Rating: R
Genre:
Comedy Drama
Theatrical Release: 03/06/1987(USA)
Release Date: 04/02/2002
SubTitles: English/French/Espanol
Dubbed: English
Sound: DDS
Run Time: 108 Minutes
Flags: Adult Situations, Not For Children, Adult Language
Distributor/Studio: Walt Disney Video
The second of director
Barry Levinson's
Baltimore Trilogy (the first was
Diner, the third
Avalon),
Tin Men seems at first glance to be much ado about nothing. Set in 1963, the story begins when two aluminum siding salesmen, played by
Richard Dreyfuss and
Danny DeVito, are involved in a traffic accident. Fueled by their own individual frustrations--Dreyfuss dislikes the phonier aspects of his profession, while DeVito is unhappily married to
Barbara Hershey--the two men begin an all-out war of harassment against one another. DeVito goes on a destructive rampage against Dreyfuss' material possessions, while Dreyfuss contrives to steal away DeVito's wife. An ironic twist of fate ironically, brings the two men to common ground at the finale. As with the earlier
Diner, Levinson spends a great deal of screen time showing small minds obsessed with small things: counterpointing the snow-balling hostilities between Dreyfuss and DeVito is
Jackie Gayle as DeVito's partner, who can talk of nothing but the TV series
Bonanza.
Michael Tucker, who like Barry Levinson was Baltimore born and bred, repeats his
Diner role as "Bagel." Listen for director Levinson's voice as a baseball stadium announcer.
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide