Happy New Year
Brief Synopsis
Two crooks don a variety of disguises to rob a jewelry store.
Cast & Crew
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John G. Avildsen
Director
Peter Sellars
Wendy Hughes
Anthony Heald
Charles Durning
Joan Copeland
Film Details
MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Action
Crime
Release Date
1987
Location
France; Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 26m
Synopsis
Two crooks don a variety of disguises to rob a jewelry store.
Cast
Peter Sellars
Wendy Hughes
Anthony Heald
Charles Durning
Joan Copeland
Peter Falk
Bruce Malmuth
Richard Helfritz
Lead Person
Tom Courtenay
Daniel Gerroll
Tracy Brooks Swope
Claude Lelouch
Crew
Deborah Aquila
Casting Associate
John Balling
Scenic Artist
Jean Bass
Other
Mark Bass
Production Assistant
Jerry Bertolami
Dolly Grip
Frank Bianco
Hair
Will Brantley
Electrician
Gene Bright
Carpenter
Jim Bright
Carpenter
Jim Bright
Electrician
Michael Bright
Carpenter
Mary Lou Byrd
Wardrobe
William J Cassidy
Production Designer
William J Cassidy
Associate Producer
Jim Chory
Assistant Director
Clifford Coleman
Assistant Director
Harold Collins
Construction Coordinator
Bill Comp
Carpenter
Bill Conti
Music
Bill Conti
Music Conductor
Jack Cowden
Script Supervisor
James A. Crabe
Director Of Photography
James P Crapser
Carpenter
Robert Cuevas
Carpenter
Bob Destolfe
Photography
Nancy Dowd
Screenplay
Daniel Duarte
Other
Jose Duarte
Scenic Artist
Fran Dunning
Security
Tom Elmore
Rigging Gaffer
Jan Foreman
Accounting Assistant
Peter Garofalo
Makeup
Luke Halpin
Other
Luke Halpin
Stunts
Joel Hatch
Production Assistant
Robbie Heine
Other
Robert Heine
Assistant Camera Operator
Enid Howell
Casting
Don Ivey
Set Decorator
Jay Ivey
Carpenter
Scott Jacobson
Other
J B Jones
Special Effects
Bob Kellow
Carpenter
Herbert Kerhlehut
Driver
Eddie Knott
Grip
Eddie Knott
Key Grip
Jane Kurson
Editor
Huey Labored
Transportation Co-Captain
Robert Laden
Special Makeup Effects
Kip Langello
Other
Jim Latham
Foreman
Steve Latham
Carpenter
Claude Lelouch
Story By
Ross Maehl
Gaffer
William F Matthews
Art Director
William M. Mcconnell
Assistant Camera Operator
Jonathan Mcgowan
Assistant Camera Operator
Michael P. Mcgowan
Camera Operator
Michael Metzel
Carpenter
Margaret A Mitchell
Production Accountant
Gary Mottern
Projectionist
Rafael Ordoniz
Caterer
Chuck Poreto
Production Assistant
Rusty Pouch
Electrician
Verdelle Reed
Driver
James Robinson Ii
Props
Bill Rogers
Transportation Captain
Nick Romanac
Property Master
Peter Roseman
Electrician
Al Ruban
Unit Production Manager
Allan Ruban
Executive Producer
Charlie Ruban
Location Assistant
James Sabat
Sound Mixer
Louis Sabat
Boom Operator
Ken Sandberg
Scenic Artist
Jonathan P Shaw
Assistant Editor
Gil Soule
Craft Service
Jeff Stacey
Location Manager
Alex Stasko
Carpenter
Cynthia Streit
Production Coordinator
Gene Sullivan
Driver
Sherry Thorup
Location Assistant
Jodie Tillen
Costumes
Cindy Tiller
Driver
Bonnie Timmermann
Casting
Freddie Turett
Driver
Robert K Ulland
Camera Operator
Jerry Weintraub
Producer
O C Whiddon
Carpenter
Film Details
MPAA Rating
Genre
Comedy
Action
Crime
Release Date
1987
Location
France; Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 26m
Award Nominations
Best Makeup
1987
Articles
Happy New Year (1987)
The scenario (adapted by Nancy Dowd under a pseudonym) finds New York City career criminals Nick (Falk) and Charlie (Charles Durning) on a Florida-bound train, planning that one last big score that will set up their retirement. Their ultimate destination is the ritzier part of Palm Beach, and their target is a Harry Winston jewelry store. In order to study and ultimately pierce the shop's security, Nick devises a most unusual angle; donning elaborate makeup and posing as a wealthy, dotty octogenarian, he starts frequenting the establishment, buying ever more pricy pieces as purported presents to a dying wife. The store's officious manager (Tom Courtenay) comes to welcome the profitable visits of this affable oldster; Nick even proceeds to broaden the ruse by putting in appearances in old-lady drag as the counterfeit codger's sister.
