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IMDbPro

It Runs in the Family

  • 2003
  • 12A
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
5.4K
YOUR RATING
Kirk Douglas, Michael Douglas, Bernadette Peters, Rory Culkin, Cameron Douglas, and Diana Douglas in It Runs in the Family (2003)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer1:51
1 Video
34 Photos
ComedyDramaRomance

This is the story of a dysfunctional New York family, and their attempts to reconcile.This is the story of a dysfunctional New York family, and their attempts to reconcile.This is the story of a dysfunctional New York family, and their attempts to reconcile.

  • Director
    • Fred Schepisi
  • Writer
    • Jesse Wigutow
  • Stars
    • Kirk Douglas
    • Michael Douglas
    • Bernadette Peters
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    5.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Fred Schepisi
    • Writer
      • Jesse Wigutow
    • Stars
      • Kirk Douglas
      • Michael Douglas
      • Bernadette Peters
    • 52User reviews
    • 51Critic reviews
    • 44Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:51
    Official Trailer

    Photos34

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    Top cast53

    Edit
    Kirk Douglas
    Kirk Douglas
    • Mitchell Gromberg
    Michael Douglas
    Michael Douglas
    • Alex Gromberg
    Bernadette Peters
    Bernadette Peters
    • Rebecca Gromberg
    Rory Culkin
    Rory Culkin
    • Eli Gromberg
    Cameron Douglas
    Cameron Douglas
    • Asher Gromberg
    Diana Douglas
    Diana Douglas
    • Evelyn Gromberg
    Michelle Monaghan
    Michelle Monaghan
    • Peg Maloney
    Geoffrey Arend
    Geoffrey Arend
    • Malik
    Sarita Choudhury
    Sarita Choudhury
    • Suzie
    Irina Gorovaia
    Irina Gorovaia
    • Abby Staley
    • (as Irene Gorovaia)
    Annie Golden
    Annie Golden
    • Deb
    Mark Hammer
    • Stephen Gromberg
    Audra McDonald
    Audra McDonald
    • Sarah Langley
    Josh Pais
    Josh Pais
    • Barney
    Louie Torrellas
    Louie Torrellas
    • Jeremy
    Johnathan Mondel
    • Morgan
    • (as Jonathan Mondel)
    Wynter Kullman
    Wynter Kullman
    • Katie
    Kelly Overton
    Kelly Overton
    • Erica
    • Director
      • Fred Schepisi
    • Writer
      • Jesse Wigutow
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews52

    5.55.3K
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    Featured reviews

    Chris Knipp

    Family gathering

    It isn't the least bit fair to call "It Runs in the Family" a "vanity project."

    With three generations, Kirk and Michael and Cameron Douglas, and Douglas by marriage Diana all in it, the movie is certainly a FAMILY project, and despite the direction of the great Fred Schepisi, whose "Six Degrees of Separation" was a miracle of acting and editing, it somehow doesn't ever really soar. But there is nothing, but nothing, "vanity" about it except that the rich New York Jewish family, the Grombergs, whom the Douglases play, live in splendor -- but that's certainly not a stretch for the actual Douglases. It just makes their family problems a bit more posh than most people's.

    What we see of this family is no cause for vanity, and our admiration is not sought, only our sympathy. This is a family of successful lawyers. But dad (Mitchell) has had a stroke, and his son (Alex), who has refused to become a partner, is torn between profit and pro bono cases, loyalty and infidelity, and has none of the brass or verve of the high powered Michael Douglas of "Wall Street." (Michael's performance isn't particularly strong here either, but the other Douglases' all are.) He and his therapist wife Rebecca (Bernadette Peters) have two kids nine years apart. Mitchell's wife is played by Michael's actual mother, the regal Diana Douglas, whom Kirk divorced in 1951 but has remained good friends with.

    The kids in the family are not showing great promise. The young 12-year old son Eli is a bit odd -- or at least inarticulate. Much is made of his wordlessly presenting a spreadsheet to ask for a raise in his weekly allowance, and for his not particularly wanting to discuss sex with his parents or older brother. But this is one of the places where the humane and comprehensive screenplay fails to convince completely. Is that really so odd? -- or is Eli just a budding accountant? As Eli, the very forthright and self-possessed Rory Culkin, from another famous acting family, seems too self-contained and sure of himself to be seen as truly having problems. His main problem seems to be that he's 12.

