Release Year: 2000 Rating: R Duration: 98 minutes Other Title: Nouveau voisin, Le Director: Jonathan Lynn Producer: David Willis, Allan Kaufman, Andrew Stevens Distributor: Warner Brothers
Nick is a struggling dentist in Canada. A new neighbor moves in, and he discovers that it is Jimmy "The Tulip" Teduski. His wife convinces him to go to Chicago and inform the mob boss who wants Jimmy dead.
cast
Amanda Peet as Jill St. Claire Bruce Willis as Jimmy 'The Tulip' Tudeski Matthew Perry as Nicholas 'Oz' Oseransky Michael Clarke Duncan as Franklin 'Frankie Figs' Figueroa Natasha Henstridge as Cynthia Tudeski Rosanna Arquette as Sophie Oseransky
Better known as Jack in the WB TV series and stars as Jill in Whole Nine Yards. Jack andor Jill Confused You wont be after downloading this multi image slide show for your desktop. Provided by CelebrityScreenSavers.com Free for Windows 95-XP. 800 X 600 screen resolutions. Source: Ezthemes Size: (3245 Kb)
THE WHOLE NINE YARDS Reviewed by Harvey Karten Warner Bros./Morgan Creek Productions Director: Jonathan Lynn Writer: Mitchell Kapner Cast: Bruce Willis, Matthew Perry, Rosanna Arquette, Michael Duncan, Natasha Henstridge, Amanda Peet, Kevin Pollak When you hear that a movie with the title "The Whole Nine Yards" is about a dentist in suburban Montreal, you may figure that it's about floss, not football, and you would be partially correct. Jonathan Lynn's concept is mostly about the friendship between two unlikely fellows, a wimpy DDS with a practice in suburban Montreal and a hit man seeking to hide out from a gangster intent on eliminating him. Mitchell Kapner's screenplay has quite a few belly laughs as any decent sitcom would, but not only covers no new ground in its satire of uptight professionals and uncannily relaxed mobsters but is occasionally meanspirited, obvious to a fault, and performed by a troupe that seem to be putting on a show for their parents in a junior high auditorium. Filled with pratfalls, dopey facial expressions, and a mindless plot featuring comic betrayals and outrageously cartoonish characters, "The Whole Yards" displays a cast of actors who are either the only ones in town having a good time or just plain embarrassed to be going through these antics.