Someone should puzzle out sometime why the genius that illuminates Tomlin’s one-woman shows has never quite found itself on screen. If the edge goes to Midler it’s because her city persona is a towering inferno all by itself, and it burns down the competition. The actresses are in splendid form at the heart of the film’s fascination is the care they’ve lavished on individual character brush strokes. Laser clear thinking is her byword her twin’s complete untogetherness appalls her: “Splash some water on your face and maintain ,” she hisses at a starch-less Tomlin before they face a board meeting. ![]() With an explosive entrance, her shiny black hat at a lethal angle, she minces into Moramax firing directives-and employees-left and right. Of the four twins, the rich, venomous Midler is the most powerful character, a fact that has certainly not eluded Midler herself. The brisk verbal wit, combined with quiet, droll sight gags, sets the film foursquarely in our affection at this point, and it holds even through a sag late in the second act when things become less crisp and defined than perhaps they should be. It’s the Manhattan section that sets the tone for the rest of the picture debuting screenwriters Dori Pierson and Marc Rubel and director Jim Abrahams (one-third of the “Airplane!” directing trio) keep it moving like a conveyor belt in a toy factory, a fresh surprise every second. It will require a trip to New York, where a mix-up lands both sets of twins in twin suites at the Plaza Hotel, to start every spark plug of this mistaken-identity farce firing. And Tomlin-Ratliff is a fiery activist, bristling with protest buttons, whose current cause is Saving Jupiter Hollow from the Moramax monsters. Swathed in gingham, she yearns for Armani and gridlock. Even when milking a cow or yodeling, Midler-Ratliff is not a country girl. Similar feelings of displacement are affecting the poor Ratliff set of twins. A myopic and tottering nurse mismatches the identical pairs, creating two sets of fraternal twins: a rich Bette Midler and Lily Tomlin Shelton and a poor Bette Midler and Lily Tomlin Ratliff. (Or “The Comedy of Errors” once.) Years ago, two mothers at the Jupiter Hollow Hospital delivered twin girls, one mother from the rich eastern Shelton family, the other from the poor, Jupiter Hollow Ratliffs. “Big Business” uses the switched-baby plot, doubled. And when it gets on a roll, it’s a movie with more wit to its lines and a more pungent array of them than much of the mishmash that has passed as Bette Midler’s Greatest Movie Hits. ![]() ![]() Like a sensational party the night before, “Big Business” may not bear the closest scrutiny in the cold light of day, but it gives an irresistible glow at the time. Don’t fret as you watch its buoyant hilarity, the intricacies flow smoothly as honey off a spoon. (It’s apparent, ultimately, that Abrahams is going for the vibe of a door-slamming farce but the director is simply unable to achieve that kind of briskly-paced lunacy.) It doesn’t help, certainly, that one’s efforts at discerning the separate twins from one another are occasionally rather challenging (to say the least), and there’s little doubt, as well, that the climactic stretch is hardly able to pack the knee-slapping punch that Abrahams is clearly striving for – thus cementing Big Business‘ place as a somewhat watchable yet entirely disposable bit of ’80s filmmaking.“Big Business” (citywide) is a bright whirligig of a movie, but reading any description of its plot set-up-twins upon twins, both sets with the same two names-is enough to put you in your hammock with a sick headache. (And this is to say nothing of an exceedingly capable supporting cast that includes Fred Ward and Edward Herrmann.) There’s just never a point at which the whole thing coalesces into something palpably entertaining, though, with the somewhat desperate nature of Dori Pierson and Marc Reid Rubel’s screenplay paving the way for a frenetic yet mostly tedious second half. ![]() Filmmaker Abrahams delivers a fairly forgettable comedy that boasts little in the way of memorable sequences or even overt laughs, which is a shame, really, given that both Midler and Tomlin tackle their respective roles with an enthusiasm and gusto that’s generally difficult to resist. Directed by Jim Abrahams, Big Business details the wacky shenanigans that ensue after two sets of twins (Bette Midler’s Sadie and Lily Tomlin’s Rose), accidentally separated at birth, find themselves coincidentally converging on the same hotel for a pivotal meeting.
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