
Jazz In Film
Ever have one of those trips where everything goes wrong? Well, buckle up, because George and Gwen Kellerman’s adventure in The Out-Of-Towners (1969) takes “bad travel day” to comedic extremes.
Here’s the setup: George is up for a big promotion, and the company’s flying him and his wife Gwen to New York City—all expenses paid—for an interview with the higher-ups. Sweet deal, right? They’ve got it all planned out: arrive the night before, catch dinner and a Broadway show, wake up refreshed and ready to impress. What could possibly go wrong?
Everything!
Their plane gets diverted to Boston. Okay, minor hiccup. But then comes a train ride from hell, a mugging, getting caught up in a police chase, and—just for good measure—George breaks a tooth. It’s like the universe conspired to turn their dream trip into an absolute disaster.
Director Arthur Hiller orchestrates this chaos beautifully, with Jack Lemmon and Sandy Dennis playing the increasingly frazzled couple to perfection. And keeping the whole madcap adventure moving? A fantastic score by none other than Quincy Jones.
Sometimes the journey to success is… well, let’s just say it’s memorable.
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