Strong acting elevates Your Three Minutes Are Up, a tonally
confused dramedy about a straight-laced dude who tries to emulate his carefree
buddy, leading to catastrophe. Beau Bridges plays the uptight guy well,
articulating how his character envies his friend’s ability to change sexual
partners daily and live beyond his means through various financial scams, while
Ron Leibman is terrific—which is to say maddening—as the loudmouth swinger
leaving a trail of bad debts and hurt feelings in his wake. The point seems to
be that the uptight guy could use a little of his pal’s looseness, and the
swinger could use a little of his friend’s social responsibility. Unfortunately,
both characters come across as jerks. The uptight guy torments his fiancée by
disappearing for an adventure, and the swinger is an outright liar and thief.
That being the case, it’s hard to know whether viewers are meant to feel excited
or repulsed when, say, the guys stiff two young girls with the check for an
expensive meal or scam a payoff from an unlucky motorist by deliberately
causing a fender-bender. Is this a bummer morality tale or a kicky thrill ride?
At the beginning of the movie, Los Angeles working stiff Charlie (Bridges) is
the typical movie schmuck, the sort of character Jack Lemmon played a zillion
times for Billy Wilder and other directors. He slaves away at a soul-sucking
job, endures constant criticism from his betrothed, Betty (Janet Margolin), and
watches wide-eyed whenever Mike (Leibman) scores with a busty Scandinavian or
some other sexpot. Then Mike’s life hits a wall. His bank account runs dry, his
car is repossessed, and his unemployment benefits are cancelled because he’s
lied about pursuing work. Mike asks Charlie for a lift to the airport, and that
leads to an endless drive up the California coast, with mischievous idylls in
Santa Barbara and the Bay Area. Charlie has a blast partying with hookers and
running scams, though he knows his real life will eventually catch up with him,
whereas Mike seems oblivious to the idea of consequences.
Although the
filmmakers clearly meant to imbue Your
Three Minutes Are Up with humorous elements, very little of what happens is
funny. Bridges’ character seems more depressed than pathetic, and Leibman’s is
so obnoxious it’s hard to enjoy his rapscallion excesses. Yet if the movie is
viewed a melancholy character study or as a critique of the carefree swinger
lifestyle, Your Three Minutes Are Up
is somewhat effective. One more thing: The Oscar-winning 2004 dramedy Sideways bears such a remarkable resemblance
to this picture that it’s likely Rex Pickett, author of the novel upon which Sideways is based, saw Your Three Minutes Are Up and never
forgot the experience.
Your Three Minutes Are Up: FUNKY
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Bridges and Leibman worked together 15 years later in the 1988 suspense thriller "Seven Hours to Judgement".
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