Submitted by LoneWolfInCyberia t3_z8nk2r in movies

​

https://preview.redd.it/cqpo8sug623a1.png?width=251&format=png&auto=webp&s=62fd1854e2a739f0a7572e6dbdd19b28778ac800

This was one of my favorite movies of the 80s, still remains a great watch, a more tongue in cheek take off on the Indiana Jones series.

The fun starts right in the opening scene, where we are apparently watching a Western , of a lady stripping to kill the bad guy, and then it zooms to the face of Joan Wilder( Kathleen Turner) typing away furiously in her apartment. One great setup truly.

Joan a successful writer, keeps dreaming of a guy whom she creates in her novels, who would carry her away from her rather unremarkable life. However she has to deal with her sister Elaine, held to ransom in Colombia by a group of crooks, Ira(Zack Norman)  and  Ralph( Danny  De Vito) . Elaine's husband had earlier been kidnapped and murdered. In order to save her sister, Joan has to hand over a treasure map that shows the location to a precious emerald.

The real villian of the piece though is Zolo(Manuel Ojeda), a rogue cop with his own private army, more vicious than the bumbling duo of Ira and Ralph. Zolo deliberately diverts Joan into another bus from the one she was supposed to take to Cartagena, which goes somewhere into the wild interiors of Colombia. However a mixup and an accident sees Joan encounter Jack Colton( Michael Douglas) a free wheeling adventurer who smuggles out rare birds for money, starting out one crazy ride through the Colombian jungles and highlands.

Romancing the Stone is one great entertainer, and it was written by Diane Thomas, a Malibu waitress, which impressed Douglas a lot,that he choose to produce and act in it. The script to date is one of the most read and analyzed.

One great scene, is when Jack and John, meet a drug smuggler Juan, who turns out to be a big fan of Joan's novels, superbly shot. Or the scene where Jack, Joan and Juan are escaping Zolo's men, and Juan keeps pointing out all his childhood memories.

It's a movie that has it all, great comedy, some good action, and a lovely romance thrown in. It helps that both Douglas and Turner are great actors, and have a superb chemistry between them. Douglas is perfect as Jack, the smooth talking, rogue, and his abiity to pull off those one liners, and Turner has just the right amount of sex appeal and charm to sweep you off the feet.

De Vito and Norman are brilliant as the bumbling crooks, and Alfonso Arau is equally great as Juan, while Ojeda makes a suitably menacing Zolo.

Just the kind of entertainer, to chill out with on a weekend or date, reccomended highly.

78

Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

nkleszcz t1_iycco3n wrote

Don’t forget that this was Robert Zemekis’ golden ticket, giving him the opportunity to make Back to the Future.

30

LoneWolfInCyberia OP t1_iyccr12 wrote

He had Used Cars before this, quite a good comedy too, actually his 80s comedies were quite good, this, Back to Future series, Who Killed Roger Rabbit, before he went all serious in the 90s.

7

nkleszcz t1_iycf22x wrote

As good as Used Cars was, it wasn’t a hit. (Neither was I Wanna Hold Your Hand or 1941). RtS was a surprise moneymaker and a lucrative one at that, thus giving him the clout he needed for so risky a project.

6

Quint-MacReady t1_iyd13ao wrote

“Aren’t you a little big to be playing in the fucking mud?” Used Cars is a hilarious classic!

3

TheMadLurker17 t1_iye8nm9 wrote

Alas Used Cars bombed initially. No studio wanted to greenlight Back to the Future at the time because of the poor box-office office showings of his films up to that point. Romancing the Stone's strong box-office is what got Back to the Future greenlit.

'The Movies that Made Us' episode on Back to the Future details this.

3

Droidatopia t1_iyd65et wrote

Joan Wilder?!? The Joan Wilder?!?!

27

attack_rat t1_iydk56t wrote

“They told you I had a car? They are such comedians! They mean my little mule, Pepe!”

BRONCOGATECRASH

17

erotic_jesus t1_iyd56rs wrote

Dammit man, the Doobie Brothers broke up! Shit! When did that happen?

17

MixesLiesWithTruth t1_iycgu16 wrote

A cheesy adventure in a far off land with a cute, naive woman who spends a lot of time lost in her imagination, and with some Danny DeVito action in there for good measure. What's not to love?

15

Pugthomas t1_iycjrny wrote

How about Jacks white outfit in the dance scene…

15

lizzpop2003 t1_iychqji wrote

Agreed. I love that movie. For a similar vibe but with a twist, the recent The Lost City with Sandra Bullock was pretty good. It felt like a spiritual successor to Romancing The Stone to me.

12

Quint-MacReady t1_iyd1vji wrote

Definitely a knock off of Romancing the Stone. Not bad, but Pitt was the best part.

13

roox911 t1_iyd3h2j wrote

Serious scene stealer. He was hilarious

2

flyvehest t1_iycjd4r wrote

It was OK-ish, but, on any given day i'd MUCH rather rewatch Romancing the Stone than The Lost City.

11

Mst3Kgf t1_iycsld1 wrote

Oh, the second I saw the trailer for "Lost City", I thought "It's 'Romancing the Stone' all over again." And once I saw the movie, it was confirmed.

