Renaissance Man

Renaissance Man

1994 "One Man's Mission To Teach The Few, The Proud... The Impossible!"
Renaissance Man
Renaissance Man

Renaissance Man

6.2 | 2h8m | PG-13 | en | Drama

An advertising man is slowly sliding downhill. When he is fired from his job in Detroit, he signs up for unemployment. One day they find him a job: teaching thinking skills to Army recruits. He arrives on base to find that there is no structure set up for the class.

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6.2 | 2h8m | PG-13 | en | Drama , Comedy | More Info
Released: June. 03,1994 | Released Producted By: Cinergi Pictures , Touchstone Pictures Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

An advertising man is slowly sliding downhill. When he is fired from his job in Detroit, he signs up for unemployment. One day they find him a job: teaching thinking skills to Army recruits. He arrives on base to find that there is no structure set up for the class.

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Cast

Danny DeVito , Gregory Hines , James Remar

Director

Adam Greenberg

Producted By

Cinergi Pictures , Touchstone Pictures

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Reviews

Robert J. Maxwell The director, Penny Marshall, belongs to a group that includes Ron Howard and Rob Reiner. They reliably produce family movies that are commercial in that they're emotionally satisfying, politically correct, show little or no smoking, and are without special challenge. Their products are to movies as Time Magazine is to news. That doesn't necessarily mean they're poor movies. You want basic news in a familiar format, you read Time Magazine.In this case, poor Danny DeVito is an award-winning advertising man who loses his job and takes the only alternative -- teaching on an army base to a dozen soldiers who are marginal and need to be taught to think.The diverse students are scornful, having been ordered to attend the class. DeVito feels hopeless. But, bit by bit, both DeVito and the class come around to mutually relish the bond they've formed. On top of that, DeVito, who marched against the Vietnam war, accommodates himself to the army, and the students learn the difference between a simile and a metaphor.It has its funny moments -- DeVito stranded on top of a tall tower -- but the underlying theme is a serious one. That's how you make a commercial movie that the whole family will enjoy. It's not an insult to the intelligence, not an orgy of blood, not based on a comic strip or a cartoon character, and it has a happy ending. The ending is predictable because it's part of a friendly formula: mismatched teacher and class who learn from each other, as in "The Blackboard Jungle," "The Private War of Major Benson," or "To Sir, With Love." The reason it's part of a formula is that it's been proved to work.On the whole, the students may be ignorant, in the sense of not knowing much about high culture or grammar. They may not be able to write twelve-tone music, but they're not stupid, in the sense of being unable to learn quickly. I taught night school at Camp Lejeune and the Marines were as bright as any, and a few were very quick on their mental feet indeed.
Predrag Danny De Vito is Bill Rego, a successful ad exec and father who is made unemployed when a stressful journey to work causes the loss of an important contract for the ad company. After suffering the humiliation of having to start unemployment, he is assigned a teaching post at a military base due to a master degree from University (making him an eligible teacher). The military believes if they can help recruits cut the mustard at physical aspects, they can help the lower IQ'd in the brain department as well. After the initial conflict with his class due to their varying social background and much to the resentment of their drill instructor, he starts to teach them Shakespeare (in true sarcastic DeVito style), gaining their respect along the way. Also features Mark Walhberg in an early role. A thoroughly good film, well acted and very well scripted.Overall rating: 6 out of 10.
bkoganbing One of the most moving experiences in cinema I had during the Nineties was watching Renaissance Man. It's more than a comedy about underachievers realizing their potential. It's about the man who makes them realize their worth as human beings getting quite an education about life himself.Danny DeVito is that man in a role about as far removed as you can get from Louis DePalma in Taxi and Lawrence Garfield in Other People's Money. He's an advertising man who loses a couple of big clients while getting stuck in traffic and gets bounced from his job.Needing an income while looking for a job, the Michigan Unemployment Department gives him an interesting job, a civilian remedial education teacher for the United States Army. He's assigned to a class of eight trainees who might wash out if they don't shape up. It's their mental attitudes that need adjusting.A little trial and error and DeVito hits upon the idea to use Shakespeare, specifically Hamlet as a teaching tool. Interpreting and learning life's lesson from one of the greatest works of literature in the English language apparently works and in ways far beyond making these trainees get through basic training.This is my favorite film with Danny DeVito and he's not an easy fit into army life. Cliff Robertson, James Remar, and Gregory Hines are some of the army people he deals with.But the eight trainees are the heart of the film. Mark Wahlberg, Lillo Brancato, Kadeem Hardison, Richard Jones, Khalil Kain, Gregory Sporleto, Stacey Dash are seven of them. One of them doesn't make it through and ironically because of an act of kindness. But my favorite in the film is Peter Simmons who plays Private Brian Davis from Grand Forks, North Dakota. It's young men like him and his father before him in Vietnam who was killed in action who keep this country safe and secure. He gets the best recognition possible at the end of the film and you are guaranteed not to have a dry eye when you see it.Renaissance Man is a beautifully crafted film from Penny Marshall and should not be missed when broadcast.
kscotay What I don't like...Hollywood took such literary license with this movie, I had to comment. If this squad is "double-d", I think that casting services need to be fired... Hobbs is obviously no dummy, Melvin has a sleep disorder, Leroy was a jock but he's no dummy....Why are the dd's allowed to go off-base during their basic training. When they go off the base, they're in their OD (olive drabs) uniforms which the military frowns on, but then they also went to Stratford Ontario from Michigan (International Border) into Canada (the Bluewater Bridge joining Port Huron and Sarnia). Devito is a little too unmilitary and generally a jerk, but gets the girl in the end. When did they have the time to put the rap ditty together.What I did like... It's not totally mindless entertainment, and there's some funny scenes or one-liners so it's not a total wash.