Middle Men (film)
Middle Men | |
---|---|
Theatrical poster | |
Directed by | George Gallo |
Produced by |
Christopher Mallick William Sherak Jason Shuman Michael Weiss |
Written by |
George Gallo Andy Weiss |
Starring |
Luke Wilson Giovanni Ribisi Gabriel Macht James Caan |
Music by | Brian Tyler |
Cinematography | Lukas Ettlin |
Edited by | Malcolm Campbell |
Production company |
Oxymoron Entertainment & Paramount Pictures |
Distributed by | Paramount Vantage[1] |
Release dates |
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Running time | 105 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $20 million[2] |
Box office | $754,301[2][3] |
Middle Men is a 2009 American drama film directed by George Gallo and written by Gallo and Andy Weiss. It stars Luke Wilson, Giovanni Ribisi, Gabriel Macht and James Caan.[4] The movie is based on the experiences of Christopher Mallick who was previously associated with the internet billing companies Paycom and ePassporte. Christopher Mallick has been accused of stealing millions of dollars from his customers at ePassporte to fund the creation of the film.[5][6][7][8]
Plot
In 2004 Houston, Jack Harris drives with several million dollars in a duffel bag to deliver to Russian mobsters, worried about the safety of his wife Diana and their children. In 1997 Los Angeles, Jack helps a sick friend co-managing a nightclub. Wayne Beering and Buck Dolby are best friends renting together. The drug-addicted friends are watching porn when Wayne asks why there is no porn on the internet. Buck, a former NASA scientist, takes 15 minutes to create a program to allow online credit card transactions to charge people for looking at porn on their website. They earn thousands of dollars in a matter of days. Needing more porn they approach Nikita Sokoloff, a Russian mob boss who owns a local strip club, who agrees to 25% of their business in return for letting them photograph and film his strippers.
Buck and Wayne's website is successful and they party in Las Vegas while neglecting to make payments to Sokoloff. Jack has made the LA nightclub a success and attracts the attention of Jerry Haggerty, a crooked lawyer hired by Wayne and Buck to sort out their problem with Sokoloff. Jack meets the friends and becomes a partner in the business, paying Haggerty $200,000 to get out, knowing Haggerty is under federal indictment and a threat to the business.
Sokoloff's nephew comes to collect his $400,000 profit, but when he threatens to kill Jack's family, one of Jack's body guards punches his head so hard that he falls dead. Jack and his partners dump the body in the ocean and fabricate a story that Sokoloff's nephew took the money and ran. Sokoloff is skeptical, but agrees to let it pass in return for an increase to 50% of the partnership.
Jack expands the business by dropping their porn site and focusing on the online credit card billing services. They create a billing company called "24/7 billing.com", becoming the titular Middle Men for other internet-based porn providers. The billing business is making hundreds of millions of dollars within a year. Jack becomes addicted to the money, sex and power of his new lifestyle, spends little time with his Houston family and starts a relationship with porn star Audrey Dawns.
Haggerty, bitter that Jack cut him out of what has become a multimillion dollar partnership, schemes to take over the company. He manipulates the foolish Wayne and Buck to work with Denny Z, providing billing services for Denny's numerous child pornography websites.
Audrey's live stream porn site is watched by an international web of terrorists, which the US government uses to track and arrest or kill the terrorists. The FBI asks for Jack and Audrey's help to expand their terrorist hunt, but Wayne and Buck fear that Jack is meeting with the FBI to turn them in for the murder of Sokoloff's nephew and the child porn. The two confide in Haggerty about killing Sokoloff's nephew, which Haggerty uses to incite Sokoloff to make a move on Jack.
When Jack finds out that his partners are helping facilitate Denny Z's child porn, he confronts Denny Z at a house party. Jack sees Audrey having sex with two men at the party and realizes how much he misses his family, leading him to break up with Audrey.
An FBI agent, appreciative of the help Jack has given the government, warns him that 24/7billing.com is about to be indicted for supporting child porn. Jack's life is further complicated when Sokoloff's men kidnap his maid's son, who they believe is Jack's son. Jack gathers up several million dollars and goes to meet Sokoloff, as seen at the start of the film.
Jack is told that the boy will be released if he signs a contract giving his partnership share to Wayne, Buck, Sokoloff, and Haggerty. Jack signs the agreement but backdates it to before Denny Z's child porn business was added. Sokoloff kills Haggerty, but lets Jack go as thanks for all the money he has made him.
The movie ends with Jack's FBI friend charging Sokoloff, Wayne and Buck with providing billing services for child porn. Jack and the maid's son return home, where Diane welcomes Jack back.
Cast
- Luke Wilson as Jack Harris
- Giovanni Ribisi as Wayne Beering
- Gabriel Macht as Buck Dolby
- James Caan as Jerry Haggerty
- Jacinda Barrett as Diana Harris
- Kevin Pollak as FBI Agent Curt Allmans
- Laura Ramsey as Audrey Dawn
- Rade Šerbedžija as Nikita Sokoloff
- Terry Crews as James
- Kelsey Grammer as District Attorney Frank Griffin
Release
Middle Men was released on August 6, 2010.
The first official theatrical trailer for the film was released on June 16, 2010.[9]
A red band trailer was released on July 10, 2010.
A long take sequence taking place at an orgy was cut from the film. The scene's inclusion would have pushed the film from an R rating to an NC17 rating. The scene was subsequently leaked to adult video clip website Pornhub.[10] It was subsequently included on the home-video release.
Reception
The film received mixed reviews. Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 40% based on 50 reviews, and an audience score of 56% based on 19,156 user ratings. The site consensus is "Middle Men benefits from a solid cast, particularly Luke Wilson, but its muddled script lets them down".[11] Metacritic gives the film a weighted average score of 60% based on reviews from 20 critics, and user score of 8.5 based on 30 ratings.[12]
The film grossed only $733,000 at the box office during its three-week run. The budget was $20 million.[2]
Home media
Middle Men was released February 8, 2011.
Soundtrack
Two soundtrack albums were released, both on August 3, 2010: Middle Men: Original Motion Picture Score, composed by Brian Tyler, and Middle Men: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, collecting songs used in the film.
- Score
All songs written and composed by Brian Tyler.
Track listing | ||
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No. | Title | Length |
1. | "My Name Is Jack Harris" | 1:46 |
2. | "Middle Men" | 2:21 |
3. | "Tightrope" | 2:42 |
4. | "Wayne And Buck" | 2:09 |
5. | "Broken" | 4:07 |
6. | "Down The Rabbit Hole" | 2:47 |
7. | "Boat Ride" | 2:23 |
8. | "Back To LA" | 1:42 |
9. | "Aimless Electricity Upon Touching" | 4:30 |
10. | "Paranoia" | 2:11 |
11. | "Friendly Warning" | 3:22 |
12. | "Guilt" | 3:29 |
13. | "Trouble" | 1:57 |
14. | "FBI" | 2:55 |
15. | "Alejandro" | 2:30 |
16. | "Full Circle" | 2:36 |
17. | "Middle Men Finale" | 3:07 |
- Soundtrack
Track listing | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Artist(s) | Length |
1. | "Who Do You Love?" (cover of Bo Diddley, 1956; released 1978) | Ellas McDaniel | George Thorogood | 4:20 |
2. | "You Make My Dreams" (1981) | Sara Allen, Daryl Hall, John Oates | Hall & Oates | 3:10 |
3. | "Honey" (1998) | Moby, Bessie Jones | Moby | 3:28 |
4. | "Sympathy for the Devil" (1968) | Jagger/Richards | The Rolling Stones | 6:17 |
5. | "How Bizarre" (1995) | Alan Jansson, Pauly Fuemana | OMC | 3:44 |
6. | "Oye Como Va" (1963) | Puente | Tito Puente | 5:49 |
7. | "Buona Sera" (1956) | Carl Sigman, Peter DeRose | Louis Prima | 3:00 |
8. | "Sweet Dreams (of You)" (cover of Don Gibson, 1956; released 1963) | Don Gibson | Patsy Cline | 2:33 |
9. | "Everybody Wants to Rule the World" (1985) | Roland Orzabal, Ian Stanley, Chris Hughes | Tears for Fears | 4:09 |
10. | "Freeze Frame" (1982) | Seth Justman, Peter Wolf | J. Geils Band | 3:56 |
11. | "Bodyrock" (1999) | Moby | Moby | 3:35 |
12. | "You Can't Always Get What You Want" (1969) | Jagger/Richards | The Rolling Stones | 7:28 |
13. | "The Way You Move" (2003) | Big Boi, Carl-Mo, Sleepy Brown | Outkast (featuring Sleepy Brown) | 3:54 |
14. | "California Love (Remix)" (1995) | Joe Cocker, Woodrow Cunningham, Norman Durham, Mikel Hooks, Ronald Hudson, Christopher Stainton, Larry Troutman, Roger Troutman | 2Pac (featuring Dr. Dre & Roger Troutman) | 6:23 |
15. | "24-7" | Tyler | Brian Tyler | 5:58 |
16. | "Middle Men Suite" | Tyler | Brian Tyler | 5:56 |
References
- ↑ Rich, Katey (2010-02-19). "Paramount Picks Up Luke Wilson Indie Middle Men". Cinema Blend. Retrieved 19 November 2010.
- 1 2 3 "Middle Men". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved May 2, 2015.
- ↑ "Middle Men - Box Office Data, Movie News, Cast Information". The Numbers. Retrieved 2010-09-16.
- ↑ Dave McNary (September 18, 2008). "Wilson, Ribisi to star in 'Middle Men'". Variety. Retrieved April 1, 2009.
- ↑ Sanjiv Bhattacharya (2011-03-01). "Inside Hollywoods Greatest Vanity Project". Details. Retrieved 2011-03-01.
- ↑ "AVN - 'After Porn Ends' Gets Life After Porn on iTunes". Business.avn.com. 2012-05-30. Retrieved 2012-12-01.
- ↑ "Following the Money, ePassporte Edition — Krebs on Security". krebsonsecurity.com. 2010-09-15. Retrieved 2013-01-12.
- ↑ "AVN - ePassporte CEO Issues Statement to Calm the Masses". Business.avn.com. Retrieved 2013-01-12.
- ↑ "Middle Men Full Trailer". The Film Stage. June 16, 2010. Retrieved June 16, 2010.
- ↑ TMZ Staff (July 23, 2010). "Luke Wilson's New Movie -- Deleted Orgy Scene". TMZ.
- ↑ "Middle Men (2010)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved May 2, 2015.
- ↑ "Middle Men". Metacritic.
External links
- Official website
- Middle Men at the Internet Movie Database
- Middle Men at AllMovie
- Middle Men at Box Office Mojo
- Middle Men at Rotten Tomatoes
- Middle Men at the TCM Movie Database
- Interview with Christopher Mallick
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