Nothing But Trouble | 
| Actors: Danielle Aykroyd, P.h. Aykroyd, Peter Aykroyd, Daniel Baldwin, Raymond J. Barry Studio: Warner Home Video Category: DVD
List Price: $9.98 Buy Used: $0.73 You Save: $9.25 (93%)
New (66) Used (158) Collectible (6) from $0.73
Rating: 114 reviews Sales Rank: 5867
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dvd, Full Screen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled) Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 DVD Layers: 1 DVD Sides: 1 Picture Format: Pan & Scan Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 94 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.5 x 0.5
MPN: WARD16376D ISBN: 6305162018 UPC: 085391637622 EAN: 9786305162018 ASIN: 6305162018
Theatrical Release Date: February 15, 1991 Release Date: November 10, 1998 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description A pair of highway travellers are taken prisoner by an eerie small town judge with his own brand of justice. Studio: Warner Home Video Release Date: 02/03/2004 Starring: John Candy Demi Moore Run time: 93 minutes Rating: Pg13 Director: Dan Ackroyd
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| Customer Reviews: Read 109 more reviews...
If you saw it as a child, you'll love it forever!!! July 4, 2009 T. Malone (Chicago, IL) I don't understand all the horrible reviews people are giving "Nothing But Trouble." I mean, what more could one expect from a film starring Dan Aykroyd, Chevy Chase, and John Candy?! This is one of my favorite films of ALL TIME. If you have children, LET THEM WATCH THIS FILM. Everyone I know who knows of (and loves) this film saw it as a child, and there is some weird quality about this movie that makes it that much more rewarding to experience the Valkenvania court house as a child. Other movies that are also good to see as a child if for no other purpose than to revisit them years later as an adult: "She Devil," "Problem Child," "Problem Child II," "Death Becomes Her," "War of the Roses," and "The Worse Little Witch."
NOTHING BUT TROUBLE (WARNER BROS./1991) October 30, 2008 prospero72 (Cox's Creek, Kentucky) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
REVIEW: As the old cliche goes: comedy is a very subjective art form. What some people find hilarious to the point of hysterics, others may see as scraping the bottom barrel of stupidity. But if comedy itself is the hardest medium to master then BLACK comedy (that is: comedy which finds humor in the most distasteful of subject matter) is nearly impossible to bring across on screen or in front of a live audience unless you have an innate genius for such ribald material (a la Alfred Hitchcock or Mel Brooks). Case in point here: Dan Aykroyd's deliberately whacked-out, over-the-top, disgusting, cornball of a movie "NOTHING BUT TROUBLE". In it he plays a 106-year-old Justice Of The Peace named Alvin Valkenheiser who presides over a carnival-house court, and who is quick to pronounce a death sentence for the most mundane of traffic violations. His latest "capture" is big-time stock report publisher Chris Thorne (Chase) who is helping a lady in distress (Moore) by driving her to Las Vegas in order to settle some personal business there. Also on board are two annoying South American "Brazillionares" who impose themselves upon Chase and Moore when they overhear their travel plans. On their way the two of them suggest they have a picnic: Moore agrees, Chase grumbles, and soon the foursome are zooming through Valkenvania where they get pulled over by patrolman John Candy. But their nightmare has only begun as they witness first-hand the outlandish antics of Justice Valkenheiser, are treated to a memorably bizarre dinner, and are imprisoned for the night where they sneak out and discover a whole lot more about Valkenvania then they really wish they had ever known. All of this sounds fairly interesting: but with the exception of Candy (in a dual role as the patrolman and the mute strongman...er...strongwoman Eldona), and the painstaking production design there really isn't much here to get excited about. For one thing: it just isn't very funny. And nothing is more painful and depressing than watching a comedy that isn't funny. Especially one that resorts to such desperate measures as making Aykroyd wear a prosthetic nose that looks like a certain part of the male anatomy, or having him and actor John Deveikis dress up in a couple of rubber suits in order to portray two overgrown monster babies. This is as bad as movie making gets. HARSH LANGUAGE: about 32 words. VIOLENCE: about 10 scenes of moderate-to-gross violence. NUDITY/SEXUAL REFERENCES: about 3 (as well as the aforementioned prosthetic "nose" of Justice Valkenheiser). DRUG REFERENCES: some drinking, smoking, and a scene where Candy pulls over a carload of dope dealers sampling their own goods. RAZZIE AWARDS: Worst Supporting Actor (Dan Aykroyd) RAZZIE AWARD NOMINATIONS: Worst Picture, Worst Actress (Demi Moore), Worst Supporting actress (John Candy - in drag), Worst Screenplay (Dan Aykroyd), Worst Director (Dan Aykroyd)
Not funny September 6, 2008 Hairy Larry (Toronto, Ontario) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Not funny, uninterestingly perverse in a non-sexual way; normally interesting actors trapped in a truly awful movie.
Nothing. May 8, 2008 James Richard Flavin (Iwaki, Japan) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
The title should have been simply, "Nothing" I've seen some real stinkers over the years, but this film is in its own league. The film's only possible saving grace might be in using it in one of those old, "This is your brain on drugs." TV ads.
Whackier Than I Remember May 3, 2008 E. Drake (Northeast, USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This was a film that I loved as a child. Along with "Big", "The Burbs", "The Adventures of Baron Munchausen" and a half a dozen others, if this film was on TV, I would stop everything and see it to its end. Generally, as I get older, I rarely watch a film more than 1 or 2 times. But these films of my childhood I have seen at least a dozen times. After not seeing this movie for at least eight years or so, I was surprised to see how much I remembered and even more surprised to see how much I just didn't "get" as a child. The obvious that I never realized as a child: the judge's [...]-shaped nose, the hot dog the judge sloppily ate, Chevy Chase's sweet talking to Demi Moore, Tupac Shakur's cameo...etc. The not-so-obvious was how totally messed up, sociopathic, criminally insane, whacked out of their skulls, the judge's family was. Wow, was this one freaky movie, no wonder I liked it so much as a kid. Surely, as I watched it with a slightly maturer mind, I did not feel it was as exciting as I used to think it was. In fact, I am pretty sure that anyone who has not yet scene this movie and sees it today, will most probably think that this is a horrible film. However for those whom this film remains a part of their childhood, for [...] new or a [...] used on Amazon, I think its a good deal. Oh and by the way, the ending to this film really stinks. For film junkies, Peter Aykroyd, Dan Aykroyd's younger brother, wrote the story for this film. Dan Aykroyd wrote the screenplay. Maybe I am the only one, but I would like some new films with Chevy Chase in them. New Dan Aykroyd films would be nice too.
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