Let's Go to Prison | |
---|---|
Directed by | Bob Odenkirk |
Written by | Robert Ben Garant Thomas Lennon Michael Patrick Jann |
Produced by | Marc Abraham Matt Berenson Paul Young |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Ramsey Nickell |
Edited by | Eric L. Beason Denis Thorlaksen |
Music by | Alan Elliott |
Carsey-Werner Strike Entertainment | |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
| |
90 minutes | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $4 million[1] |
Box office | $4.63 million |
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Let's Go to Prison is a 2006 American comedy film directed by Bob Odenkirk and starring Dax Shepard, Will Arnett and Chi McBride. The film was loosely based on the non-fiction book, You Are Going to Prison by Jim Hogshire. It was released in theatres November 17, 2006.
Plot[edit]
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John Lyshitski (Dax Shepard) has spent most of his life in prison, serving three different sentences. Each of his three trials were before Judge Nelson Biederman III, who was well respected but harsh and well known for imposing tough sentences. After being released from his third sentence, John decides to take revenge on Judge Biederman. John calls the courthouse under an alias to determine when Judge Biederman will be presiding over his next case, only to discover that Judge Biederman died three days before John's release.
John turns his attention to the late judge's brash son, Nelson Biederman IV (Will Arnett). At a dedication ceremony for Judge Nelson Biederman III, John breaks into Nelson's BMW, wrecks the interior and empties Nelson's emergency inhaler. After the ceremony, Nelson drives off and, finding his inhaler empty, panics and hyperventilates. He stops at a pharmacy and frantically searches through the shelves, desperately seeking a replacement for the empty inhaler. Unable to explain himself due to his asthma attack, Nelson's erratic behavior horrifies the pharmacy owners, who think he is a junkie seeking a fix. After Nelson finally finds an inhaler after knocking lots of drugs off the shelves onto the floor, he begins to use it, but when he holds it up over his head, the pharmacy owners mistake the inhaler for a tiny pistol and call the police. Meanwhile, John, who has followed Nelson to the pharmacy in his van, has witnessed the entire incident from a distance. John takes out his real gun and fires a shot into the air. The gunshot sound further terrifies the pharmacy owners, who think that Nelson is shooting at them. One of the owners returns fire with a shotgun, barely missing Nelson. Shortly afterward the police arrive and arrest Nelson. John is ecstatic that Nelson has landed in the criminal justice system which he suffered in for so long at the hands of Nelson's father.
Nelson is arrested and charged with assault and armed robbery. He demands that the Biederman Foundation do everything possible to have him acquitted. The board nearly complies with Nelson's demands, but, as they are fed up with his obnoxious behavior, they suddenly realize that this is an opportunity to get rid of him. They purposely conspire to provide him with a horribly incompetent defense at the trial. Their (and also John's) plan works perfectly as Nelson is found guilty and sentenced to three to five years in state prison. John, not satisfied with Nelson merely going to prison, decides to join him in prison by purposely selling drugs to undercover cops. At his trial before the same judge Nelson had, John pleads guilty and asks for the same sentence (3–5 years) at the same prison that Nelson is in. He manages to become Nelson's cellmate, pretends to be his friend, and gives Nelson terrible advice on surviving life in prison.
Despite being an unhardened and inexperienced prisoner, Nelson manages to get himself out of the many situations that John's misinformation creates. He meets gang leader Barry (Chi McBride), an imposing, brawny gay fellow who coerces Nelson into a relationship. Despite his intimidating appearance, Barry is a sensitive romantic – he likes smooth jazz, he supplies potential romantic partners with his finest toilet-made Merlot, and he has transformed his prison cell into a candle-lit, rose-bedecked passion parlour.
Nelson gets on the wrong side of the prison's white supremacist gang leader Lynard (Michael Shannon), who promises to kill him. Nelson gets his hands on a deadly chemical and a syringe with the intent of using it to commit suicide. Before he can do so, Nelson is attacked by Lynard in his cell. As Lynard attacks Nelson, the syringe falls out of Nelson's pocket. Lynard assumes it to be heroin and injects himself with it, accidentally killing himself and earning Nelson the respect of and authority over his fellow white supremacists, who believe Nelson had done the deed. Nelson reaches his one-year parole hearing not only relatively unharmed, but the new leader of the white supremacist gang for 'killing' Lynard, who was violent and spiteful towards all the prisoners including his fellow white supremacists. Nelson, who initially submits to being Barry's partner out of fear, grows to care for Barry and willingly plays along with the 'relationship' to keep him happy. Nelson also protects Barry from Lynard's former cronies, who are now loyal to Nelson.
Everything now looks bright for Nelson, who has had incredibly good fortune despite all of John's shenanigans. However, John has one more trick up his sleeve. He drugs Nelson and causes his parole to be denied. Enraged, Nelson confronts John who then confesses to framing Nelson and causes him to end up in jail. The two get into a fight. John quickly realizes that he is now Nelson's target. The guards set up a death match between the two. John and Nelson secretly hatch a plan to inject each other with a coma-inducing drug. The guards and prisoners, believing that they are dead, bury the pair in the graveyard. Just before the death match, Nelson had legally adopted Barry, who has been paroled, to allow him to retake control of the Biederman Foundation. Barry uses the Biederman Foundation's funds bribe the mortician to skip the autopsy. Barry later digs up John and Nelson. John, Nelson and Barry begin a new chapter of life, starting a winery (the product being 'toilet wine'). Nelson, Barry, and John are now rich, free, and the best of friends.
