Paulie is a 1998 American adventure fantasy comedy film about a disobedient talking parrot named Paulie, starring Tony Shalhoub, Cheech Marin, Gena Rowlands, Hallie Eisenberg, and Jay Mohr. Mohr performs both the voice of Paulie and the on-screen supporting role of Benny, a character who has a lot of dialogue with him. It received mixed to positive reviews and was a box office disappointment, grossing $26.9 million domestically against a $23 million budget. However, in the years after its release, Paulie would find a larger audience on home media sales.
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Paulie | |
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![]() Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | John Roberts |
Written by | Laurie Craig |
Produced by | Mark Gordon Gary Levinsohn Allison Lyon Segan |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Tony Pierce-Roberts |
Edited by | Bruce Cannon |
Music by | John Debney |
Production company | Mutual Film Company |
Distributed by | DreamWorks Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 91 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $23 million |
Box office | $26.9 million[1] |
The film is a picaresque tale about a blue-crowned conure who humans can understand named Paulie, and his long quest to return to his owner. Misha Vilyenkov, a Russian immigrant and former teacher of literature, lives in America and works as a janitor at an institute. He encounters Paulie there and is shocked to see him speaking as clearly as a human. Subsequently, he doesn't speak a word when Misha brings others to witness him.
Misha entices Paulie to tell him his story by offering him pieces of mango. He starts by telling about his original owner, a little girl named Marie who stutters. The story transitions to a flashback scene in which he is a baby. As Marie works on speech therapy, he begins to speak too, beginning with understanding the meaning of words and progressing to the construction of complex sentences. Marie's father, Warren, a soldier, returns home from Vietnam and decides that Paulie is not helping her. His resentment of the close bond between them, and their shared progress in speech development, is evident. It becomes obvious that Warren wants Marie to forget Paulie, when he brings her a cat, which Paulie does not get along with. Once again, Warren accuses him for Marie's speaking problems and believes she has imagined his ability to speak to humans. Eventually, after a dramatic event in which she falls off the roof in an attempt to teach Paulie to fly, Warren convinces her mother, Lila, to send him away, which devastates Marie.
Paulie is passed from one owner to another, eventually ending up in a pawn shop, owned by Artie where he spends his time insulting the customers. One day, a shady customer named Benny shows interest in purchasing him, thinking he could profit from his ability to talk to humans. Before he can act, however, a widowed artist named Ivy purchases him with the intent of reforming his rude personality. She befriends him and agrees to help him find Marie, who has moved to Los Angeles. They begin traveling using her mobile home, but when she loses her sight in the middle of their trip, Paulie decides to stay and take care of her. After she dies, Paulie, having finally learned to fly, continues his journey.
In East Los Angeles, Paulie joins a group of performing conures owned by migrant musician Ignacio, temporarily forgetting about Marie as he develops feelings for a female conure named Lupe. At one of his performances, Benny, having also moved to Los Angeles, recognizes him and attempts to purchase him from Ignacio. When Ignacio refuses his offer, Benny makes a phony police call at one of his performances. As the police show up, Benny kidnaps Paulie amidst all the chaos and Ignacio is arrested and presumably deported. Under Benny's influence, Paulie begins a life of crime. In a botched jewel theft, he flies down through the chimney of a house, where he is trapped inside, and then abandoned.
Paulie is then brought to the institute, his current home, where Dr. Reingold, the head of the institute, his employees and fellow scientists are stunned by his ability to speak to humans. They subject him to testing, and Reingold promises that he will be reunited with Marie when they are done. When he discovers that he has been lied to—that Marie has been found but the institute has instead decided to keep him as their property—he refuses to cooperate with any more tests, humiliating Reingold in front of his scientific peers by acting like an ordinary parrot and then insulting him. As a result, his wings are clipped, and he is eventually imprisoned in the basement when he starts pecking the researchers.
Moved by Paulie's story, Misha decides to give up his menial job to release him and take him to Marie. After escaping from the institute, freeing the encaged animals, and taking a bus to her address, they find her, now a full grown, beautiful young woman unrecognizable to Paulie. After a moment of confusion, Paulie and Marie are happily reunited as she sings his favorite song and he remembers her. The film ends with the trio happily entering her house.
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Directed by John Roberts and written by Laurie Craig, the film's production budget was $23 million.[2]
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The film scored a 62% approval rating at Rotten Tomatoes from 37 reviews, with an average rating of 6.2/10.[3] It was distributed in 24 countries and 10 different languages between 1998 and 1999.[citation needed] Box office receipts grossed $5,369,800 on the opening weekend, and $26,875,268 total.[4] It was released in 1,812 North American theaters.[2]
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Award | Category | Result |
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ALMA Award | Outstanding Actor in a Feature Film - Cheech Marin | Nominated |
ALMA Award | Outstanding Actress in a Feature Film - Trini Alvarado | Nominated |
BAFTA Children's Award | Best Children's Feature Film | Won |
Bronze Gryphon | Early Screens - John Roberts | Won |
Young Artist Award | Best family feature - Comedy | Nominated |
Young Artist Award | Best performance in a feature film - Young Actress aged ten or under - Hallie Kate Eisenberg | Nominated |
Young Artist Award | Best performance by a young actress in a comedy film - Hallie Kate Eisenberg | Nominated |