City Slickers
City Slickers

City Slickers

Yesterday they were businessmen. Today they're cowboys. Tomorrow they'll be walking funny.

  • 114 Mins
  • 1991
  • en
  • star6.5/ 10

Three New York businessmen decide to take a "Wild West" vacation that turns out not to be the relaxing vacation they had envisioned.

Cast & Crew

Review

Peter McGinn

This is is a fairly funny movie. Billy Crystal’s character and two friends head out for a dude ranch for an adventure vacation. The jokes come vast and furious as do the sight gags. Jack Palance made a bit of a name for himself with his cowboy antics and one-armed pushups. My favorite scene had nothing to do with dude ranch stuff. Mitch (Crystal) is explaining how a DVD recorder doesn’t even require the tv to record a show, and his friend just isn’t getting it. It’s hilarious. This isn’t a movie classic or anything, but plenty entertaining enough.

CinemaSerf

As their fortieth birthdays loom large and illustrate to "Mitch" (Billy Crystal), "Ed" (Bruno Kirby) and "Phil" (Daniel Stern) that their high-powered city jobs are ultimately quite unfulfilling, they decide to take up the challenge of herding some cows from Mexico up to Colorado. Completely unused to the wilderness, or indeed to anything without air-conditioning and comfort, they are put under the charge of the gnarly "Curly" (Jack Palance) who's disdain for this hapless trio is fairly clear from the outset. What chance they can adapt their city attitudes to cope with all that nature can throw at them? Well on that front there's not the slightest bit of jeopardy, it's all about their "journey". There, I think it will all depend on whether or not you like Billy Crystal's style of semi-slapstick comedy. I don't really and so wasn't particularly engaged as this sort of merged John Wayne with Laurel and Hardy. Palance looks like he's enjoying himself, and easily steals the show with his facial expressions conveying just as much as the rather predictable script. Stern also delivers quite entertainingly as they battle with the cattle and the snakes that rattle amidst some stunning New Mexico scenery that sets up the story perfectly. It's a story about recalibrating life and on that score it sends quite a powerful message about people stopping every now and again to appreciate what they had/have and to take stock of what they want to come next. That thrust epitomises the difference between the urban and the rural, their population's who do and those who talk about doing quite well - but the humour was just all bit lame for me and the whole thing takes too long to finish where I always thought it would.

Image 0
Image 1
Image 2
Image 3
Image 4
Image 5

Movies You May Like

The Simpsons Movie
Back to the Future
When Harry Met Sally...
Singin' in the Rain
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
The Holiday
The 51st State
Trading Places
Absolute Giganten
Will Penny
Miss Congeniality
Because I Said So
Sister Act
10 Items or Less
Westworld
Les Demoiselles de Rochefort
Uncle Buck
When the Screaming Starts
Django
Overboard

Recommended Movies

City Slickers II: The Legend of Curly's Gold
Ucieczka z kina „Wolność”
The Story of Nintendo
Patton Oswalt: Annihilation
Blondie Goes to College
True Identity
Le Vélo de Ghislain Lambert
Hannie Caulder
Auntie Mame
Warlock
Class
Phantom of the Opera
Class Action Park
Final Portrait
The Sons of Katie Elder
Gangster No. 1
Late Phases
The Shootist
Old Yeller
Young Guns