Cast[edit]
- Dax Shepard as John Lyshitski
- Will Arnett as Nelson Biederman IV
- Chi McBride as Barry
- David Koechner as Shanahan
- Dylan Baker as Warden
- Michael Shannon as Lynard
- David Darlow as Judge Nelson Biederman III
- Bob Odenkirk as Duane
- A. J. Balance as John Lyshitski – 18 years
- Tim Heidecker as Wine Tester
- Eric Wareheim as Wine Tester
Production notes[edit]
The defunct Joliet Prison in Joliet, Illinois used for the film is the same prison featured in the beginning of The Blues Brothers (1980) and the first season of the Fox show Prison Break (2005).
During the end credits, Chi McBride in character as Barry, sings a song called 'Shower With U' (credited as 'Barry's Love Theme' on the soundtrack) in which he repeatedly sings 'I wanna take a shower with you'.
The studio made significant alterations during the film's editing process that made Odenkirk unhappy with the final result (which also happened with the Mr. Show with Bob and David film, Run Ronnie Run, which Odenkirk wrote). According to writers Tom Lennon and Robert Ben Garant's appearance on the Nerdist Podcast from August 23, 2011, changes included a happier ending, the removal of a sparse drums-only score recorded by Meg White of The White Stripes, and other alterations that made a significant change to the overall tone of the film.[2][3][4]
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Reception[edit]
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The film received mostly negative reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 12% based on 41 reviews. The consensus states: 'Let's Go to Prison is guilty on all counts of clichéd setups, base humor, and failure to ellicit laughs.'[5]Metacritic gives it a score of 27 out of 100 sampled from 13 critics, indicating 'generally unfavorable reviews'.[6]
Dennis Harvey of Variety wrote: 'Unlike the vast majority of rude bigscreen comedies these days, 'Prison' may actually improve with repeat viewings, since its best aspects are offhand enough to be missed the first time around.'[7]Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter did not find the film funny 'the few laughs this purported comedy contains are fully displayed in its far more amusing trailer'.[8]
Box Office Mojo reports that the film opened in 11th place with a meager take of $2,220,050. It closed with a domestic gross of $4,630,045.[9]
Home media[edit]
The film was released on DVD March 6, 2007 with deleted scenes and an alternate ending.[10]
The Unrated version contains pre-credits and post-credits scenes that feature a real-life officer[citation needed] giving the details about the film.
References[edit]
- ^'Will Arnett Interview - Let's Go to Prison and Blades of Glory'. Movies.about.com. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2017-02-22.
- ^Elliott, Alan (October 4, 2005). 'Part 2: Meg White'. Alan Elliott's official blog. Retrieved October 19, 2014.
- ^'Worst Reviews' Staff (2006). 'Let's Go To Prison' WorstPreviews.com. Retrieved October 19, 2014.
- ^Hutchinson, Sean (October 10, 2014). '15 Things You Probably Didn't Know About 'Let's Go to Prison', MentalFloss.com. Retrieved October 19, 2014.
- ^'Let's Go To Prison (2012)'. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- ^'Let's Go to Prison Reviews'. Metacritic. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- ^Harvey, Dennis (19 November 2006). 'Let's Go to Prison'. Variety.
- ^''Let's Go to Prison' a criminal endeavor'. The Hollywood Reporter. 20 November 2006 – via Reuters.
- ^'Let's Go to Prison (2006) - Weekend Box Office Results'. Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on 2012-10-23. Retrieved 2011-08-25.
- ^'Let's Go To Prison Comes to DVD March 6'. Archived from the original on 2007-01-05. Retrieved 2007-01-03.
External links[edit]
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- Let's Go to Prison at IMDb
- Let's Go to Prison at AllMovie
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John Lyshitski is a car stealing slacker, with a weed problem, and has been in Illinois’ Rossmore State Penitentiary so many times, he knows its entire population of both staff and cons by their fast names. Cursed with the old ill luck of being in the wrong place, at the wrong time, in possession of the wrong car, he’s been deemed a lost cause repeat offender in the eyes of everyone else. When the heartless judge, who has been behind most of his sentences, goes to the big court house in the sky, John decides to ruin the man’s legacy by having the judge’s only offspring, Nelson Biederman IV, thrown in the slammer along with him. Here, the world-class selfish jerk learns a certain old lesson the hard way: Do unto others as you would have others do unto you. But has John gone too far in the payback department?
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Hilarious offbeat comedy. I say “offbeat” since the main love interest is a large black man named Barry, who will woo you like you’ve never been woo-ed before. This is not your normal Hollywood comedy, it’s got more of an “Arrested Development” feel – a funny script and Bob Odenkirk’s direction (and supporting player role) make this work. Basically, this film takes every men’s prison cliché and pushes it ten times further. If you’ve ever wanted to just stay in and drink toilet wine with a loved one, then this film should resonate with you. This is destined to end up a cult movie since it’s not exactly mainstream humor, but if you’re a fan of Odenkirk and David Cross’s “Mr. Show,” you’ll find a lot here to enjoy – and you’ll also find the very tall Brian Posner standing in a crowd scene near the end.
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