Rating: PG13
Genre:
Comedy
Theatrical Release: 12/11/1987(USA)
Release Date: 05/31/2005
SubTitles: English/French/Espanol
Dubbed: English/French/Espanol
Sound: DDS2.0
Run Time: 88 Minutes
Flags: Mild Violence, Adult Situations, Questionable for Children, Adult Language
Distributor/Studio: MGM
The "exchange murders" plot gambit, played with utter solemnity in
Hitchcock's
Strangers on a Train, is used as the launching pad for raucous laughter in
Throw Momma From the Train. Director/star
Danny DeVito plays
Owen Lift, a middle-aged bachelor, totally dominated by his gorgon mother, played with hilarious ferocity by
Anne Ramsey.
Billy Crystal co-stars as
Larry Donner, a creative-writing professor, saddled with a vituperative, thoroughly despicable ex-wife,
Margaret (
Kate Mulgrew). Signing up for
Larry's writing course,
Owen has trouble at first with character development and construction in his stories.
Larry recommends that
Owen watch a screening of
Strangers on a Train, which he considered a model of tight, concise storytelling.
Owen is so entranced by the film that he decides to emulate
Strangers star
Robert Walker. That is,
Owen wants
Larry to bump off his mother, in exchange for
Owen's murder of
Margaret. Without being asked,
Owen does away with
Margaret (or so it seems), then hounds
Larry to the point of killing "
Momma." This being a
comedy, the actual consequences of the swap-murder plot aren't nearly as calamitous as in the
Hitchcock film. Cinematographer
Barry Sonnenfeld would apply the "black humor" lessons learned in
Throw Momma From the Train for his own directorial debut,
The Addams Family (1991).
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide