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Trading Places

Trading Places is a 1983 American comedy film directed by John Landis, with a screenplay by Timothy Harris and Herschel Weingrod. Starring Dan Aykroyd, Eddie Murphy, Ralph Bellamy, Don Ameche, Denholm Elliott, and Jamie Lee Curtis, the film tells the story of an upper-class commodities broker (Aykroyd) and a poor street hustler (Murphy) whose lives cross when they are unwittingly made the subjects of an elaborate bet to test how each man will perform when their life circumstances are swapped.

Trading Places
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJohn Landis
Written by
Produced byAaron Russo
Starring
CinematographyRobert Paynter
Edited byMalcolm Campbell
Music byElmer Bernstein
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • June 8, 1983 (1983-06-08)
Running time
116 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$15 million
Box office$120.6 million

Harris conceived the outline for Trading Places in the early 1980s after meeting two wealthy brothers who were engaged in an ongoing rivalry with each other. He and his writing partner Weingrod developed the idea as a project to star Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder. When they were unable to participate, Landis cast Aykroyd—with whom he had worked previously—and a young but increasingly popular Murphy in his second feature-film role. Landis also cast Curtis against the intent of the studio, Paramount Pictures; she was famous mainly for her roles in horror films, which were looked down upon at the time. Principal photography took place from December 1982 to March 1983, entirely on location in Philadelphia and New York City. Elmer Bernstein scored the film, using Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's opera buffa The Marriage of Figaro as an underlying theme.

Trading Places was considered a box-office success on its release, earning over $90.4 million to become the fourth-highest-grossing film of 1983 in the United States and Canada, and $120.6 million worldwide. It also received generally positive reviews, with critics praising both the central cast and the film's revival of the screwball comedy genre prevalent in the 1930s and 1940s while criticizing Trading Places for lacking the same moral message of the genre while promoting the accumulation of wealth. It received multiple award nominations including an Academy Award for Bernstein's score and won two BAFTA awards for Elliott and Curtis. The film also launched or revitalized the careers of its main cast, who each appeared in several other films throughout the 1980s. In particular, Murphy became one of the highest-paid and most sought after comedians in Hollywood.

In the years since its release, the film has been reassessed both positively and negatively. It has been praised as one of the greatest comedy films and Christmas films ever made, but retrospective assessments have criticized its use of racial jokes and language. In 2010, the film was referenced in Congressional testimony concerning the reform of the commodities trading market designed to prevent the insider trading demonstrated in Trading Places. In 1988, Bellamy and Ameche reprised their characters for Murphy's comedy film Coming to America.

Plot edit

Brothers Randolph and Mortimer Duke own a commodities brokerage firm, Duke & Duke Commodity Brokers, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Holding opposing views on the issue of nature versus nurture, they make a wager and agree to conduct an experiment—switching the lives of two people on opposite sides of the social hierarchy and observing the results. They witness an encounter between their managing director—the well-mannered and educated Louis Winthorpe III, engaged to the Dukes' grandniece Penelope Witherspoon—and poor black street hustler Billy Ray Valentine; Valentine is arrested at Winthorpe's insistence after the latter assumes he is being robbed. The Dukes decide to use them for their experiment.

Winthorpe is framed as a thief, drug dealer and philanderer by Clarence Beeks, a man on the Dukes' payroll. He is fired from Duke & Duke, his bank accounts are frozen, he is denied entry to his Duke-owned home, and is vilified by Penelope and his friends. He is befriended by Ophelia, a prostitute who helps him in exchange for a financial reward once he is exonerated to secure her own retirement. The Dukes post bail for Valentine, install him in Winthorpe's former job, and grant him use of Winthorpe's home. Valentine becomes well versed in the business, using his street smarts to achieve success, and begins to act in a well-mannered way.

During the firm's Christmas party, Winthorpe plants drugs in Valentine's desk, attempting to frame him, and brandishes a gun to escape. Later, the Dukes discuss their experiment and settle their wager for $1. They plot to return Valentine to the streets, but have no intention of taking back Winthorpe. Valentine overhears the conversation and seeks out Winthorpe, who has attempted suicide by overdosing. Valentine, Ophelia, and Winthorpe's butler, Coleman, nurse him back to health and inform him of the experiment. Watching a television news broadcast, they learn that Beeks is transporting a secret United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) report on orange crop forecasts. Winthorpe and Valentine remember large payments made to Beeks by the Dukes. They realize the Dukes will obtain the report early to corner the market on frozen concentrated orange juice.

On New Year's Eve, the four board Beeks' train in disguise, intending to switch the original report with a forgery that predicts low orange crop yields. Beeks uncovers their scheme and attempts to kill them, but is knocked unconscious by a gorilla being transported on the train. The four disguise Beeks with a gorilla costume and cage him with the real gorilla. The group deliver the forged report to the Dukes in Beeks' place. After sharing a kiss with Ophelia, Winthorpe travels to New York City with Valentine, carrying with them Coleman's and Ophelia's life savings to carry out their plan.

On the commodities trading floor, the Dukes commit their holdings to buying frozen concentrated orange juice futures contracts, legally committing themselves to buying the commodity at a later date. Other traders follow their lead, driving the price up; Valentine and Winthorpe short-sell juice futures contracts at the inflated price. Following the broadcast of the actual crop report and its prediction of a normal harvest, the price of juice futures plummets. As the traders panic sell their futures, Valentine and Winthorpe buy at the lower price from everyone except the Dukes, fulfilling the contracts they had short-sold earlier and turning an immense profit.

After the closing bell, Valentine and Winthorpe explain to the Dukes that they made a wager on whether they could get rich and make the Dukes poor at the same time, and Winthorpe pays Valentine his winnings of $1. When the Dukes prove unable to pay the $394 million required to satisfy their margin call, the exchange manager orders their seats sold and their corporate and personal assets confiscated, effectively bankrupting them. Randolph collapses holding his chest and Mortimer shouts at the others, demanding the floor be reopened in a futile plea to recoup their losses. The now-wealthy Valentine, Winthorpe, Ophelia, and Coleman vacation on a luxurious tropical beach, while Beeks and the gorilla are loaded onto a ship bound for Africa.

Cast edit

 
 
Ralph Bellamy in 1971 (left) and Don Ameche in 1964. They portrayed the Duke brothers, Randolph and Mortimer, respectively.

As well as the main cast, Trading Places features Robert Curtis-Brown as Todd, Winthorpe's romantic rival for Penelope; Alfred Drake as the Securities Exchange manager;[6] and Jim Belushi as Harvey, a party-goer on New Year's Eve.[3] The film has numerous cameos, including singer Bo Diddley as a pawnbroker;[7] Curtis' sister Kelly as Penelope's friend Muffy; the Muppets puppeteers Frank Oz and Richard Hunt as, respectively, a police officer and Wilson, the Dukes' broker on the trading floor; and Aykroyd's former Saturday Night Live colleagues, Tom Davis and Al Franken, as train baggage handlers.[3]

Other minor roles include Ron Taylor as "Big Black Guy", American football player J. T. Turner as "Even Bigger Black Guy" who only says "Yeah!",[8] and Giancarlo Esposito as a cellmate.[6] Trading Places also features the final theatrically released performance of Avon Long who plays the Dukes' butler Ezra.[9] The gorilla is portrayed by mime Don McLeod.[10][11]

Production edit

Writing and development edit

In the early 1980s, writer Timothy Harris often played tennis against two wealthy, but frugal brothers who regularly engaged in a competitive rivalry and betting. Following one session, Harris returned home exasperated with the pair's conflict and concluded that they were "awful" people. The situation gave him the idea of two brothers betting over nature versus nurture in terms of human ability. Harris shared the idea with his writing partner Herschel Weingrod, who liked the concept. Harris also drew inspiration for the story from his own living situation; he lived in a rundown area near Fairfax Avenue in Los Angeles. He described the area in grim terms as crime-ridden, where everyone either had a gun pointed at them or had been raped.[2]

Harris and Weingrod researched the commodities market for the script.[2] They learned of financial market incidents, including Russian attempts to corner the wheat market and the Hunt brothers' efforts to corner the silver market on what became known as Silver Thursday. They thought trading orange juice and pork bellies would be funnier because the public would be unaware such mundane items were traded.[12] Harris consulted with people in the commodities business to understand how the film's finale on the trading floor would work. The pair determined that the commodities market would make for an interesting setting for a film, as long as it was not about the financial market itself. They needed something to draw the audience in. It was decided to set the story in Philadelphia because of its connections to the founding of the United States, the American dream and idealism and the pursuit of happiness. This was tempered by introducing Billy Ray Valentine as a black man begging on the street.[2] The pair knew that the method of Winthorpe's and Valentine's financial victory could be confusing, but hoped that audiences would be too invested in the characters' success to care about the details.[12]

The script was sold to Paramount Pictures under the title Black and White. Then-Paramount executive Jeffrey Katzenberg offered the project to director John Landis. Landis disliked the working title,[2] but favorably compared the script to older screwball comedies of the 1930s by directors like Frank Capra, Leo McCarey, and Preston Sturges, which often satirized social constructs and social classes, reflecting the cultural issues of their time. Landis wanted his film to reflect these concepts in the 1980s;[2][13][14] he said the main updates were the addition of swearing and nudity.[13] Landis admitted that it took him a while to understand how Trading Places' finale worked.[2]

Casting edit

 
Dan Aykroyd pictured in 1982. Paramount Pictures saw Aykroyd's success as tied to his partnership with the late John Belushi, and did not want to cast him, but his previous work with director John Landis helped him to secure the role.

Trading Places was developed with the intent to cast comedy duo Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder as Valentine and Louis Winthorpe III respectively.[2][13] The pair were in high demand following the success of their comedy film Stir Crazy (1980).[3] When Pryor was severely injured after setting fire to himself while freebasing cocaine, the decision was made to cast someone else.[2][15] Paramount Pictures suggested Eddie Murphy.[2] The studio was initially unhappy with Murphy's performance in his first film, the as-then-unreleased action-comedy 48 Hrs. (1982)—a film also conceived as a Pryor project.[16] However, that film was well received by preview test audiences, leading the studio to reverse its opinion.[2][13] Landis was unaware of Murphy, who had been gaining fame as a performer on Saturday Night Live. After watching Murphy's audition tapes, Landis was impressed enough to travel to New York City to meet with him.[2] Murphy said that he was paid $350,000 for the role; it was reported that the figure was as high as $1 million.[17][18]

Landis wanted Dan Aykroyd to serve as Murphy's co-star. He had worked previously with Aykroyd on the musical comedy film The Blues Brothers (1980); the experience had been positive. Landis said, "he could easily play [Winthorpe] ... you tell him what you want, and he delivers. And I thought he'd be wonderful." Paramount Pictures was less enamored with Aykroyd; executives believed that he performed better as part of a duo, as he had working with John Belushi. They felt that Aykroyd working alone would be akin to Bud Abbott, half of Abbott and Costello, working without Lou Costello and Aykroyd's recent films had fared poorly at the box office. Aykroyd agreed to take a pay cut for the role.[2]

The studio also objected to the casting of Jamie Lee Curtis. At the time she was seen as a "scream queen", primarily associated with low-quality B movies. Landis had worked previously with Curtis on the horror documentary Coming Soon, for which she had served as the host. She wanted to move away from horror films as she was conscious that the association would limit her future career prospects. She had turned down a role in the horror film Psycho II (1983) because of this. Her mother, Janet Leigh, had famously starred in Psycho (1960).[2] Curtis had performed recently in the slasher film Halloween II (1981) as a favor to director John Carpenter and producer Debra Hill; she was paid $1 million for that role, but received only $70,000 for Trading Places.[2] When asked if she had researched her role as a prostitute, Curtis jokingly remarked: "I'd love to say I went out and turned a couple of tricks on 42nd Street, but I didn't."[19] Curtis had long hair when she was cast; costume designer Deborah Nadoolman Landis suggested cutting her hair shorter for the film.[13]

