Throw Momma from the Train
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| Throw Momma from the Train | |
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Throw Momma From the Train movie poster |
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| Directed by | Danny DeVito |
| Produced by | Larry Brezner |
| Written by | Stu Silver |
| Starring | Billy Crystal Danny DeVito Kim Greist Anne Ramsey Kate Mulgrew |
| Distributed by | Orion Pictures |
| Release date(s) | December 11, 1987 |
| Running time | 88 min |
| Language | English |
| IMDb profile | |
Throw Momma from the Train is a dark comedy film released in 1987. The movie was inspired by the 1951 Alfred Hitchcock thriller Strangers on a Train, which also plays a role in the movie. The title comes from the 1956 hit song, Mama From The Train (A Kiss, A Kiss) written by Irving Gordon and sung by Patti Page.
It stars Billy Crystal, Danny DeVito (who also directed), Anne Ramsey, Kim Greist, Rob Reiner, Branford Marsalis, and Kate Mulgrew. It has been released for television and video/DVD.
The film received mixed reviews but was a major commercial success. Actress Anne Ramsey was singled out for praise and her portrayal of the maniacal and overbearing Mrs. Lift and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress.
[edit] Plot
The movie follows the interaction of the two main characters, Larry Donner (played by Billy Crystal), and Owen Lift (DeVito). At one time Devito was going to play the role of Larry and Crystal would play the role of Owen.
Larry Donner is a struggling writer who teaches a creative writing class at a community college. Larry feels anger and resentment towards his ex-wife, Margaret (Mulgrew), who has stolen his book and had it published in her name. The book has become a smashing success and has propelled her to undeserved wealth and fame, including the chance to promote her book Hot Fire, on The Oprah Winfrey Show. His anger and resentment at her success causes him to frequently scream the word "slut!", and to experience writer's block.
Owen Lift is a student in Donner's writing class, and an utterly incompetent writer. Lift is a middle aged milquetoast who lives with his overbearing mother (Anne Ramsey). He dreams of killing her, but turns spineless whenever she bullies him.
Owen goes to Larry seeking advice concerning his writing. Larry advises Owen to go see an Alfred Hitchcock film to gain some insight into plot development. Owen also overhears Larry exclaiming that he wished his ex-wife were dead. Owen goes to see Strangers on a Train, a movie in which two strangers meet on a train and form a plot to commit a murder for each other. The murderer's lack of a strong connection to the crime and the other person's ability to establish a perfect alibi at the time of the murder will, in theory, allow each to get away with murder.
Owen believes that the choice of film is a message from Larry. Owen then forms a plan to kill Margaret believing that Larry will respond by killing his mother. Ironically, upon sneaking into Margaret's new home in Hawaii, Owen discovers that Margaret is indeed behaving very much like a slut: she's having an affair with her gardener while talking to her real boyfriend on the telephone. Eventually, Owen follows Margaret onto a boat to Maui (where she has a book signing), and apparently pushes her off while she's trying to retrieve her earring.
When a news story appears announcing Margaret's disappearance from a cruise ship, Owen comes to Larry and tells him that he has killed Margaret and that Larry now "owes" him the murder of his mother. Larry, in a desperate attempt to hide from the police and from Detective DeBenedetto (played by Bruce Kirby), who is obsessed with catching Larry whether or not he killed Margaret, stays with Owen and his mother for the next few days, becoming another victim to Mrs. Lift's bullying.
Owen and Larry bond over the time, and make up (with a reluctant Larry) two plans to kill Mrs. Lift: the first one involves Larry suffocating the sleeping Mrs. Lift with a pillow, but he chickens out when he sees that her eyes are still open, and narrowly escapes police arrest by hiding in the pantry (Owen, believing Larry had killed his mother and fled, lets DeBenedetto and his assistant inside). The second consists of Larry pushing Mrs. Lift down the staircase to the basement through a door Owen loosens before going bowling (his alibi), but Mrs. Lift, despite Larry's warning, punches the door, and it doesn't fall, prompting Larry to test it and fall into the basement, knocking himself unconscious. Owen returns home, and Mrs. Lift tells him Larry is dead, mocking him at the same time. Enraged, Owen tries to kill his sleeping mother himself by blowing a trumpet in her ear to give her a heart attack. The noise wakes Larry up, but doesn't kill Mrs. Lift, and in her delusion, she hits Larry in the crotch with her cane, again knocking him out.
The next day, a newsflash announces a bounty on Larry's head by the police, and Mrs. Lift attempts to call the police, believing Larry to be a murderer. Larry rips the phone wire apart and flees for Mexico on train. Surprisingly, Owen and Mrs. Lift accompany him so as to avoid having to lie for him. During the journey, Larry's patience with Mrs. Lift reaches its pinnacle when she unintentionally gives him advice on writing. Believing Mrs. Lift was trying to steal his ideas like Margaret had, Larry follows her out of the compartment after telling Owen that he intends to kill her. Owen, however, realising that he doesn't really want his mother to die, gives chase to the end of the train, and in the ensuing fight, Mrs. Lift almost falls off the train, but is saved by Larry and Owen. Owen thus earns his mother's genuine love and respect, but angrily kicks Larry off the train, causing him to fall onto the railway and break his leg.
Margaret is later discovered alive after being rescued by a Polynesian fisherman, and they are going to be married. Larry, seeing this on the news in a hospital, realises that Owen didn't actually kill her but she had simply fallen overboard, although Owen believed he had actually pushed her off. To Larry's annoyance, Margaret's accident is only going to make her richer, for she has sold the movierights of the accident for one and a half million dollars.
A year later, Larry writes a book about his experiences with Owen and his mother (titled Throw Momma from the Train), and a while before finishing, he is visited by Owen, who tells him that his mother has passed away and that he is going to New York for the release of his new book. Unfortunately, Owen reveals that it is also about their experiences together, and an enraged Larry tries to strangle him until Owen shows him a published copy of the book, which is actually a children's pop-up book with the story drastically altered to be suitable for children (it is called Momma, Owen, and Owen's friend Larry).
The film concludes with Larry, Owen and Beth (Larry's lover, played by Kim Griest) on holiday together in Hawaii, reflecting the final chapter of Owen's book. Larry and Owen's books have now become best-sellers, making them the writers they always wanted to be.
[edit] Trivia
| Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- Rob Reiner and Oprah Winfrey make cameos.
- The phrase "The night was so very sultry" can be found in Charles Dickens A Tale Of Two Cities, in Book the Second: Chapter 6, "Hundreds of People".
- The car driven by Larry and Owen is a Saab 96.
- Larry (Billy Crystal) and Owen (Danny DeVito) drive through the same tunnel as the Back to the Future II scene where Marty McFly is saved from Biff Tannen by Emmett Brown's dangling rope at the tunnels exit.
| Preceded by Three Men and a Baby |
Box office number-one films of 1987 (USA) December 13, 1987 |
Succeeded by Eddie Murphy Raw |