In the course of casing the joint, however, Nick begins taking appreciative notice of Carolyn Benedict (Wendy Hughes), the elegant and attractive owner of a neighboring antique store. After espying her failed efforts to get a local restaurateur to part with a coveted Louis XVI table, Nick finagles the purchase of the piece, and shows up on her doorstep looking to bargain. Though Carolyn proves a hard negotiator, Nick's intrigue is unbowed, and she soon finds herself in the unlikely position of reciprocating his attentions. Even as their relationship deepens, Nick reluctantly accepts the inevitability that the heist must come off as planned--and the unexpected hitches pile up as the story moves to its end.
The screenplay of Happy New Year hewed very close to that of its inspiration, director Claude Lelouch's La Bonne Annee (1973) (Avildsen worked in a cameo for Lelouch as a train passenger in the opening). The most significant deviance from Lelouch's original scenario came with the introduction of the elderly sister pose, an idea attributed to Falk. With a lesser actor, it could have become overdone quickly; in his hands, it only made for a larger canvas for him to render very charming work. Falk purportedly based the old lady characterization on his mother. Though Happy New Year was in the can by mid-1985, Avildsen was contractually forbidden to cut it until his directing obligations on The Karate Kid (1984) were completed. After that, the project became an emblematic victim of the ensuing power struggles at Columbia's front office that culminated with the studio's 1989 acquisition by Sony; it took until the late summer of 1987 for its release, and after minimal promotion, it quickly disappeared.
Thanks to the late '70s emergence of the filmmakers dubbed the "Australian New Wave," the antipodean film industry enjoyed unprecedented cache with American art house crowds over the course of the Reagan Era. One of the biggest beneficiaries was the talented and versatile Hughes, as showcased in remarkable efforts like Phillip Noyce's Newsfront (1978), Gillian Armstrong's My Brilliant Career (1979), Paul Cox's Lonely Hearts (1982) and Carl Schultz's Careful, He Might Hear You (1983). Happy New Year's troubled production history, however, would make for an inauspicious U.S. debut, and gaining traction in Hollywood proved difficult afterwards; after a handful of TV assignments in the early '90s, she returned home for good, continuing to grace Australian film, television and stage through the late 2000s. Happy New Year was noted by the AMPAS, at least, as Robert Laden's age effects secured him a Best Makeup Oscar® nomination.
Producer: Jerry Weintraub
Director: John G. Avildsen
Screenplay: Warren Lane (screenplay); Claude Lelouch (film "La bonne annee")
Cinematography: James Crabe
Art Direction: William F. Matthews
Music: Bill Conti
Film Editing: Jane Kurson
Cast: Peter Falk (Nick), Charles Durning (Charlie), Claude Lelouch (Man on Train), Gary Maas (Fence), Jack Hrkach (Bellboy), Tom Courtenay (Edward Saunders), Earleen Carey (Winston Sales Girl), Debra Garrett (as Debbie Garrett (Winston Sales Girl), Karina Etcheverry (Winston Sales Girl), Ted Bartsch (Doorman).
C-85m.
by Jay S. Steinberg
Happy New Year (1987)
Nearly unreleased in the course of the turmoil that marked the late '80s at Columbia Pictures, and barely acknowledged when it finally did hit a handful of screens, the caper comedy/romance Happy New Year (1987) hasn't enjoyed an appreciable rediscovery in the generation since. It's unfortunate, as this remake of a '70s French farce benefits from a disarming central performance courtesy of Peter Falk, able work from the other principals in the cast, and crisp direction from John G. Avildsen (Rocky, 1976).