For the greedy Duke brothers, Ralph Bellamy was the first choice for Randolph.[3] For Mortimer, Landis wanted to cast an actor famous in the 1930s or 1940s who was not associated with playing a villain. His first choice was Ray Milland, but the actor was unable to pass a physical test to qualify for insurance while filming. As the start date for filming loomed, Landis thought of Don Ameche. The casting director claimed that Ameche was dead.[13] Landis was skeptical of this and contacted the Screen Actors Guild in an attempt to locate him. They confirmed that Ameche had no agent, and his royalty payments were being forwarded to his son in Arizona. Landis accepted this as evidence that Ameche was deceased. However, after hearing of Landis' search, one of the Paramount Studios' secretaries mentioned that they saw Ameche regularly on San Vicente Boulevard in Santa Monica, California. Landis called directory assistance to locate a "D. Ameche" in the area and made contact.[2] Ameche had not featured in a film for over a decade; when asked why, he said that no one had offered him film work.[2][20] The studio did not want to pay Ameche what Milland had been offered; as Ameche was financially independent and in no need of work, he refused to take the part until he received equal pay.[21][22] Landis claimed that the studio reduced the film's budget, frustrated at Ameche's casting after a long absence from film work.[13]

John Gielgud and Ronnie Barker were considered for the role of Winthorpe's butler, Coleman. Barker refused to act if it involved filming more than 7 miles (11 km) from his home in the United Kingdom.[3][13] G. Gordon Liddy, a central figure in the Watergate political scandal of the early 1970s, was offered the role of corrupt official Clarence Beeks. Liddy was interested in the offer until he learned that Beeks becomes the romantic partner of a gorilla. Paul Gleason took the role; his character reads a copy of Liddy's autobiography Will while riding the train.[3] Don McLeod portrayed the gorilla; he had already become popular for his performances as a gorilla in American Tourister commercials, which led to film appearances.[10][11]

Filming edit

 
The Curtis Institute of Music pictured in 2010. The building was used as the exterior of the Heritage Club where Winthorpe and Valentine first meet.

Principal photography began on December 13, 1982.[4][23] The budget was estimated to be $15 million.[24][a] Filming took place on location in Philadelphia and New York City.[2][4] Robert Paynter and Malcolm Campbell served, respectively, as the film's cinematographer and editor.[25][26]

The script underwent minor changes throughout filming; some improvisation was also encouraged. Changes were normally discussed in advance, but on other occasions, ad-libbed dialogue was considered funny enough to keep. Examples of ad-libs retained in the film include Valentine comparing Randolph to Randy Jackson of The Jackson 5 and demonstrating his "quart of blood" technique in jail.[14][23] Murphy liked Trading Places' script; he felt it was unlike 48 Hrs., which he said had been saved by director Walter Hill. Even so, he changed many of his own lines because he said that a white writer writing for a black person would use stereotypical dialogue like "jive turkey" and "sucker", and he could write his lines to sound authentic.[23] Weingrod said the studio objected to Murphy's line, "Who put their Kools out on my Persian rug?" They believed it was racist because the Kool cigarette brand was targeted mainly at African Americans; Murphy restored the line.[27] Ophelia pretending to be a European exchange student to fool Beeks was also improvised; Curtis used a mix of German attire with a Swedish accent because she could not perform a German accent.[3]

The first fifteen days of filming were spent in Philadelphia.[4] Landis described the weather as freezing. While filming the scene where Randolph and Mortimer collect Valentine from jail, Landis was positioned in a towing truck that pulled the Rolls-Royce carrying Ameche, Bellamy and Murphy. Landis wore a thick parka to stay warm, and the actors had a space heater in their vehicle; Landis listened to their dialogue via radio. Describing the filming of the scene, Landis recalled a jovial discussion between Ameche, Bellamy, and Murphy: Bellamy said that Trading Places was his 99th film; Ameche said it was his 100th. Murphy informed Landis that "between the three of us we've made 201 films!"[13] Filming locations in Philadelphia included townhouses in Center City that served as the Winthorpe home exterior, and the Philadelphia Mint (now the Community College of Philadelphia) which served as the police station's exterior.[4][28] The exterior and lobby of the Wells Fargo Building serve as the respective exterior and lobby of Duke & Duke.[2][29]

 
Winthorpe, Valentine, Ophelia, and Coleman retire with their gains to a tropical beach. The scene was shot on location in St Croix in the United States Virgin Islands.

The Duke & Duke upstairs offices were filmed inside the upstairs of the Seventh Regiment Armory in New York.[2] Murphy's character, pretending to be crippled, is introduced in Rittenhouse Square. The nearby Curtis Institute of Music, shown as the exterior of the Heritage Club, is seen adjacent to Rittenhouse Park in the film's opening.[4][30][31] The interior was filmed at the then-abandoned New York Chamber of Commerce Building.[2][32] Independence Hall is also featured.[30] During filming in Philadelphia, Murphy was so popular that a police officer had to be stationed outside of his trailer to control the crowds.[33]

Filming moved to New York City in January 1983; many of the interior scenes were filmed there.[2][4] In late January, two holding cells on the 12th-floor of the New York Supreme Court building at 100 Centre Street were taken over for filming. Empty lockups in police administration buildings would normally be in use but because of the financial investment the production had made filming in the city, the mayor's office agreed to accommodate Landis' request; the studio paid for any expenses incurred. The New York Times reported that for years the Corrections Department had failed to deliver prisoners on time for trials and arraignments; despite this, they moved nearly 300 prisoners through the 12th-floor before 9 a.m. on the day of filming.[34]

The scene where Valentine and Winthorpe enact their plan against the Dukes was filmed at the COMEX commodity exchange located inside 4 World Trade Center. The lack of windows gave the appearance the floor was situated below ground, but it was actually on a high floor. The scene was scripted to take place at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, but the filmmakers were unable to secure permission to film there.[2] The scene was shot over approximately 3–4 hours a day over two days.[2] It was scheduled to take place during a weekday, but Aykroyd's and Murphy's presence on the floor distracted the active traders and over $6 billion of trading had to be halted; filming was rescheduled for a weekend.[4] A majority of the people on screen are actual traders, along with some extras. Landis said the traders in the film were less physically rough with each other than they were during normal trading.[2][4] Landis also performed some guerrilla filmmaking there for additional footage.[2] Ameche was opposed to using foul language and often apologized in advance to his crewmates for what he was scripted to say; he only performed one take of his final scene where he shouts "fuck him", referring to Randolph.[3] The final scene shot was of the main characters celebrating on a beach; this was filmed on Saint Croix island in the United States Virgin Islands.[4][35] Principal photography concluded on March 1, 1983, after 78 days.[4]

Music edit

Elmer Bernstein composed the score for Trading Places.[36] He and Landis had collaborated previously on several films including The Blues Brothers and the horror-comedy An American Werewolf in London (1981).[37] Landis conceived of the idea to use the opera buffa The Marriage of Figaro by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart as the underlying theme for the score. He had used classical music in his previous films to represent the upper classes and felt that it would be fitting for the pompous elites of the financial industry.[38][39] The Marriage of Figaro concerns the story of a servant who is wronged by his wealthy employer, Count Almaviva, and takes his revenge by unraveling the count's own machinations.[40]

Bernstein created his own arrangements of the music to reflect the differing emotions of each scene.[38][40] The overture of Marriage of Figaro plays over the film's opening.[36] The score also includes arrangements of Pomp and Circumstance Marches by Edward Elgar, and Mozart's Symphony No. 41.[36][38] Trading Places features songs including: "Do You Wanna Funk" by Sylvester and Patrick Cowley, "Jingle Bell Rock" by Brenda Lee, "The Loco-Motion" by Little Eva, and "Get a Job" by the Silhouettes.[4]

Release edit

Context edit

The summer of 1983 (June–September) was predicted to surpass the previous year's record-breaking $1.4 billion in theater tickets sold. The season featured expected hits such as the third installment in the Star Wars series, Return of the Jedi, Superman III, and the latest James Bond film Octopussy. Over 40 films were scheduled for release over the 16-week period. Studios had to strategize their releases to avoid damaging their own films' performances by pitting them against better-performing competition.[41] Paramount Studios opted to release Trading Places at the start of summer, as those films expected to do well would benefit from being in theaters longer during this busy period. Comedy films were considered counterprogramming that attracted audiences who had already seen, or were not interested in, the major film releases that were mainly focused on science-fiction and superheroes. Trading Places was released between Return of the Jedi in May and Superman III in mid-June. While sequels were expected to do well having the advantage of a built-in audience, Trading Places was predicted to be successful based on its cast.[41]

Box office edit

In the United States (U.S.) and Canada, Trading Places received a wide release on Wednesday, June 8, 1983, across 1,375 theaters.[42][43] The film earned $1.7 million leading into its opening weekend when it earned a further $7.3 million—an average of $5,344 per theater. Trading Places finished as the number three film of the weekend behind Octopussy ($8.9 million), also making its debut that weekend, and Return of the Jedi ($12 million), which was in its third week of release.[44] The film retained the number three position in its second weekend with a further gross of $7 million, behind Return of the Jedi ($11.2 million), and the debuting Superman III ($13.3 million).[45] In its third weekend, it fell to fifth place with $5.5 million, behind the debuting science-fiction horror Twilight Zone: The Movie ($6.6 million) and sex comedy Porky's II: The Next Day ($7 million), Superman III ($9 million), and Return of the Jedi ($11.1 million).[46]

While the film never claimed the number one box office ranking, it spent seventeen straight weeks among the top ten-highest-grossing films.[47] By September, it was the fourth-highest-grossing film of the year with $80.6 million,[48] and by the end of its theatrical run, Trading Places earned an approximate box office gross of $90.4 million.[43][b] It finished as the fourth-highest-grossing film of 1983, behind Paramount Studio's surprise hit, the romantic drama Flashdance ($90.46 million), the comedy-drama Terms of Endearment ($108.4 million), and Return of the Jedi ($309.2 million).[48][49][50] Estimates by industry experts suggest that as of 1997, the box office returns to the studio—minus the theaters' share—was $40.6 million.[51] Outside of the United States and Canada, Trading Places is estimated to have earned a further $30.2 million, bringing its worldwide gross to $120.6 million.[52][c]

Reception edit

Critical response edit

 
Jamie Lee Curtis pictured in 1989. She was dismissed as only a horror film star before her critically well-received breakthrough performance in Trading Places.

Trading Places received generally positive reviews from critics.[2] Reviewers compared it to the socially conscious comedies of the 1930s and 1940s, like My Man Godfrey (1936), Easy Living (1937), Christmas in July (1940), and Sullivan's Travels (1941) by directors like Preston Sturges, Frank Capra, and Gregory La Cava.[d] Janet Maslin said that the "likable" film owed a debt to the screwball comedy genre. She continued, "Preston Sturges might have made a movie like Trading Places – if he'd had a little less inspiration and a lot more money."[42] Gary Arnold said the film was too inconsistent to be compared to those older films.[55] Vincent Canby said that the screwball style had been updated for the "existential hipness" of the 1980s, but the film lacked the same morality tale the genre often espoused that money is not important. Instead, the characters do not dismantle or expose the corruption of the financial system, they just take revenge on the Dukes, obtaining extreme wealth in the process. Even so, he concluded the film was one of the best American comedies released in a long time.[53] Maslin agreed that the film was too enamored with the wealthy institutions it satirized to provide a true criticism of the system and its failings. She called it the American Dream in film form.[42]

Dave Kehr said that though the film pays homage to screwball comedies, it stripped the concept of all but the "crudest audience-gratification moments" and avoided exploration of the genre's moral conflicts.[56] In Variety's review, the reviewer concluded that the middle segment of the film lacked humor.[25] People said that the ending was perfectly presented, but Arnold considered it to be confusing and reliant on the audience's knowledge that the "heroes" were being heroic to compensate for a lack of clarity in their actions.[55][57] He continued that even as a farcical film, the events were too unbelievable.[55] Roger Ebert said the ending was inventive for not involving a "manic chase".[54] He appreciated that Trading Places did not rely on obvious racial plot points or employ sitcom tropes for the social-status swaps of Winthorpe and Valentine. He commended the focus on developing each character so that they were funny because of their individual quirks and personalities. He concluded that this required a deeper script than would normally be developed for a comedy.[54]

The cast were all generally praised.[25][42][54] Maslin called it a strange but well-cast film representing multiple Hollywood generations.[42] Ebert said that what could have been stereotypical characters were elevated by the actors and the writing, adding that Murphy and Aykroyd made a "perfect" team.[54] Canby said that Murphy demonstrated why he was the most successful comedian in the last decade.[53] Several reviewers compared his role to that in 48 Hrs.;[58][55] Arnold said that Trading Places was evidence that Murphy's successes were not a fluke, and that Murphy demonstrated an "exhilarating comic authority".[55] Canby said that Trading Places gave Murphy an opportunity to demonstrate the range of his abilities in a "lithe, graceful, uproarious" performance.[53]

Reviewers agreed that the film featured Aykroyd's best performance to date.[53][55] People said that if audiences had given up on Aykroyd following the failures of Neighbors (1981) and Doctor Detroit (1983), his career was revitalized by Trading Places.[57] Canby said that Aykroyd gave a more consistent performance than in his previous roles. He said that Aykroyd had demonstrated that his success was not dependent upon his partnership with John Belushi.[53] Arnold said that Aykroyd worked best when he shared a central role with another star.[55] Rita Kempley said that his relationship with Murphy was just as enjoyable as his one with Belushi.[58]

Variety noted that the supporting cast in Bellamy, Ameche, Elliott and Curtis were essential to the film.[25] Reviewers said that Curtis brought a deft comic ability to the role.[53][55] Arnold called the role "stale" and "predictable" but felt Curtis offered an "infectious" humor that earns the audience's support.[55] People said that she had a significant appeal, and Kempley called her both "curvaceous" and "vivacious".[58][57] Canby said that in her first major non-horror role, Curtis performed with "marvelous good humor".[53] Kehr criticized Landis for often turning his heroines into "busty bunnies", and said that he had treated Curtis the same way.[56] Ebert called Bellamy and Ameche's casting a "masterstroke".[54] Canby said the pair had well-written roles that were supported by their comic performances. He continued that Ameche was as funny in Trading Places as he was always meant to be.[53]

People said that the film works because Landis demonstrated a "remarkable" restraint.[57] Canby said Landis had shown that he could direct a precise comedy as well as special effects-laden fare.[53] Arnold disagreed saying Landis' comedic timing was less precise than in his previous work and that he lacked the skill to handle the source material properly.[55] People said that Harris and Weingrod had developed a well-written script,[57] but Arnold said they had failed to update the screwball genre to tackle social contrasts in a similar way.[55]

Accolades edit

At the 41st Golden Globe Awards in 1984, the film received two nominations: Best Musical or Comedy (losing to romantic drama Yentl) and Best Actor in a Musical or Comedy for Murphy who lost to Michael Caine's performance in the comedy drama Educating Rita.[59] At the 56th Academy Awards, Bernstein was nominated for Best Original Score; he lost to Michel Legrand and Alan and Marilyn Bergman, who scored Yentl.[60]

The 37th British Academy Film Awards named Elliott and Curtis the Best Supporting Actor and Best Supporting Actress, respectively. Harris and Weingrod were nominated for Best Original Screenplay; they lost to Paul D. Zimmerman for the 1982 black comedy The King of Comedy.[61]

Post-release edit

Performance analysis and aftermath edit

 
Eddie Murphy pictured in 1988. His successes with 48 Hrs. and Trading Places elevated him to film superstardom.

As predicted, the 1983 summer film season broke the previous year's record with over $1.5 billion worth of tickets sold. It was seen as a substantial increase in spite of increased ticket prices.[48] Even so, the year was a mixture of unexpected successes and disappointments. Films like Superman III and the action comedies Smokey and the Bandit Part 3 and Stroker Ace had failed at the box office. The science fiction comedy The Man with Two Brains featuring an established star in Steve Martin had also underperformed.[62] Conversely, Flashdance was an unexpected hit and the third highest-grossing film of the year, despite a negative critical reception.[48] In September, The New York Times wrote that Trading Places was the only film of the fifteen top-grossing films that could be recommended without reservation.[62] The film was well-received critically and considered a significant commercial success, along with Flashdance and Return of the Jedi.[63][62] Then-production vice president of MGM/UA studio Peter Bart described it as a "gimmick" film that focused on a "high-concept" over story and characterization. Bart believed its success triggered a negative trend that resulted in him receiving numerous film pitches—often a mix of the high-concept nature of Trading Places with a Flashdance-inspired breakdancing or gym setting.[64] Harris recalled people asking if the producer Aaron Russo or Katzenberg had created the idea and just paid him to write it. He said he knew it was a success because people were trying to take credit for it.[2]

Trading Places is considered responsible for launching, changing, or re-launching the careers of many of its stars.[2] Murphy's success was significant. He rose from a TV comedian to a superstar with two of the most successful films of the year.[65] Industry experts voted him as the biggest box-office star after Clint Eastwood. No other African-American actor had achieved a comparable level of success before him.[65] It was reported that Murphy earned up to $1 million for Trading Places, but by his third film, Beverly Hills Cop (1984), he commanded a $3 million salary. This was considered a top-tier salary reserved for the most popular movie stars.[18]

Shortly after Trading Places' release, Paramount Pictures signed Murphy to a $25 million five-film exclusive contract—one of the biggest deals ever with an actor at the time. The studio also agreed to finance his Eddie Murphy Productions studio.[18][66] Murphy was among several young stars who emerged that year, including Matthew Broderick, Tom Cruise, and Michael Keaton, who were all in their 20s. This reflected the fact that average audiences were aging and now in their late teens to late 20s, and led to a shift in focus away from making films targeted mainly at children.[64] His rapid rise to fame led to Murphy leaving Saturday Night Live the following year; he said he had grown to dislike the job and felt he was resented for his success.[23]

After a series of failures, Trading Places revitalized Aykroyd's career.[67] Throughout the 1980s, he went on to star in the blockbuster phenomenon Ghostbusters (1984),[68] Spies Like Us (1985) and Dragnet (1987). He earned an Academy Award nomination for his performance in the comedy-drama Driving Miss Daisy (1989).[69][70] Trading Places is considered Curtis's breakout performance, allowing her to move into films outside the horror genre; actor John Cleese cast Curtis in the 1988 heist comedy A Fish Called Wanda specifically because of her performance in Trading Places.[2][19][71] Curtis said Landis had "single-handedly changed the course of my life by giving me that part."[2] After not having worked in film for more than a decade, Ameche followed Trading Places with the 1985 comedy-drama Cocoon, for which he won his first and only Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.[2][21]

Landis continued to work as a director but suffered setbacks following a lawsuit over the accidental deaths of several actors on a segment he directed for Twilight Zone: The Movie and a succession of moderately successful films.[72][73] According to Murphy, he hired Landis to direct his 1988 comedy Coming to America to help support Landis's career. The pair had a falling out on the set of that film; even so, they collaborated again on Beverly Hills Cop III (1994).[13][72][74] Harris and Weingrod were elevated to prominence as writers.[2] They later sued Trading Places' producer, Aaron Russo, for an agreed upon 0.5% of the producer profits share, estimated to be worth $150,000; the outcome of this lawsuit is unknown.[4]

Home media edit

In the early 1980s, the VCR home video market was gaining popularity rapidly. In previous years, VHS sales were not a revenue source for studios, but by 1983 they could generate up to 13% of a film's total revenue; the North American cassette rights could generate $500,000 alone.[75] Trading Places was released on VHS in May 1984, priced at $39.95.[76] Paramount distributed its own cassettes and priced them significantly lower than the standard $80 price to promote home user VCR adoption. A successful film was expected to earn between $5 million and $10 million on the home video market.[75] In the rental market, Trading Places was one of the more popular releases in May, alongside the action thriller Sudden Impact.[75] Paramount signed an exclusive deal to show its movies, including Trading Places, on the Showtime TV network for approximately $500 million; this was seen as an attempt by Paramount to damage the network monopoly held by HBO that the studio saw as financially unfavorable.[75][77]

Trading Places was first released on DVD in October 2002.[78] A Special Collector's Edition (also known as the "Looking Good, Feeling Good" edition) was released in 2007 on DVD, Blu-ray, and HD DVD. This edition included deleted scenes, details on the film's production, including discussions with the cast and crew, 1983 promotional interviews, and interviews with financial experts about the film.[79][80] The film was also released in a pack that included Coming to America.[81] To celebrate the film's 35th-anniversary in 2018, a special edition was released containing a Blu-ray and digital version of the film, and behind-the-scenes featurettes.[82] A limited-edition release of Bernstein's score was made available in 2011. Only 2,000 copies were released by La-La Land Records.[83]

Analysis edit

Ending explained edit

Several publications have attempted to explain exactly how Valentine and Winthorpe make a large sum of money on the commodities market while simultaneously bankrupting the Dukes.[84][85] The fake crop report created by Valentine and Winthorpe indicates to the Dukes that the orange crop will be poor, making the limited stock more valuable.[1][84][85] The Dukes attempt to buy up as many Frozen Concentrated Orange Juice (FCOJ) futures contracts as possible to corner the market—effectively owning a substantial enough number of contracts that they are able to control the price of FCOJ. The other traders realize what the Dukes are doing and join in buying futures.[84][85] This demand significantly inflates the price to $1.42 per pound—each future represents several pounds of FCOJ. Winthorpe and Valentine begin selling futures at this inflated price, believing it to be the peak price; the contracts will require them to supply FCOJ in April.[1][85] Anticipating that the crop report will cause the value of FCOJ to rise far above $1.42, the other brokers purchase heavily from the pair.[1][84][85]

Once the real crop report is published indicating that the orange crop will be normal and there will be no shortage of FCOJ, the value of the futures plummets as the traders desperately attempt to sell their futures and limit their financial losses.[84][85] Winthorpe and Valentine then buy back the futures from the traders—except for the Dukes' trader Wilson—at the lower price of 29 cents a pound.[84][85] The difference is their profit. Effectively, they have sold FCOJ which they do not have at a high price and bought it back at a lower price, earning them a profit and eliminating the need to fulfil any contracts.[85] Meanwhile, the Dukes have bought a significant number of FCOJ futures, around 100,000 contracts or 1.5 million pounds of FCOJ and have been unable to sell any of them. When trading closes, they must meet the margin call—essentially a deposit—for holding the futures contracts. In addition to their basic financial loss from buying futures at up to $1.42 that are now worth only 29 cents, the margin call for holding the futures gives them a total loss of $394 million,[e] which they do not have, requiring the sale of all of their assets.[86]

Thematic analysis edit

 
A drawing from the 1882 novel The Prince and the Pauper by Mark Twain. Trading Places is seen as a modern retelling of that story and Twain's 1893 short story The Million Pound Bank Note.

