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Mousehunt

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Mousehunt is a 1997 slapstick comedy film directed by Gore Verbinski, scored by Alan Silvestri and released by DreamWorks SKG.

Starring Nathan Lane and Lee Evans, it concerns two brothers who, upon inheriting an antique house, must rid it of a troublesome mouse who comedically foils their efforts to exterminate him.

Plot

It revolves around Lars (Lee Evans) and Ernie (Nathan Lane) Schmuntz, two "down on their luck" brothers, sons of a wealthy, deceased string merchant (William Hickey). The movie opens with their father's funeral, where things quickly turn wacky. As the brothers carry their father's coffin down the church stairs, an argument ensues between them about whether Lars' semi-gray suit is black enough for a solemn event like a funeral. This results in Lars' angrily jerking at the poorly manufactured coffin, causing the handle to come off and send their father thundering down the stairs. As cries of shock come from the crowd, the coffin hits a fire hydrant and the corpse flies out of the coffin and into an open manhole cover.

Lars and Ernie's father has apparently left the two brothers with his quasi-antique string factory along with a number of "personal effects" to the tune of a box of Cuban cigars, a spoon collection, a ceramic egg and a crumbling old mansion estate.

Although his father was a fairly successful string merchant, Ernie is a high class, hotshot chef, who never liked string. His father's inheritance spells disaster for him when he brings the box of cigars (containing a cockroach) with him to his restaurant, Chez Ernie; the visiting Mayor eats the roach and subsequently dies of shock. With his restaurant closed, Ernie finds employment in a seamy little restaurant, Rimpy's, until he meets Lars. Lars, who inherited his father's fanaticism for the string industry, refused to sell the factory for a fortune and enraged his temperamental wife April, who kicked him out of his own home. The two brothers wander the streets homeless for a while before they remember that they do have a home--the old estate from their father.

The brothers hadn't thought much of their inheritance until they discover the house's blueprints (dated 1876), after an insane night of frights at their "inheritance." The brothers discover it's a long-lost architectual achievement worth millions.

However, the house does already have an occupant...a clever little mouse. Fearing an incident similar to that of the aforementioned cockroach, Ernie decides to get rid of the mouse before he and Lars renovate and auction off the house. Hilarity ensues when they try every possible way to get rid of the little thing, from using a vacuum (it exploded due to it being inserted in a sewage pipe), to a vicious overgrown tiger-like domestic cat (which the mouse ultimately slaughtered through a hidden elevator after breaking the strings), to a huge mousetrap array (it backfires), to the eccentric exterminator Caesar (Christopher Walken) (who gets yanked out of the house by his own equipment).

Ultimately, during the final encounter with the mouse before the House Auction, Ernie and Lars accidentally use a rifle (Ernie was aiming down a hole the mouse had gone down) to shoot Caesar's obscured flea-bomb and make a massive hole in the floor. It is then that they realize each other's attempts to sell and keep the factory without telling oneanother, leading to the famous "I hate you!" scene in which Lars throws an orange at Ernie which "accidentally" knocks the mouse out. Taking their chance, unable to bring themselves to killing the hurt creature, they put the mouse in a box, stamp it, and mail it to Havana, Cuba.

Unfortunately, during the auction, Lars sees that the box has been returned to its sender, and that the mouse has chewed its way out, leaving a big hole.

During their secret antics with the mouse during the auction, they lose control of the water pipes in the house, leading to major wreckage of the house on the eve of the auction. The bidders are washed out the front door of the house and the brothers are left broke...until the mouse discovers how to make string cheese using the old factory. Ever since then, the brothers have found their solutions and were eventually back in business as the mouse becomes Ernies's side expert.

Additional information

During the film, there was also a somewhat ghostly portrait of their father of which the brothers rarely paid attention to. From the start, the image had an ugly cranky look because of the angry mob outside trying to purposely shut down the factory. And the angry face gets worst until Ernie finally decides to look at it and notice it starring directly at him with full suspions. Then when Lars and his ex-wife April meet in such an undergarment "sexy" manner, the image pulls out a SHOCKED stare at the two of them. But way later near the climax, when the brothers return to the string factory, the image looks at the mouse and the two have a few sign communications and then smiles afterwards.

The mouse is purposefully an enigma in this movie, he is extremely intelligent, and seems to know the brothers extremely well, despite them not ever seeing it before. It apparently has been living in this house for a long time; the previous owner of the house (before Shmuntz Sr.) was found locked in a trunk in the attic, which the mouse eventually does to the exterminator. In addition, he knows Smuntz Sr.'s special sandwich, which lends to the idea that he is the ghost of Smuntz Sr, come back to life. However, more likely, Smuntz Sr. met the mouse when he first came to the house, saw how intelligent it was and befriended it. He then most likely saw how separated his sons were, and asked the mouse to help them come together. All the mouse's antics throughout the movie would therefore have been done for the sole purpose of bringing them to the factory and showing them that they can bring their two obsessions together (cooking and string), thus bringing them closer.

Trivia

The spanish-language title is "hunt-hard" (Duro de Cazar), probably akin to the movies Die Hard and Spy Hard.

Several different mice had to be used for filming, each specializing in a special maneuver (such as a mouse that was an expert at jumping), according to promotional material. However, a close look at the mouse at the end of the movie makes it seem like a computer-generated image.

External link

 


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