Multiplicity
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #4911 in DVD
- Released on: 1998-04-15
- Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Formats: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, NTSC
- Original language: English, Spanish
- Subtitled in: English, French, Spanish
- Dubbed in: French
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 116 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com essential video
An inevitable idea: a working man (Michael Keaton) who can't meet all his professional and family responsibilities has himself cloned. It works so well having one copy of himself to take charge of matters at the office that he makes another copy who takes care of the home front. Pretty soon, different aspects of Keaton's personality are emphasized in the different clones: the laborer becomes a macho creep and the domestic god becomes rather feminine. A third clone, struck from the duplicates instead of the original, becomes like a photocopy of a photocopy: inferior. This timely comedy should be better than it is, but special-effects requirements are so labor-intensive that most scenes feel stiff and leaden. Keaton is good in all four parts, and in certain gee-whiz effects scenes, where he even high-fives himself, he pulls off a minor miracle or two. (Of course, a kid did the same thing in Disney's 1998 remake of The Parent Trap.) The DVD release includes optional widescreen and standard formats and optional French and Spanish soundtracks. --Tom Keogh
Customer Reviews
"A Copy Made From A Copy Is Never Quite As Sharp"
This is a laugh out loud comedy even if a few elements are in questionable taste. Michael Keaton is hilarious playing an overworked suburban LA man and his three clones. The first clone (Doug 2) created so the Keaton character (Doug) can have more time at home with his wife and kids is a rugged workaholic. Clone #3 is made to be a more sensitive house husband type of guy when the original Doug becomes overwhelmed with all the home time and decides what he really needs is more leisure time for himself. And the fourth clone, well, he's made from Doug 2 and as my review title quotes the film "a copy made from a copy is never quite as sharp". Obviously complications arise many having to do with Laura, Doug's lovely wife, played by Andie MacDowell, who remains oblivious to the fact that she actually has four husbands for awhile. Keaton is remarkable in giving all four of the Dougs distinct personalities and seems to be even able to change his physical characteristics as he plays the different roles. The movie ends rather implausibly but of course it is all just for fun nonsense anyway. One more thing - er I don't think the "science" behind the cloning is real well researched so don't watch this hoping to get a better grade on your genetics test!
Brilliant :)
All in all this is a great movie. Michael Keaton gives a great performance in a movie with a ridiculous premise. The movie is full of stupid humor, but well worth the watch just to hear Four say 'I like pizza' and 'Okay Steve.'
Highly recommended!
HOLD ON TO YOUR HEAD
HOLD ON TO YOUR HEAD, because if you don't it may fall off from laughing so hard. Keaton is a harried building contractor, with a hot wife (Andie MacDowell) and no time for her. He has a pal who is a scientist experimenting with cloning. So over time he clones Keaton's Character 3 times. One is his masculine side, the other his fem side and the last a retard-lunatic, and his wife doesn't know from day to day who she is shagging, and she thinks they are all moods of the same guy, but he is unaware of his clones bedtime dalliances with his wife know they are intimate with her. Now he is in four places at once with good and bad results, all of which are hilarious.