The scenario (adapted by Nancy Dowd under a pseudonym) finds New York City career criminals Nick (Falk) and Charlie (Charles Durning) on a Florida-bound train, planning that one last big score that will set up their retirement. Their ultimate destination is the ritzier part of Palm Beach, and their target is a Harry Winston jewelry store. In order to study and ultimately pierce the shop's security, Nick devises a most unusual angle; donning elaborate makeup and posing as a wealthy, dotty octogenarian, he starts frequenting the establishment, buying ever more pricy pieces as purported presents to a dying wife. The store's officious manager (Tom Courtenay) comes to welcome the profitable visits of this affable oldster; Nick even proceeds to broaden the ruse by putting in appearances in old-lady drag as the counterfeit codger's sister.
In the course of casing the joint, however, Nick begins taking appreciative notice of Carolyn Benedict (Wendy Hughes), the elegant and attractive owner of a neighboring antique store. After espying her failed efforts to get a local restaurateur to part with a coveted Louis XVI table, Nick finagles the purchase of the piece, and shows up on her doorstep looking to bargain. Though Carolyn proves a hard negotiator, Nick's intrigue is unbowed, and she soon finds herself in the unlikely position of reciprocating his attentions. Even as their relationship deepens, Nick reluctantly accepts the inevitability that the heist must come off as planned--and the unexpected hitches pile up as the story moves to its end.
The screenplay of Happy New Year hewed very close to that of its inspiration, director Claude Lelouch's La Bonne Annee (1973) (Avildsen worked in a cameo for Lelouch as a train passenger in the opening). The most significant deviance from Lelouch's original scenario came with the introduction of the elderly sister pose, an idea attributed to Falk. With a lesser actor, it could have become overdone quickly; in his hands, it only made for a larger canvas for him to render very charming work. Falk purportedly based the old lady characterization on his mother. Though Happy New Year was in the can by mid-1985, Avildsen was contractually forbidden to cut it until his directing obligations on The Karate Kid (1984) were completed. After that, the project became an emblematic victim of the ensuing power struggles at Columbia's front office that culminated with the studio's 1989 acquisition by Sony; it took until the late summer of 1987 for its release, and after minimal promotion, it quickly disappeared.
Thanks to the late '70s emergence of the filmmakers dubbed the "Australian New Wave," the antipodean film industry enjoyed unprecedented cache with American art house crowds over the course of the Reagan Era. One of the biggest beneficiaries was the talented and versatile Hughes, as showcased in remarkable efforts like Phillip Noyce's Newsfront (1978), Gillian Armstrong's My Brilliant Career (1979), Paul Cox's Lonely Hearts (1982) and Carl Schultz's Careful, He Might Hear You (1983). Happy New Year's troubled production history, however, would make for an inauspicious U.S. debut, and gaining traction in Hollywood proved difficult afterwards; after a handful of TV assignments in the early '90s, she returned home for good, continuing to grace Australian film, television and stage through the late 2000s. Happy New Year was noted by the AMPAS, at least, as Robert Laden's age effects secured him a Best Makeup Oscar® nomination.
Producer: Jerry Weintraub
Director: John G. Avildsen
Screenplay: Warren Lane (screenplay); Claude Lelouch (film "La bonne annee")
Cinematography: James Crabe
Art Direction: William F. Matthews
Music: Bill Conti
Film Editing: Jane Kurson
Cast: Peter Falk (Nick), Charles Durning (Charlie), Claude Lelouch (Man on Train), Gary Maas (Fence), Jack Hrkach (Bellboy), Tom Courtenay (Edward Saunders), Earleen Carey (Winston Sales Girl), Debra Garrett (as Debbie Garrett (Winston Sales Girl), Karina Etcheverry (Winston Sales Girl), Ted Bartsch (Doorman).
C-85m.
by Jay S. Steinberg
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Summer August 7, 1987
Remake of "La bonne annee" (1973) directed by Claude Lelouch.
Began shooting May 13, 1985.
Remade as "Happy New Year" (1987) directed by John Avildsen.
Released in United States Summer August 7, 1987