Directed by
Woody Allen
Written by
Woody Allen and Mickey Rose
Cast
Woody Allen .... Fielding Mellish
Louise Lasser .... Nancy
Carlos Montalbán .... General Emilio M. Vargas
Natividad Abascal .... Yolanda
Jacobo Morales .... Esposito
Miguel Ángel Suárez .... Luis
David Ortiz .... Sanchez
René Enríquez .... Diaz
Jack Axelrod .... Arroyo
Howard Cosell .... Himself
Roger Grimsby .... Himself
Don Dunphy .... Himself
Charlotte Rae .... Mrs. Mellish
Stanley Ackerman .... Dr. Al Mellish
Dan Frazer .... Priest
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| Admit it, if you were a writer/ director/actor you'd write this stuff for yourself too. |
Woody plays Fielding Mellish, a product tester who tests products that aren’t particularly funny. We first see him testing out an exercise office desk, which is mildly amusing. He meets a political activist, Nancy, who he becomes involved with in the type of romantic comedy scenes that are funnier in later Woody Allen films. Before long she breaks up with him. Determined to win her back he travels to the South American country of San Marcos, to participate in one of Nancy’s favourite causes.
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| This makes me so nostalgic for my University days. |
Eventually the rebels overthrow the government. Fielding becomes President after the rebel leader goes crazy, making such laws such as one declaring that everyone under the age of 16 is now 16. When Fielding returns to America to try and get government support for the beleaguered San Marcos economy he’s arrested and put on trial for treason.
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| If I were a writer/director/actor I think I'd leave Howard Cosell out of this scene. |
South American rebels and old school boxing commentators aside, Bananas still isn’t the classic it’s made out to be, I think there’s enough good stuff in here to make the film worth checking out. You just have to have some patience to sit through the dud jokes. And, like all of Woody’s films that star Woody, he acts the way he acts. And if you don’t like that you probably won’t like this. That should be enough information.
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