
OUT TO SEA (PG-13)
Director: Martha
Coolidge
Stars: Jack Lemmon,
Walter Matthau, Brent Spiner, Dyan
Cannon, Gloria De Haven, Elaine
Stritch, Hal Linden, Donald
O'Connor, Edward Mulhare, Rue
McClanahan, Alexandra Powers,
Sean O'Bryan
Running Time: 106 minutes.
Having appeared together in a number of movies over
the past three decades, Jack Lemmon and Walter
Matthau, the screen's original odd couple, have
established a wonderful rapport that enlivens even the
most mediocre comedy. Their easygoing style and
relationship is immediately obvious in Out To Sea,
their latest screen pairing.
In this amusing cross between Grumpy Old Men and
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, the pair play a couple of
lonely old men who land a job on a cruise ship posing
as dance hosts. Unlucky gambler Charlie (Matthau)
hopes to meet some wealthy widows, while his
brother-in-law Herb (Lemmon) is a little more
reluctant to become involved in the foolish scheme.
The pair immediately run afoul of Godwyn (Star
Trek's Brent Spiner), the obsequious cruise director,
who is desperate to ensure that everything runs
smoothly on his ship. Matthau pursues the beautiful
Liz (Dyan Cannon), but he has a rival in the urbane
and very rich Carswell (Edward Mulhare, from the
Knight Rider tv series). Meanwhile, the recently
widowed Lemmon falls for Vivian (Gloria De
Haven), a widow who is accompanying her daughter
and son-in-law on their anniversary holiday.
It's a little surprising to see a Hollywood romantic
comedy featuring septuagenarians rather than self
indulgent twentysomethings. Martha Coolidge
(Rambling Rose, etc) maintains the light weight tone
of the material throughout, and she sensibly allows
her two stars plenty of room to manoeuvre. Matthau
and Lemmon obviously have a lot of fun here, and,
once again, their contrasting personalities provide
much of the film's humor. Matthau moves with all
the grace of a wounded elephant, and the scene
where he "trips the light fantastic" on the ship's dance
floor is precious. The final credit sequence features
some choice out-takes and gaffes; many are hilarious
little gems that provide wonderful insights into the
relationship between the two stars.
Cast against type, Spiner has a lot of fun sending up
his own image as our heroes' worst nightmare - a
song and dance man raised on a military base - and
his scene-stealing performance is one of the highlights
of Out To Sea. Coolidge has fleshed out the cast
with seasoned veterans like Donald O'Connor
(Singing In The Rain, etc), Elaine Stritch, Barney
Miller's Hal Linden, and Golden Girls' Rue
McClanahan, who all seem to revel in the material.
© 1996-97 Greg King / Used With Permission