6

Keefer1970 t1_iyd4zdb wrote

Fun movie. Kathleen Turner was fiiiiiine back then, too.

12

Mst3Kgf t1_iydsewp wrote

She was and yet she's also convincing as a socially awkward woman unlucky in love in the first act.

But like Douglas, we were all checking out her legs in the jungle.

5

Corrosive-Knights t1_iycksn1 wrote

Agree this is a damn fine -and fun!- film.

Alas, they made a sequel in 1985, The Jewel of the Nile, and… it wasn’t very good at all, imho.

8

Mst3Kgf t1_iycsdz4 wrote

The actors would all agree. Douglas, Turner and DeVito all had the opportunity to do another sequel, but they decided to do "War of the Roses" instead. Smart choice.

It didn't help "Jewel" that Diane Thomas, writer of "Stone", died tragically in a car accident before she could have a crack at the sequel.

12

Corrosive-Knights t1_iyd9w66 wrote

Wow, wasn’t aware of what happened to Diane Thomas!

Such a shame, truly, as Romancing the Stone was such a unique adventure film!

5

brass_neck t1_iydy7j8 wrote

I just read her brief but interesting Wikipedia page. I'm a big fan of Romancing the Stone. Watched it as a child then re-watched it over lockdown and it held up really well in my opinion. She was clearly very well respected as a writer by some of the biggest Hollywood names at the time. I'd enjoy a respectful look at her sadly brief but interesting life (probably a 'based-on') in the form of a mini-series.

5

Jackieirish t1_iydnxom wrote

>died tragically in a car accident before she could have a crack at the sequel.

That wasn't it. She was busy writing Always and an early draft of Indiana Jones 3 while they were making Jewel, so I guess they must have just decided to give it to somebody else.

Not sure why I've been downvoted, but here you go:

["Thomas's death came six weeks before the sequel to Romancing the Stone, The Jewel of the Nile, was released."](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diane_Thomas#Other_work_(including_Always_and_an_original_draft_for_the_third_Indiana_Jones_movie)

In other words, she was alive while they were making it, so they certainly had the screenplay long before her passing.

−1

Harrow_Sparrow t1_iydeyrn wrote

I honestly enjoyed it. I thought it was really cool and fun. Not on the same level as Romancing the Stone but still pretty decent

4

Corrosive-Knights t1_iye5ff6 wrote

Ultimately, what you enjoy you certainly can enjoy!

For me, alas, the film didn’t work as I mentioned in my OP. However, I envy you enjoying it… I really wish I could say the same given I liked the original and hoped for the best with the sequel!

2

Quint-MacReady t1_iyd22bl wrote

Jewel is terrible and such a shame this could have been a great adventure trilogy.

2

SFWRedditsOnly t1_iydizkj wrote

"Look at them snappers!"

One of my favorite movies growing up. Used to play on TBS/TNT all the time.

7

Dear-Parsnip t1_iycjybh wrote

This is my wife’s favourite movie! I bought her an Anniversary gift a copy of the signed script. We re-enact favourite scenes lol!

6

Quint-MacReady t1_iyd0e14 wrote

Classic fun adventure with a solid cast. The mudslide and waterfall scenes are superb. And talk about sex appeal, Turner in the 80’s in this and Body Heat and the voice of Jessica Rabbit yeah she had it in buckets not just the right amount.

4

Kiethblacklion t1_iydaum4 wrote

She still had that sex appeal in Undercover Blues, but with the hot mom element added in.

2

qp0n t1_iyexiz8 wrote

This movie holds up because filming on location never ages poorly.

4

ichoosewaffles t1_iyfcsqm wrote

This movie was SO good! I only watched the recent movie, Lost City with Sandra Bullock because a friend said it reminded them of Romancing the Stone. I guess in some ways that could be true but it just wasn't as good at all.

3

Baba0Wryly t1_iyd2qja wrote

I've seen this so many times because it was one of the 4 VHS tapes we owned growing up. The other 3 were Titanic (2 VHS, technically), Batman and the Wizard of Oz.

2

AZSnake t1_iydgaig wrote

Fantastic adventure rom-com featuring sizzling chemistry between Douglas and Turner in their prime. I watched it countless times as a kid, rewatched it recently and it totally holds up.

2

VaggPounder t1_iydks16 wrote

I never saw the movie but always loved the Billy Ocean song "When the Going Gets Tough" and Douglas, DeVito, and Turner are pretty funny in the video --- seems like they had a blast making it, as well as the movie

2

Mst3Kgf t1_iycso2p wrote

Just look at those snappers!

1

isecore t1_iycszmj wrote

I watched it once as a kid and a few months ago I decided to rewatch it as an adult. While it's not cinematic brilliance it sure is a fun romp and the chemistry between the two leads is right where it should be.

1

daddyd t1_iyd1r10 wrote

first saw jewel of the nile, i loved it, then i saw romancing the stone and loved it even more!

1

bigblackkittie t1_iyegx3s wrote

this movie taught me the word 'maricon' unfortunately. love the movie though.

1