The central storyline of Trading Places—a member of society trading places with another whose socio-economic status stands in direct contrast to his own—has often been compared to the 1881 novel The Prince and the Pauper by Mark Twain.[54][87][88] The novel follows the lives of a prince and a beggar who use their uncanny resemblance to each other to switch places temporarily; the prince takes on a life of poverty and misery while the pauper enjoys the lavish luxuries of royal life.[89] The Prince and the Pauper is seen as a classic tale of American literature; Trading Places adds a twist by casting an African-American as the pauper raised up in status, playing on fears of black usurpation and appropriation.[88] The film has also been compared to Twain's 1893 short story The Million Pound Bank Note, in which two brothers bet on the outcome of giving an impoverished person an unusable million-pound bank-note.[1][3] The choice to use Mozart's opera buffa The Marriage of Figaro also adds meaning. The opera tells the tale of a servant, Figaro, who foils the plans of his wealthy employer to steal his fiancée. When Winthorpe is driven to work during the film's opening, he hums "Se vuol ballare", an aria from The Marriage of Figaro, in which Figaro declares he will overturn the systems in place. This foreshadows Winthorpe's eventual efforts to do the same to the Dukes.[3][90]

The main theme of Trading Places is the consequences of wealth or the lack thereof. Both extremes are depicted by those living in opulent luxury and those trapped in a culture of poverty—a concept arguing that poor people adopt certain behaviors that keep them poor.[1] Harris has described the story as a satire of greed and social conventions, but in the end, the good guys win by becoming extremely rich.[2] Economic inequality is demonstrated by the wealthy who live in luxury. They are completely removed from those whose lives are affected by poverty. This is demonstrated by the Dukes' bet, showing their own sense of superiority over, and disregard for, the lives of those beneath them, even Winthorpe. Their only reward for the bet is personal pride.[1] Author Carolyn Anderson noted that films often feature an "introduction" scene for characters elevated above their station, like Valentine, to help them understand the rules of their new world. Conversely, there is rarely a complementary scene for those subjected to downward mobility.[91]

Vincent Canby said that although the film is an homage to social satire screwball comedies of the early 20th century, Trading Places is a symbol of its time. Where the earlier films espoused the benefits of things other than money, Trading Places is built around the value of money and those who aspire to have it. The heroes win by making lots of money; the villains are punished by becoming part of the impoverished. The heroes' reward is escaping to a tropical island, completely divorced from the poverty-stricken neighborhoods that had previously been their home.[53][92][93] Money is demonstrably a solution to all of the problems raised in the film, and when it is taken away, it is shown that people quickly resort to a basic criminal nature.[1] Stephen Schiff wrote that it can be seen as an example of supply-side economics, alongside films like the comedies Arthur (1981) and Risky Business (1983). While seemingly supporting left-leaning political concepts by arguing that given an equal platform a street-hustler like Valentine can perform Winthorpe's job equally well, Schiff argued that the film was still "unconsciously promoting Reaganism" where the accumulation of wealth is highly valued.[92] Harris described one incident where a person told him they had obtained a career in finance because of Trading Places; Harris said that this was counter to the film's message.[2]

David Budd said Trading Places defies expectations of racial stereotypes. Randolph's attempts to prove nurture wins over nature demonstrates that Valentine, given the same advantages as Winthorpe, is just as capable, and leaves behind the negative aspects of his former, unfair life.[87] Even so, once the Dukes' bet is complete, Mortimer reveals his intent to return Valentine to poverty, saying, "Do you really believe I would have a nigger run our family business?"; Randolph concurs, "Neither would I".[93] Budd concluded the film is a "message loudly asking for a reassessment of prejudice, and for level playing fields".[87] Hernan Vera and Andrew Gordon argue racial stereotypes are enabled with the permission of the only black main character. As part of their revenge against the Dukes, Winthorpe disguises his identity by donning blackface makeup, an act enabled by Valentine who has helped loosen up this strait-laced character. Because Valentine allowed it, it makes the act acceptable. This requires Valentine to accept and support Winthorpe despite having numerous reasons to dislike him, including originally getting Valentine wrongly arrested and then later trying to frame Valentine to reclaim his old job. Even so, Valentine befriends Winthorpe and helps him get revenge on the Dukes, the old establishment characters who demonstrate explicit racism. The film requires Valentine to act "white", performing as is expected of him to survive in the Dukes' world.[94]

Schiff argues that because the film identifies money as the most valuable entity, this in turn means that Ophelia is only valuable as a prostitute because she is financially intelligent.[92] Hadley Freeman said Ophelia is an example of the Smurfette principle, a female character in an otherwise male ensemble cast who exists to be pretty and rescued by men.[95] However, it is Ophelia who rescues Winthorpe, helping him to survive his new lowered-state.[93] Neal Karlen said Ophelia becomes a real person after telling Louis: "All I've got going for me in this whole, big, wide world is this body, this face, and what I've got up here [referring to her brain]".[96]

Trading Places also employs several conventions of its Christmas setting to highlight the individual loneliness of the main characters, in particular, Winthorpe. On Christmas Eve he humiliates himself in front of his former bosses, unwittingly losing his opportunity for his swap with Valentine to be undone by having become a criminal. While waiting outside a store, a dog urinates on him.[97][98] He attempts suicide and only fails because the gun does not fire; then it begins to rain on him. The following day offers a Christmas redemption and a change of fortune as Winthorpe is integrated into the non-traditional family unit of Coleman, Ophelia and Valentine.[1][97]

Legacy edit

Along with the impact their respective roles had on its stars' careers,[2] Trading Places is considered one of the best comedy films ever made and part of the canon of American comedies.[f] In a 1988 interview, Aykroyd said that he considered it among his "A-tier" films, along with Ghostbusters, Dragnet, The Blues Brothers, and Spies Like Us.[103] Bellamy and Ameche reprised their Duke characters for Murphy's 1988 film Coming to America. Murphy portrays the affluent Prince Akeem who hands the now-homeless brothers a large sum of cash. Mortimer tells Randolph that it is enough to give them a new start.[3] Of the two films, Murphy has said that while he "loves" Trading Places, he prefers Coming to America because it allowed him to portray multiple characters.[104] The 2021 sequel Coming 2 America also references the Dukes, revealing they used Akeem's donation to rebuild their business.[105][106]

In 2010, nearly 30 years after its release, the film was cited in the testimony of Commodity Futures Trading Commission chief Gary Gensler regarding new regulations on the financial markets. He said:

We have recommended banning using misappropriated government information to trade in the commodity markets. In the movie Trading Places, starring Eddie Murphy, the Duke brothers intended to profit from trades in frozen concentrated orange juice futures contracts using an illicitly obtained and not yet public Department of Agriculture orange crop report. Characters played by Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd intercept the misappropriated report and trade on it to profit and ruin the Duke brothers.[107]

The testimony was part of the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act designed to prevent insider trading on commodities markets, which had previously not been illegal. Section 746 of the reform act is referred to as the "Eddie Murphy rule".[1] An anonymous seller sold off their portion of the royalties earned from the film for $140,000 in 2019. At the time, the share was generating an average of $10,000 per annum.[108][109] A musical adaptation of Trading Places debuted at the Alliance Theater in Atlanta, Georgia, on June 4, 2022.[110]

Critical reassessment edit

Trading Places is considered one of the best comedies of the 1980s and one of the best Christmas films.[111][112][113] In 2015, the screenplay was listed as the joint thirty-third funniest on the WGA's 101 Funniest Screenplays list, tied with Ferris Bueller's Day Off (1986).[102][114] In 2017, the BBC polled 253 critics (118 female, 135 male) from 52 countries on the funniest film made. Trading Places came seventy-fourth, behind The Nutty Professor (1963) and The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! (1988).[101] Several publications have named it one of the best films of the 1980s, including: number eight by IFC;[115] number 17 by MTV;[116] number 37 by USA Today;[111] and number 41 by Rotten Tomatoes.[112] It has also been listed as one of the best comedy films ever by publications including: number 16 by Time Out;[117] number 26 by Rotten Tomatoes;[99] and number 48 by Empire.[100]

Although the film's story takes place over several weeks leading up to and after Christmas, Trading Places is regarded as a Christmas film.[1][98] In 2008, The Washington Post called it one of the most underrated Christmas films.[118] The Atlantic described it as a less traditional Christmas film, but one whose themes remain relevant, particularly regarding the divide between the wealthy and poor.[1] It has appeared on several lists of the best Christmas films, including: number 5 by Empire;[119] number 12 by Entertainment Weekly;[120] number 13 by Thrillist;[121] number 23 by Time Out;[122] number 24 by Rotten Tomatoes (based on overall critical scores);[113] number 45 by Today;[123] and unranked by Country Living[124] and The Daily Telegraph.[125] It has been a popular Christmas film on TV in Italy since its television debut in 1986, generally played on Christmas Eve.[126]

Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives the film an approval rating of 88%, based on 52 reviews, with an average rating of 7.5/10. The site's consensus states: "Featuring deft interplay between Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd, Trading Places is an immensely appealing social satire".[127] Metacritic gave the film a score of 69 out of 100, based on 10 critics, which indicates "generally favorable reviews".[128]

In the years followings its release, some critics have praised the film while highlighting elements that they believe aged poorly, including racial language, the use of blackface, and the implied rape of Beeks by a gorilla.[g] The film's use of the word "nigger", said during Mortimer's statement that he will never allow Valentine to run his family business, is sometimes censored in TV broadcasts. Todd Larkins Williams, director of the 2004 documentary The N-Word, said that it is a critical scene that should not be censored. He considered it dangerous to pretend a word never existed as in turn other negative events could also be ignored.[129] GQ argued that its social commentary remained relevant in spite of these elements.[130] In 2020, Trading Places was one of 16 films that had a disclaimer added by British broadcaster Sky UK. The disclaimer read, "This film has outdated attitudes, language, and cultural depictions which may cause offence today".[131]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The 1983 budget of $15 million is equivalent to $44.1 million in 2022.
  2. ^ The 1983 United States and Canada box office gross of $90.4 million is equivalent to $266 million in 2022.
  3. ^ The 1983 worldwide box office gross of $120.6 million is equivalent to $354 million in 2022.
  4. ^ Attributed to multiple references:[42][53][54][55]
  5. ^ The $394 million the Dukes lose is equivalent to $1.16 billion in 2022.
  6. ^ Attributed to multiple references:[2][99][100][101][102]
  7. ^ Attributed to multiple references:[1][95][129][130]

References edit

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Works cited edit

External links edit

  • Trading Places at IMDb  

trading, places, this, article, about, 1983, comedy, film, other, uses, disambiguation, 1983, american, comedy, film, directed, john, landis, with, screenplay, timothy, harris, herschel, weingrod, starring, aykroyd, eddie, murphy, ralph, bellamy, ameche, denho. This article is about the 1983 comedy film For other uses see Trading Places disambiguation Trading Places is a 1983 American comedy film directed by John Landis with a screenplay by Timothy Harris and Herschel Weingrod Starring Dan Aykroyd Eddie Murphy Ralph Bellamy Don Ameche Denholm Elliott and Jamie Lee Curtis the film tells the story of an upper class commodities broker Aykroyd and a poor street hustler Murphy whose lives cross when they are unwittingly made the subjects of an elaborate bet to test how each man will perform when their life circumstances are swapped Trading PlacesTheatrical release posterDirected byJohn LandisWritten byTimothy HarrisHerschel WeingrodProduced byAaron RussoStarringDan AykroydEddie MurphyRalph BellamyDon AmecheDenholm ElliottJamie Lee CurtisCinematographyRobert PaynterEdited byMalcolm CampbellMusic byElmer BernsteinDistributed byParamount PicturesRelease dateJune 8 1983 1983 06 08 Running time116 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 15 millionBox office 120 6 millionHarris conceived the outline for Trading Places in the early 1980s after meeting two wealthy brothers who were engaged in an ongoing rivalry with each other He and his writing partner Weingrod developed the idea as a project to star Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder When they were unable to participate Landis cast Aykroyd with whom he had worked previously and a young but increasingly popular Murphy in his second feature film role Landis also cast Curtis against the intent of the studio Paramount Pictures she was famous mainly for her roles in horror films which were looked down upon at the time Principal photography took place from December 1982 to March 1983 entirely on location in Philadelphia and New York City Elmer Bernstein scored the film using Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart s opera buffa The Marriage of Figaro as an underlying theme Trading Places was considered a box office success on its release earning over 90 4 million to become the fourth highest grossing film of 1983 in the United States and Canada and 120 6 million worldwide It also received generally positive reviews with critics praising both the central cast and the film s revival of the screwball comedy genre prevalent in the 1930s and 1940s while criticizing Trading Places for lacking the same moral message of the genre while promoting the accumulation of wealth It received multiple award nominations including an Academy Award for Bernstein s score and won two BAFTA awards for Elliott and Curtis The film also launched or revitalized the careers of its main cast who each appeared in several other films throughout the 1980s In particular Murphy became one of the highest paid and most sought after comedians in Hollywood In the years since its release the film has been reassessed both positively and negatively It has been praised as one of the greatest comedy films and Christmas films ever made but retrospective assessments have criticized its use of racial jokes and language In 2010 the film was referenced in Congressional testimony concerning the reform of the commodities trading market designed to prevent the insider trading demonstrated in Trading Places In 1988 Bellamy and Ameche reprised their characters for Murphy s comedy film Coming to America Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Writing and development 3 2 Casting 3 3 Filming 3 4 Music 4 Release 4 1 Context 4 2 Box office 5 Reception 5 1 Critical response 5 2 Accolades 6 Post release 6 1 Performance analysis and aftermath 6 2 Home media 7 Analysis 7 1 Ending explained 7 2 Thematic analysis 8 Legacy 8 1 Critical reassessment 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Works cited 11 External linksPlot editBrothers Randolph and Mortimer Duke own a commodities brokerage firm Duke amp Duke Commodity Brokers in Philadelphia Pennsylvania Holding opposing views on the issue of nature versus nurture they make a wager and agree to conduct an experiment switching the lives of two people on opposite sides of the social hierarchy and observing the results They witness an encounter between their managing director the well mannered and educated Louis Winthorpe III engaged to the Dukes grandniece Penelope Witherspoon and poor black street hustler Billy Ray Valentine Valentine is arrested at Winthorpe s insistence after the latter assumes he is being robbed The Dukes decide to use them for their experiment Winthorpe is framed as a thief drug dealer and philanderer by Clarence Beeks a man on the Dukes payroll He is fired from Duke amp Duke his bank accounts are frozen he is denied entry to his Duke owned home and is vilified by Penelope and his friends He is befriended by Ophelia a prostitute who helps him in exchange for a financial reward once he is exonerated to secure her own retirement The Dukes post bail for Valentine install him in Winthorpe s former job and grant him use of Winthorpe s home Valentine becomes well versed in the business using his street smarts to achieve success and begins to act in a well mannered way During the firm s Christmas party Winthorpe plants drugs in Valentine s desk attempting to frame him and brandishes a gun to escape Later the Dukes discuss their experiment and settle their wager for 1 They plot to return Valentine to the streets but have no intention of taking back Winthorpe Valentine overhears the conversation and seeks out Winthorpe who has attempted suicide by overdosing Valentine Ophelia and Winthorpe s butler Coleman nurse him back to health and inform him of the experiment Watching a television news broadcast they learn that Beeks is transporting a secret United States Department of Agriculture USDA report on orange crop forecasts Winthorpe and Valentine remember large payments made to Beeks by the Dukes They realize the Dukes will obtain the report early to corner the market on frozen concentrated orange juice On New Year s Eve the four board Beeks train in disguise intending to switch the original report with a forgery that predicts low orange crop yields Beeks uncovers their scheme and attempts to kill them but is knocked unconscious by a gorilla being transported on the train The four disguise Beeks with a gorilla costume and cage him with the real gorilla The group deliver the forged report to the Dukes in Beeks place After sharing a kiss with Ophelia Winthorpe travels to New York City with Valentine carrying with them Coleman s and Ophelia s life savings to carry out their plan On the commodities trading floor the Dukes commit their holdings to buying frozen concentrated orange juice futures contracts legally committing themselves to buying the commodity at a later date Other traders follow their lead driving the price up Valentine and Winthorpe short sell juice futures contracts at the inflated price Following the broadcast of the actual crop report and its prediction of a normal harvest the price of juice futures plummets As the traders panic sell their futures Valentine and Winthorpe buy at the lower price from everyone except the Dukes fulfilling the contracts they had short sold earlier and turning an immense profit After the closing bell Valentine and Winthorpe explain to the Dukes that they made a wager on whether they could get rich and make the Dukes poor at the same time and Winthorpe pays Valentine his winnings of 1 When the Dukes prove unable to pay the 394 million required to satisfy their margin call the exchange manager orders their seats sold and their corporate and personal assets confiscated effectively bankrupting them Randolph collapses holding his chest and Mortimer shouts at the others demanding the floor be reopened in a futile plea to recoup their losses The now wealthy Valentine Winthorpe Ophelia and Coleman vacation on a luxurious tropical beach while Beeks and the gorilla are loaded onto a ship bound for Africa Cast edit nbsp nbsp Ralph Bellamy in 1971 left and Don Ameche in 1964 They portrayed the Duke brothers Randolph and Mortimer respectively Dan Aykroyd as Louis Winthorpe III a wealthy commodities director at Duke amp Duke 1 Eddie Murphy as Billy Ray Valentine a street beggar and con man 2 Ralph Bellamy as Randolph Duke greedy co owner of Duke amp Duke alongside his brother Mortimer 1 Don Ameche as Mortimer Duke Randolph s equally greedy brother 1 Denholm Elliott as Coleman Winthorpe s butler 3 Jamie Lee Curtis as Ophelia a prostitute who helps Winthorpe 2 Kristin Holby as Penelope Witherspoon the Dukes grandniece and Winthorpe s fiancee 4 Paul Gleason as Clarence Beeks a security expert covertly working for the Dukes 5 As well as the main cast Trading Places features Robert Curtis Brown as Todd Winthorpe s romantic rival for Penelope Alfred Drake as the Securities Exchange manager 6 and Jim Belushi as Harvey a party goer on New Year s Eve 3 The film has numerous cameos including singer Bo Diddley as a pawnbroker 7 Curtis sister Kelly as Penelope s friend Muffy the Muppets puppeteers Frank Oz and Richard Hunt as respectively a police officer and Wilson the Dukes broker on the trading floor and Aykroyd s former Saturday Night Live colleagues Tom Davis and Al Franken as train baggage handlers 3 Other minor roles include Ron Taylor as Big Black Guy American football player J T Turner as Even Bigger Black Guy who only says Yeah 8 and Giancarlo Esposito as a cellmate 6 Trading Places also features the final theatrically released performance of Avon Long who plays the Dukes butler Ezra 9 The gorilla is portrayed by mime Don McLeod 10 11 Production editWriting and development edit In the early 1980s writer Timothy Harris often played tennis against two wealthy but frugal brothers who regularly engaged in a competitive rivalry and betting Following one session Harris returned home exasperated with the pair s conflict and concluded that they were awful people The situation gave him the idea of two brothers betting over nature versus nurture in terms of human ability Harris shared the idea with his writing partner Herschel Weingrod who liked the concept Harris also drew inspiration for the story from his own living situation he lived in a rundown area near Fairfax Avenue in Los Angeles He described the area in grim terms as crime ridden where everyone either had a gun pointed at them or had been raped 2 Harris and Weingrod researched the commodities market for the script 2 They learned of financial market incidents including Russian attempts to corner the wheat market and the Hunt brothers efforts to corner the silver market on what became known as Silver Thursday They thought trading orange juice and pork bellies would be funnier because the public would be unaware such mundane items were traded 12 Harris consulted with people in the commodities business to understand how the film s finale on the trading floor would work The pair determined that the commodities market would make for an interesting setting for a film as long as it was not about the financial market itself They needed something to draw the audience in It was decided to set the story in Philadelphia because of its connections to the founding of the United States the American dream and idealism and the pursuit of happiness This was tempered by introducing Billy Ray Valentine as a black man begging on the street 2 The pair knew that the method of Winthorpe s and Valentine s financial victory could be confusing but hoped that audiences would be too invested in the characters success to care about the details 12 The script was sold to Paramount Pictures under the title Black and White Then Paramount executive Jeffrey Katzenberg offered the project to director John Landis Landis disliked the working title 2 but favorably compared the script to older screwball comedies of the 1930s by directors like Frank Capra Leo McCarey and Preston Sturges which often satirized social constructs and social classes reflecting the cultural issues of their time Landis wanted his film to reflect these concepts in the 1980s 2 13 14 he said the main updates were the addition of swearing and nudity 13 Landis admitted that it took him a while to understand how Trading Places finale worked 2 Casting edit nbsp Dan Aykroyd pictured in 1982 Paramount Pictures saw Aykroyd s success as tied to his partnership with the late John Belushi and did not want to cast him but his previous work with director John Landis helped him to secure the role Trading Places was developed with the intent to cast comedy duo Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder as Valentine and Louis Winthorpe III respectively 2 13 The pair were in high demand following the success of their comedy film Stir Crazy 1980 3 When Pryor was severely injured after setting fire to himself while freebasing cocaine the decision was made to cast someone else 2 15 Paramount Pictures suggested Eddie Murphy 2 The studio was initially unhappy with Murphy s performance in his first film the as then unreleased action comedy 48 Hrs 1982 a film also conceived as a Pryor project 16 However that film was well received by preview test audiences leading the studio to reverse its opinion 2 13 Landis was unaware of Murphy who had been gaining fame as a performer on Saturday Night Live After watching Murphy s audition tapes Landis was impressed enough to travel to New York City to meet with him 2 Murphy said that he was paid 350 000 for the role it was reported that the figure was as high as 1 million 17 18 Landis wanted Dan Aykroyd to serve as Murphy s co star He had worked previously with Aykroyd on the musical comedy film The Blues Brothers 1980 the experience had been positive Landis said he could easily play Winthorpe you tell him what you want and he delivers And I thought he d be wonderful Paramount Pictures was less enamored with Aykroyd executives believed that he performed better as