autobiography in May entitled It Ain't Easy Being Me and in just the past two months appeared on television for Jimmy Kimmel Live, and in an episode of the CBS sitcom Still Standing playing a wisecracking, next-door neighbor. Sadly, this flurry of reactivity was not to last. On August 24, he entered UCLA Medical Center for heart valve-replacement surgery, but complications from an infection after the operation led to a coma, and he reamined in vegetative state for the last six weeks of his life. He is survived by his wife of 11 years, Joan Child; his son, Brian; and daughter, Melanie.
by Michael T. Toole
Rodney Dangerfield, (1921-2004)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Fall November 10, 2000
Released in United States on Video April 24, 2001
Released in United States March 2000
Shown at ShoWest 2000 in Las Vegas, Nevada March 6-9, 2000.
Tim Herlihy reportedly received $1,000,000 for this screenplay.
Adam Sandler reportedly received $20,000,000 for this role.
Tim Herlihy reportedly received $1,000,000 for this screenplay.
Adam Sandler reportedly received $20,000,000 for this role.
Completed shooting March 3, 2000.
Began shooting November 2, 1999.
The "Little Nicky" soundtrack available on Mavrick Records.
Released in United States Fall November 10, 2000
Released in United States on Video April 24, 2001
Released in United States March 2000 (Shown at ShoWest 2000 in Las Vegas, Nevada March 6-9, 2000.)