part of a duo as he had working with John Belushi They felt that Aykroyd working alone would be akin to Bud Abbott half of Abbott and Costello working without Lou Costello and Aykroyd s recent films had fared poorly at the box office Aykroyd agreed to take a pay cut for the role 2 The studio also objected to the casting of Jamie Lee Curtis At the time she was seen as a scream queen primarily associated with low quality B movies Landis had worked previously with Curtis on the horror documentary Coming Soon for which she had served as the host She wanted to move away from horror films as she was conscious that the association would limit her future career prospects She had turned down a role in the horror film Psycho II 1983 because of this Her mother Janet Leigh had famously starred in Psycho 1960 2 Curtis had performed recently in the slasher film Halloween II 1981 as a favor to director John Carpenter and producer Debra Hill she was paid 1 million for that role but received only 70 000 for Trading Places 2 When asked if she had researched her role as a prostitute Curtis jokingly remarked I d love to say I went out and turned a couple of tricks on 42nd Street but I didn t 19 Curtis had long hair when she was cast costume designer Deborah Nadoolman Landis suggested cutting her hair shorter for the film 13 For the greedy Duke brothers Ralph Bellamy was the first choice for Randolph 3 For Mortimer Landis wanted to cast an actor famous in the 1930s or 1940s who was not associated with playing a villain His first choice was Ray Milland but the actor was unable to pass a physical test to qualify for insurance while filming As the start date for filming loomed Landis thought of Don Ameche The casting director claimed that Ameche was dead 13 Landis was skeptical of this and contacted the Screen Actors Guild in an attempt to locate him They confirmed that Ameche had no agent and his royalty payments were being forwarded to his son in Arizona Landis accepted this as evidence that Ameche was deceased However after hearing of Landis search one of the Paramount Studios secretaries mentioned that they saw Ameche regularly on San Vicente Boulevard in Santa Monica California Landis called directory assistance to locate a D Ameche in the area and made contact 2 Ameche had not featured in a film for over a decade when asked why he said that no one had offered him film work 2 20 The studio did not want to pay Ameche what Milland had been offered as Ameche was financially independent and in no need of work he refused to take the part until he received equal pay 21 22 Landis claimed that the studio reduced the film s budget frustrated at Ameche s casting after a long absence from film work 13 John Gielgud and Ronnie Barker were considered for the role of Winthorpe s butler Coleman Barker refused to act if it involved filming more than 7 miles 11 km from his home in the United Kingdom 3 13 G Gordon Liddy a central figure in the Watergate political scandal of the early 1970s was offered the role of corrupt official Clarence Beeks Liddy was interested in the offer until he learned that Beeks becomes the romantic partner of a gorilla Paul Gleason took the role his character reads a copy of Liddy s autobiography Will while riding the train 3 Don McLeod portrayed the gorilla he had already become popular for his performances as a gorilla in American Tourister commercials which led to film appearances 10 11 Filming edit nbsp The Curtis Institute of Music pictured in 2010 The building was used as the exterior of the Heritage Club where Winthorpe and Valentine first meet Principal photography began on December 13 1982 4 23 The budget was estimated to be 15 million 24 a Filming took place on location in Philadelphia and New York City 2 4 Robert Paynter and Malcolm Campbell served respectively as the film s cinematographer and editor 25 26 The script underwent minor changes throughout filming some improvisation was also encouraged Changes were normally discussed in advance but on other occasions ad libbed dialogue was considered funny enough to keep Examples of ad libs retained in the film include Valentine comparing Randolph to Randy Jackson of The Jackson 5 and demonstrating his quart of blood technique in jail 14 23 Murphy liked Trading Places script he felt it was unlike 48 Hrs which he said had been saved by director Walter Hill Even so he changed many of his own lines because he said that a white writer writing for a black person would use stereotypical dialogue like jive turkey and sucker and he could write his lines to sound authentic 23 Weingrod said the studio objected to Murphy s line Who put their Kools out on my Persian rug They believed it was racist because the Kool cigarette brand was targeted mainly at African Americans Murphy restored the line 27 Ophelia pretending to be a European exchange student to fool Beeks was also improvised Curtis used a mix of German attire with a Swedish accent because she could not perform a German accent 3 The first fifteen days of filming were spent in Philadelphia 4 Landis described the weather as freezing While filming the scene where Randolph and Mortimer collect Valentine from jail Landis was positioned in a towing truck that pulled the Rolls Royce carrying Ameche Bellamy and Murphy Landis wore a thick parka to stay warm and the actors had a space heater in their vehicle Landis listened to their dialogue via radio Describing the filming of the scene Landis recalled a jovial discussion between Ameche Bellamy and Murphy Bellamy said that Trading Places was his 99th film Ameche said it was his 100th Murphy informed Landis that between the three of us we ve made 201 films 13 Filming locations in Philadelphia included townhouses in Center City that served as the Winthorpe home exterior and the Philadelphia Mint now the Community College of Philadelphia which served as the police station s exterior 4 28 The exterior and lobby of the Wells Fargo Building serve as the respective exterior and lobby of Duke amp Duke 2 29 nbsp Winthorpe Valentine Ophelia and Coleman retire with their gains to a tropical beach The scene was shot on location in St Croix in the United States Virgin Islands The Duke amp Duke upstairs offices were filmed inside the upstairs of the Seventh Regiment Armory in New York 2 Murphy s character pretending to be crippled is introduced in Rittenhouse Square The nearby Curtis Institute of Music shown as the exterior of the Heritage Club is seen adjacent to Rittenhouse Park in the film s opening 4 30 31 The interior was filmed at the then abandoned New York Chamber of Commerce Building 2 32 Independence Hall is also featured 30 During filming in Philadelphia Murphy was so popular that a police officer had to be stationed outside of his trailer to control the crowds 33 Filming moved to New York City in January 1983 many of the interior scenes were filmed there 2 4 In late January two holding cells on the 12th floor of the New York Supreme Court building at 100 Centre Street were taken over for filming Empty lockups in police administration buildings would normally be in use but because of the financial investment the production had made filming in the city the mayor s office agreed to accommodate Landis request the studio paid for any expenses incurred The New York Times reported that for years the Corrections Department had failed to deliver prisoners on time for trials and arraignments despite this they moved nearly 300 prisoners through the 12th floor before 9 a m on the day of filming 34 The scene where Valentine and Winthorpe enact their plan against the Dukes was filmed at the COMEX commodity exchange located inside 4 World Trade Center The lack of windows gave the appearance the floor was situated below ground but it was actually on a high floor The scene was scripted to take place at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange but the filmmakers were unable to secure permission to film there 2 The scene was shot over approximately 3 4 hours a day over two days 2 It was scheduled to take place during a weekday but Aykroyd s and Murphy s presence on the floor distracted the active traders and over 6 billion of trading had to be halted filming was rescheduled for a weekend 4 A majority of the people on screen are actual traders along with some extras Landis said the traders in the film were less physically rough with each other than they were during normal trading 2 4 Landis also performed some guerrilla filmmaking there for additional footage 2 Ameche was opposed to using foul language and often apologized in advance to his crewmates for what he was scripted to say he only performed one take of his final scene where he shouts fuck him referring to Randolph 3 The final scene shot was of the main characters celebrating on a beach this was filmed on Saint Croix island in the United States Virgin Islands 4 35 Principal photography concluded on March 1 1983 after 78 days 4 Music edit nbsp The Marriage of Figaro Overture source source Performed by Musopen Symphony 4 00 Problems playing this file See media help Elmer Bernstein composed the score for Trading Places 36 He and Landis had collaborated previously on several films including The Blues Brothers and the horror comedy An American Werewolf in London 1981 37 Landis conceived of the idea to use the opera buffa The Marriage of Figaro by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart as the underlying theme for the score He had used classical music in his previous films to represent the upper classes and felt that it would be fitting for the pompous elites of the financial industry 38 39 The Marriage of Figaro concerns the story of a servant who is wronged by his wealthy employer Count Almaviva and takes his revenge by unraveling the count s own machinations 40 Bernstein created his own arrangements of the music to reflect the differing emotions of each scene 38 40 The overture of Marriage of Figaro plays over the film s opening 36 The score also includes arrangements of Pomp and Circumstance Marches by Edward Elgar and Mozart s Symphony No 41 36 38 Trading Places features songs including Do You Wanna Funk by Sylvester and Patrick Cowley Jingle Bell Rock by Brenda Lee The Loco Motion by Little Eva and Get a Job by the Silhouettes 4 Release editContext edit See also 1983 in film The summer of 1983 June September was predicted to surpass the previous year s record breaking 1 4 billion in theater tickets sold The season featured expected hits such as the third installment in the Star Wars series Return of the Jedi Superman III and the latest James Bond film Octopussy Over 40 films were scheduled for release over the 16 week period Studios had to strategize their releases to avoid damaging their own films performances by pitting them against better performing competition 41 Paramount Studios opted to release Trading Places at the start of summer as those films expected to do well would benefit from being in theaters longer during this busy period Comedy films were considered counterprogramming that attracted audiences who had already seen or were not interested in the major film releases that were mainly focused on science fiction and superheroes Trading Places was released between Return of the Jedi in May and Superman III in mid June While sequels were expected to do well having the advantage of a built in audience Trading Places was predicted to be successful based on its cast 41 Box office edit In the United States U S and Canada Trading Places received a wide release on Wednesday June 8 1983 across 1 375 theaters 42 43 The film earned 1 7 million leading into its opening weekend when it earned a further 7 3 million an average of 5 344 per theater Trading Places finished as the number three film of the weekend behind Octopussy 8 9 million also making its debut that weekend and Return of the Jedi 12 million which was in its third week of release 44 The film retained the number three position in its second weekend with a further gross of 7 million behind Return of the Jedi 11 2 million and the debuting Superman III 13 3 million 45 In its third weekend it fell to fifth place with 5 5 million behind the debuting science fiction horror Twilight Zone The Movie 6 6 million and sex comedy Porky s II The Next Day 7 million Superman III 9 million and Return of the Jedi 11 1 million 46 While the film never claimed the number one box office ranking it spent seventeen straight weeks among the top ten highest grossing films 47 By September it was the fourth highest grossing film of the year with 80 6 million 48 and by the end of its theatrical run Trading Places earned an approximate box office gross of 90 4 million 43 b It finished as the fourth highest grossing film of 1983 behind Paramount Studio s surprise hit the romantic drama Flashdance 90 46 million the comedy drama Terms of Endearment 108 4 million and Return of the Jedi 309 2 million 48 49 50 Estimates by industry experts suggest that as of 1997 the box office returns to the studio minus the theaters share was 40 6 million 51 Outside of the United States and Canada Trading Places is estimated to have earned a further 30 2 million bringing its worldwide gross to 120 6 million 52 c Reception editCritical response edit nbsp Jamie Lee Curtis pictured in 1989 She was dismissed as only a horror film star before her critically well received breakthrough performance in Trading Places Trading Places received generally positive reviews from critics 2 Reviewers compared it to the socially conscious comedies of the 1930s and 1940s like My Man Godfrey 1936 Easy Living 1937 Christmas in July 1940 and Sullivan s Travels 1941 by directors like Preston Sturges Frank Capra and Gregory La Cava d Janet Maslin said that the likable film owed a debt to the screwball comedy genre She continued Preston Sturges might have made a movie like Trading Places if he d had a little less inspiration and a lot more money 42 Gary Arnold said the film was too inconsistent to be compared to those older films 55 Vincent Canby said that the screwball style had been updated for the existential hipness of the 1980s but the film lacked the same morality tale the genre often espoused that money is not important Instead the characters do not dismantle or expose the corruption of the financial system they just take revenge on the Dukes obtaining extreme wealth in the process Even so he concluded the film was one of the best American comedies released in a long time 53 Maslin agreed that the film was too enamored with the wealthy institutions it satirized to provide a true criticism of the system and its failings She called it the American Dream in film form 42 Dave Kehr said that though the film pays homage to screwball comedies it stripped the concept of all but the crudest audience gratification moments and avoided exploration of the genre s moral conflicts 56 In Variety s review the reviewer concluded that the middle segment of the film lacked humor 25 People said that the ending was perfectly presented but Arnold considered it to be confusing and reliant on the audience s knowledge that the heroes were being heroic to compensate for a lack of clarity in their actions 55 57 He continued that even as a farcical film the events were too unbelievable 55 Roger Ebert said the ending was inventive for not involving a manic chase 54 He appreciated that Trading Places did not rely on obvious racial plot points or employ sitcom tropes for the social status swaps of Winthorpe and Valentine He commended the focus on developing each character so that they were funny because of their individual quirks and personalities He concluded that this required a deeper script than would normally be developed for a comedy 54 The cast were all generally praised 25 42 54 Maslin called it a strange but well cast film representing multiple Hollywood generations 42 Ebert said that what could have been stereotypical characters were elevated by the actors and the writing adding that Murphy and Aykroyd made a perfect team 54 Canby said that Murphy demonstrated why he was the most successful comedian in the last decade 53 Several reviewers compared his role to that in 48 Hrs 58 55 Arnold said that Trading Places was evidence that Murphy s successes were not a fluke and that Murphy demonstrated an exhilarating comic authority 55 Canby said that Trading Places gave Murphy an opportunity to demonstrate the range of his abilities in a lithe graceful uproarious performance 53 Reviewers agreed that the film featured Aykroyd s best performance to date 53 55 People said that if audiences had given up on Aykroyd following the failures of Neighbors 1981 and Doctor Detroit 1983 his career was revitalized by Trading Places 57 Canby said that Aykroyd gave a more consistent performance than in his previous roles He said that Aykroyd had demonstrated that his success was not dependent upon his partnership with John Belushi 53 Arnold said that Aykroyd worked best when he shared a central role with another star 55 Rita Kempley said that his relationship with Murphy was just as enjoyable as his one with Belushi 58 Variety noted that the supporting cast in Bellamy Ameche Elliott and Curtis were essential to the film 25 Reviewers said that Curtis brought a deft comic ability to the role 53 55 Arnold called the role stale and predictable but felt Curtis offered an infectious humor that earns the audience s support 55 People said that she had a significant appeal and Kempley called her both curvaceous and vivacious 58 57 Canby said that in her first major non horror role Curtis performed with marvelous good humor 53 Kehr criticized Landis for often turning his heroines into busty bunnies and said that he had treated Curtis the same way 56 Ebert called Bellamy and Ameche s casting a masterstroke 54 Canby said the pair had well written roles that were supported by their comic performances He continued that Ameche was as funny in Trading Places as he was always meant to be 53 People said that the film works because Landis demonstrated a remarkable restraint 57 Canby said Landis had shown that he could direct a precise comedy as well as special effects laden fare 53 Arnold disagreed saying Landis comedic timing was less precise than in his previous work and that he lacked the skill to handle the source material properly 55 People said that Harris and Weingrod had developed a well written script 57 but Arnold said they had failed to update the screwball genre to tackle social contrasts in a similar way 55 Accolades edit At the 41st Golden Globe Awards in 1984 the film received two nominations Best Musical or Comedy losing to romantic drama Yentl and Best Actor in a Musical or Comedy for Murphy who lost to Michael Caine s performance in the comedy drama Educating Rita 59 At the 56th Academy Awards Bernstein was nominated for Best Original Score he lost to Michel Legrand and Alan and Marilyn Bergman who scored Yentl 60 The 37th British Academy Film Awards named Elliott and Curtis the Best Supporting Actor and Best Supporting Actress respectively Harris and Weingrod were nominated for Best Original Screenplay they lost to Paul D Zimmerman for the 1982 black comedy The King of Comedy 61 Post release editPerformance analysis and aftermath edit nbsp Eddie Murphy pictured in 1988 His successes with 48 Hrs and Trading Places elevated him to film superstardom As predicted the 1983 summer film season broke the previous year s record with over 1 5 billion worth of tickets sold It was seen as a substantial increase in spite of increased ticket prices 48 Even so the year was a mixture of unexpected successes and disappointments Films like Superman III and the action comedies Smokey and the Bandit Part 3 and Stroker Ace had failed at the box office The science fiction comedy The Man with Two Brains featuring an established star in Steve Martin had also underperformed 62 Conversely Flashdance was an unexpected hit and the third highest grossing film of the year despite a negative critical reception 48 In September The New York Times wrote that Trading Places was the only film of the fifteen top grossing films that could be recommended without reservation 62 The film was well received critically and considered a significant commercial success along with Flashdance and Return of the Jedi 63 62 Then production vice president of MGM UA studio Peter Bart described it as a gimmick film that focused on a high concept over story and characterization Bart believed its success triggered a negative trend that resulted in him receiving numerous film pitches often a mix of the high concept nature of Trading Places with a Flashdance inspired breakdancing or gym setting 64 Harris recalled people asking if the producer Aaron Russo or Katzenberg had created the idea and just paid him to write it He said he knew it was a success because people were trying to take credit for it 2 Trading Places is considered responsible for launching changing or re launching the careers of many of its stars 2 Murphy s success was significant He rose from a TV comedian to a superstar with two of the most successful films of the year 65 Industry experts voted him as the biggest box office star after Clint Eastwood No other African American actor had achieved a comparable level of success before him 65 It was reported that Murphy earned up to 1 million for Trading Places but by his third film Beverly Hills Cop 1984 he commanded a 3 million salary This was considered a top tier salary reserved for the most popular movie stars 18 Shortly after Trading Places release Paramount Pictures signed Murphy to a 25 million five film exclusive contract one of the biggest deals ever with an actor at the time The studio also agreed to finance his Eddie Murphy Productions studio 18 66 Murphy was among several young stars who emerged that year including Matthew Broderick Tom Cruise and Michael Keaton who were all in their 20s This reflected the fact that average audiences were aging and now in their late teens to late 20s and led to a shift in focus away from making films targeted mainly at children 64 His rapid rise to fame led to Murphy leaving Saturday Night Live the following year he said he had grown to dislike the job and felt he was resented for his success 23 After a series of failures Trading Places revitalized Aykroyd s career 67 Throughout the 1980s he went on to star in the blockbuster phenomenon Ghostbusters 1984 68 Spies Like Us 1985 and Dragnet 1987 He earned an Academy Award nomination for his performance in the comedy drama Driving Miss Daisy 1989 69 70 Trading Places is considered Curtis s breakout performance allowing her to move into films outside the horror genre actor John Cleese cast Curtis in the 1988 heist comedy A Fish Called Wanda specifically because of her performance in Trading Places 2 19 71 Curtis said Landis had single handedly changed the course of my life by giving me that part 2 After not having worked in film for more than a decade Ameche followed Trading Places with the 1985 comedy drama Cocoon for which he won his first and only Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor 2 21 Landis continued to work as a director but suffered setbacks following a lawsuit over the accidental deaths of several actors on a segment he directed for Twilight Zone The Movie and a succession of moderately successful films 72 73 According to Murphy he hired Landis to direct his 1988 comedy Coming to America to help support Landis s career The pair had a falling out on the set of that film even so they collaborated again on Beverly Hills Cop III 1994 13 72 74 Harris and Weingrod were elevated to prominence as writers 2 They later sued Trading Places producer Aaron Russo for an agreed upon 0 5 of the producer profits share estimated to be worth 150 000 the outcome of this lawsuit is unknown 4 Home media edit In the early 1980s the VCR home video market was gaining popularity rapidly In previous years VHS sales were not a revenue source for studios but by 1983 they could generate up to 13 of a film s total revenue the North American cassette rights could generate 500 000 alone 75 Trading Places was released on VHS in May 1984 priced at 39 95 76 Paramount distributed its own cassettes and priced them significantly lower than the standard 80 price to promote home user VCR adoption A successful film was expected to earn between 5 million and 10 million on the home video market 75 In the rental market Trading Places was one of the more popular releases in May alongside the action thriller Sudden Impact 75 Paramount signed an exclusive deal to show its movies including Trading Places on the Showtime TV network for approximately 500 million this was seen as an attempt by Paramount to damage the network monopoly held by HBO that the studio saw as financially unfavorable 75 77 Trading Places was first released on DVD in October 2002 78 A Special Collector s Edition also known as the Looking Good Feeling Good edition was released in 2007 on DVD Blu ray and HD DVD This edition included deleted scenes details on the film s production including discussions with the cast and crew 1983 promotional interviews and interviews with financial experts about the film 79 80 The film was also released in a pack that included Coming to America 81 To celebrate the film s 35th anniversary in 2018 a special edition was released containing a Blu ray and digital version of the film and behind the scenes featurettes 82 A limited edition release of Bernstein s score was made available in 2011 Only 2 000 copies were released by La La Land Records 83 Analysis editEnding explained edit Several publications have attempted to explain exactly how Valentine and Winthorpe make a large sum of money on the commodities market while simultaneously bankrupting the Dukes 84 85 The fake crop report created by Valentine and Winthorpe indicates to the Dukes that the orange crop will be poor making the limited stock more valuable 1 84 85 The Dukes attempt to buy up as many Frozen Concentrated Orange Juice FCOJ futures contracts as possible to corner the market effectively owning a substantial enough number of contracts that they are able to control the price of FCOJ The other traders realize what the Dukes are doing and join in buying futures 84 85 This demand significantly inflates the price to 1 42 per pound each future represents several pounds of FCOJ Winthorpe and Valentine begin selling futures at this inflated price believing it to be the peak price the contracts will require them to supply FCOJ in April 1 85 Anticipating that the crop report will cause the value of FCOJ to rise far above 1 42 the other brokers purchase heavily from the pair 1 84 85 Once the real crop report is published indicating that the orange crop will be normal and there will be no shortage of FCOJ the value of the futures plummets as the traders desperately attempt to sell their futures and limit their financial losses 84 85 Winthorpe and Valentine then buy back the futures from the traders except for the Dukes trader Wilson at the lower price of 29 cents a pound 84 85 The difference is their profit Effectively they have sold FCOJ which they do not have at a high price and bought it back at a lower price earning them a profit and eliminating the need to fulfil any contracts 85 Meanwhile the Dukes have bought a significant number of FCOJ futures around 100 000 contracts or 1 5 million pounds of FCOJ and have been unable to sell any of them When trading closes they must meet the margin call essentially a deposit for holding the futures contracts In addition to their basic financial loss from buying futures at up to 1 42 that are now worth only 29 cents the margin call for holding the futures gives them a total loss of 394 million e which they do not have requiring the sale of all of their assets 86 Thematic analysis edit nbsp A drawing from the 1882 novel The Prince and the Pauper by Mark Twain Trading Places is seen as a modern retelling of that story and Twain s 1893 short story The Million Pound Bank Note The central storyline of Trading Places a member of society trading places with another whose socio economic status stands in direct contrast to his own has often been compared to the 1881 novel The Prince and the Pauper by Mark Twain 54 87 88 The novel follows the lives of a prince and a beggar who use their uncanny resemblance to each other to switch places temporarily the prince takes on a life of poverty and misery while the pauper enjoys the lavish luxuries of royal life 89 The Prince and the Pauper is seen as a classic tale of American literature Trading Places adds a twist by casting an African American as the pauper raised up in status playing on fears of black usurpation and appropriation 88 The film has also been compared to Twain s 1893 short story The Million Pound Bank Note in which two brothers bet on the outcome of giving an impoverished person an unusable million pound bank note 1 3 The choice to use Mozart s opera buffa The Marriage of Figaro also adds meaning The opera tells the tale of a servant Figaro who foils the plans of his wealthy employer to steal his fiancee When Winthorpe is driven to work during the film s opening he hums Se vuol ballare an aria from The Marriage of Figaro in which Figaro declares he will overturn the systems in place This foreshadows Winthorpe s eventual efforts to do the same to the Dukes 3 90 The main theme of Trading Places is the consequences of wealth or the lack thereof Both extremes are depicted by those living in opulent luxury and those trapped in a culture of poverty a concept arguing that poor people adopt certain behaviors that keep them poor 1 Harris has described the story as a satire of greed and social conventions but in the end the good guys win by becoming extremely rich 2 Economic inequality is demonstrated by the wealthy who live in luxury They are completely removed from those whose lives are affected by poverty This is demonstrated by the Dukes bet showing their own sense of superiority over and disregard for the lives of those beneath them even Winthorpe Their only reward for the bet is personal pride 1 Author Carolyn Anderson noted that films often feature an introduction scene for characters elevated above their station like Valentine to help them understand the rules of their new world Conversely there is rarely a complementary scene for those subjected to downward mobility 91 Vincent Canby said that although the film is an homage to social satire screwball comedies of the early 20th century Trading Places is a symbol of its time Where the earlier films espoused the benefits of things other than money Trading Places is built around the value of money and those who aspire to have it The heroes win by making lots of money the villains are punished by becoming part of the impoverished The heroes reward is escaping to a tropical island completely divorced from the poverty stricken neighborhoods that had previously been their home 53 92 93 Money is demonstrably a solution to all of the problems raised in the film and when it is taken away it is shown that people quickly resort to a basic criminal nature 1 Stephen Schiff wrote that it can be seen as an example of supply side economics alongside films like the comedies Arthur 1981 and Risky Business 1983 While seemingly supporting left leaning political concepts by arguing that given an equal platform a street hustler like Valentine can perform Winthorpe s job equally well Schiff argued that the film was still unconsciously promoting Reaganism where the accumulation of wealth is highly valued 92 Harris described one incident where a person told him they had obtained a career in finance because of Trading Places Harris said that this was counter to the film s message 2 David Budd said Trading Places defies expectations of racial stereotypes Randolph s attempts to prove nurture wins over nature demonstrates that Valentine given the same advantages as Winthorpe is just as capable and leaves behind the negative aspects of his former unfair life 87 Even so once the Dukes bet is complete Mortimer reveals his intent to return Valentine to poverty saying Do you really believe I would have a nigger run our family business Randolph concurs Neither would I 93 Budd concluded the film is a message loudly asking for a reassessment of prejudice and for level playing fields 87 Hernan Vera and Andrew Gordon argue racial stereotypes are enabled with the permission of the only black main character As part of their revenge against the Dukes Winthorpe disguises his identity by donning blackface makeup an act enabled by Valentine who has helped loosen up this strait laced character Because Valentine allowed it it makes the act acceptable This requires Valentine to accept and support Winthorpe despite having numerous reasons to dislike him including originally getting Valentine wrongly arrested and then later trying to frame Valentine to reclaim his old job Even so Valentine befriends Winthorpe and helps him get revenge on the Dukes the old establishment characters who demonstrate explicit racism The film requires Valentine to act white performing as is expected of him to survive in the Dukes world 94 Schiff argues that because the film identifies money as the most valuable entity this in turn means that Ophelia is only valuable as a prostitute because she is financially intelligent 92 Hadley Freeman said Ophelia is an example of the Smurfette principle a female character in an otherwise male ensemble cast who exists to be pretty and rescued by men 95 However it is Ophelia who rescues Winthorpe helping him to survive his new lowered state 93 Neal Karlen said Ophelia becomes a real person after telling Louis All I ve got going for me in this whole big wide world is this body this face and what I ve got up here referring to her brain 96 Trading Places also employs several conventions of its Christmas setting to highlight the individual loneliness of the main characters in particular Winthorpe On Christmas Eve he humiliates himself in front of his former bosses unwittingly losing his opportunity for his swap with Valentine to be undone by having become a criminal While waiting outside a store a dog urinates on him 97 98 He attempts suicide and only fails because the gun does not fire then it begins to rain on him The following day offers a Christmas redemption and a change of fortune as Winthorpe is integrated into the non traditional family unit of Coleman Ophelia and Valentine 1 97 Legacy editAlong with the impact their respective roles had on its stars careers 2 Trading Places is considered one of the best comedy films ever made and part of the canon of American comedies f In a 1988 interview Aykroyd said that he considered it among his A tier films along with Ghostbusters Dragnet The Blues Brothers and Spies Like Us 103 Bellamy and Ameche reprised their Duke characters for Murphy s 1988 film Coming to America Murphy portrays the affluent Prince Akeem who hands the now homeless brothers a large sum of cash Mortimer tells Randolph that it is enough to give them a new start 3 Of the two films Murphy has said that while he loves Trading Places he prefers Coming to America because it allowed him to portray multiple characters 104 The 2021 sequel Coming 2 America also references the Dukes revealing they used Akeem s donation to rebuild their business 105 106 In 2010 nearly 30 years after its release the film was cited in the testimony of Commodity Futures Trading Commission chief Gary Gensler regarding new regulations on the financial markets He said We have recommended banning using misappropriated government information to trade in the commodity markets In the movie Trading Places starring Eddie Murphy the Duke brothers intended to profit from trades in frozen concentrated orange juice futures contracts using an illicitly obtained and not yet public Department of Agriculture orange crop report Characters played by Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd intercept the misappropriated report and trade on it to profit and ruin the Duke brothers 107 The testimony was part of the Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act designed to prevent insider trading on commodities markets which had previously not been illegal Section 746 of the reform act is referred to as the Eddie Murphy rule 1 An anonymous seller sold off their portion of the royalties earned from the film for 140 000 in 2019 At the time the share was generating an average of 10 000 per annum 108 109 A musical adaptation of Trading Places debuted at the Alliance Theater in Atlanta Georgia on June 4 2022 110 Critical reassessment edit Trading Places is considered one of the best comedies of the 1980s and one of the best Christmas films 111 112 113 In 2015 the screenplay was listed as the joint thirty third funniest on the WGA s 101 Funniest Screenplays list tied with Ferris Bueller s Day Off 1986 102 114 In 2017 the BBC polled 253 critics 118 female 135 male from 52 countries on the funniest film made Trading Places came seventy fourth behind The Nutty Professor 1963 and The Naked Gun From the Files of Police Squad 1988 101 Several publications have named it one of the best films of the 1980s including number eight by IFC 115 number 17 by MTV 116 number 37 by USA Today 111 and number 41 by Rotten Tomatoes 112 It has also been listed as one of the best comedy films ever by publications including number 16 by Time Out 117 number 26 by Rotten Tomatoes 99 and number 48 by Empire 100 Although the film s story takes place over several weeks leading up to and after Christmas Trading Places is regarded as a Christmas film 1 98 In 2008 The Washington Post called it one of the most underrated Christmas films 118 The Atlantic described it as a less traditional Christmas film but one whose themes remain relevant particularly regarding the divide between the wealthy and poor 1 It has appeared on several lists of the best Christmas films including number 5 by Empire 119 number 12 by Entertainment Weekly 120 number 13 by Thrillist 121 number 23 by Time Out 122 number 24 by Rotten Tomatoes based on overall critical scores 113 number 45 by Today 123 and unranked by Country Living 124 and The Daily Telegraph 125 It has been a popular Christmas film on TV in Italy since its television debut in 1986 generally played on Christmas Eve 126 Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives the film an approval rating of 88 based on 52 reviews with an average rating of 7 5 10 The site s consensus states Featuring deft interplay between Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd Trading Places is an immensely appealing social satire 127 Metacritic gave the film a score of 69 out of 100 based on 10 critics which indicates generally favorable reviews 128 In the years followings its release some critics have praised the film while highlighting elements that they believe aged poorly including racial language the use of blackface and the implied rape of Beeks by a gorilla g The film s use of the word nigger said during Mortimer s statement that he will never allow Valentine to run his family business is sometimes censored in TV broadcasts Todd Larkins Williams director of the 2004 documentary The N Word said that it is a critical scene that should not be censored He considered it dangerous to pretend a word never existed as in turn other negative events could also be ignored 129 GQ argued that its social commentary remained relevant in spite of these elements 130 In 2020 Trading Places was one of 16 films that had a disclaimer added by British broadcaster Sky UK The disclaimer read This film has outdated attitudes language and cultural depictions which may cause offence today 131 Notes edit The 1983 budget of 15 million is equivalent to 44 1 million in 2022 The 1983 United States and Canada box office gross of 90 4 million is equivalent to 266 million in 2022 The 1983 worldwide box office gross of 120 6 million is equivalent to 354 million in 2022 Attributed to multiple references 42 53 54 55 The 394 million the Dukes lose is equivalent to 1 16 billion in 2022 Attributed to multiple references 2 99 100 101 102 Attributed to multiple references 1 95 129 130 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o White Gillian B Lam Bourree December 25 2015 Trading Places A 1983 Christmas Comedy That s Still Surprisingly Relevant The Atlantic Archived from the original on April 22 2019 Retrieved July 3 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al Wile Rob June 27 2013 It s The 30 Year Anniversary Of The Greatest Wall Street Movie Ever Made Here s The Story Behind It Business Insider Archived from the original on July 3 2020 Retrieved July 3 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l Drumm Diana June 8 2013 Trading Places More Than 7 Things You May Not Know About The Film But We Won t Bet A Dollar On It IndieWire Archived from the original on September 18 2018 Retrieved July 3 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m 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Attitudes Disclaimer for Jungle Book Breakfast at Tiffany s Variety Archived from the original on June 26 2020 Retrieved July 18 2020 Works cited edit Anderson Carolyn 1990 Diminishing Degree of Separation In Loukides Paul Fuller eds Beyond the Stars Themes and ideologies in American popular film Bowling Green University Popular Press p 161 ISBN 978 0 87972 701 7 Retrieved July 12 2020 Budd David 2002 Classic Encounters of Black on White Culture Meets Culture in the Movies an Analysis East West North and South With Filmographies McFarland amp Company p 210 ISBN 978 0 7864 1095 8 Retrieved November 1 2020 Childs Peter 2006 Pop Video Texts Contemporary Cultural Texts and Critical Approaches Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 2043 2 Retrieved July 12 2020 Metcalf Greg 1991 Christmas Conventions of American Films in the 1980s In Loukides Paul Fuller Linda K eds Beyond the Stars Plot conventions in American popular film Bowling Green University Popular Press pp 100 113 ISBN 978 0 87972 517 4 Retrieved July 12 2020 UIP s 25M Plus Club to end 94 Variety September 11 1995 Vera Hernan Gordon Andrew 2003 8 White Out Racial Masquerade by Whites in American Film I Screen Saviors Hollywood Fictions of Whiteness Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8476 9946 9 Retrieved July 12 2020 External links editTrading Places at IMDb nbsp Portals nbsp 1980s nbsp Film nbsp Philadelphia nbsp United StatesTrading Places at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trading Places amp oldid 1204739736, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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