    Cameron Douglas, Michael's real life son, whose acting experience is chiefly from a TV series, is Asher, the 21-year-old "laid back" son, a loveable loser who deals some pot and misses a lot of his classes but knows how to party and is a good deejay. Asher is blowing his life for now, but the buoyant and physical Cameron is fun to watch as he throws all his passion and enthusiasm into his first significant screen role. As Asher, he's full of life and slouchy charm and it's not so far fetched that a nice girl would get interested in him, despite his loser qualities. Again here, though, the writer has not developed the subtleties suggested by the plot. The movie tries to show us too much about too many of the characters to provide any with full development.

    Mitchell, Alex, and Asher all give advice to each other and to Eli, never very effectively. They're full of brash posturing toward to their next of kin but lacking in real conviction. But somehow, the movie tells us, this is a way of showing affection. It's okay that they only pretend to know the answers. The story never works out any of the problems it creates for its characters or fully develops them, but it does succeed in its purpose of being a story about family and about honest acceptance of human frailty.

    Kirk as the aging patriarch, who loses his wife and then his demented brother, brings us in for some embarrassment (his scenes are the most cornball sentimental), but you can't help admiring the 86-year-old actor's enormous pluck. After his stroke he has sprung back and though he waddles feebly on his jogs around the Central Park reservoir and doesn't talk so good anymore, he certainly can still deliver his lines with a vigor one wishes Michael had mustered here. There's a kind of strength and simplicity about the aging Kirk Douglas that seems very close to real. Whether his blustery authority mixed with emotional distance is true to the man himself, it's believable in his scenes with his wife and son.

    One aspect -- also arguably anti-vanity, yet both proud and truthful, is that the Douglases are playing what they really are, a successful Jewish family, and not the sanitized non-ethnic Americans that Hollywood required when Kirk was in his prime. And because the movie shows a seder and funeral and identifies the family with Jewish ritual, we do get a sense of family life as a part of cultural tradition.

    Mitchell's wife Rebecca gets upset when she discovers women's undies in his pocket that came from a scene at a free food project where a fellow volunteer (Sarita Chudoury) has the hots for him (nothing subtle about this encounter). This sequence is poorly developed and it isn't clear, since Mitchell neither defends nor incriminates himself, why Rebecca gets into such a tailspin. Ms. Peters is nothing but earnest and intense. She can engender little sympathy nor convey much sense of an active intelligence.

    There are way more crises than any family could handle in this short span of time: marital problems, two deaths of elders, a child who runs off during a school function, the older boy flunking out of school and arrested for drugs, his first serious love affair ruined, the patriarch facing "a few good years left" alone. And none of it's resolved. But though the shortcomings in character development may be a distinct weakness in the movie, the lack of resolution is not in itself a fault. The real fault, and what keeps this from being one of Fred Schepisi's best efforts, is that the writing isn't focused enough and turns maudlin too often. It's fine to jerk a few tears, but for a comedy "It Runs in the Family" is too soft hearted and soft headed. Maybe in the end all that really mattered was for Kirk and Michael finally to make a movie together after all these years, and the process created too many good vibes to allow for edginess or wit. But let's not call that vanity. Let's call it love.
    7Agent10

    I liked it

    I'll start off by saying I liked this film. Yes, stone

    me to death or whatever, but I felt this film was rather decent in all respects. While I was surprised by the more dramatic tone to the film, the drama proved to be a welcomed surprise. It's a bit interesting to see virtually the entire Douglas family involved in this movie, which makes watching the interaction between the characters feel rather eerie. However, it was good to see Kirk Douglas in a movie again, and it only seemed fitting he do it with much of his extended family. Heart warming in many parts, it's not as bad of a movie as many critics made it out to be.
    lauramushkat

    Terrific Movie

    This is a well done movie about family life. It could be compared to The Royal Tannenbaums in genre. I personally feel it is better done, really a terrific movie. For a first time actor, Cameron Douglas did very well. Not surprising when you see how well the other actual family members do in their chosen field! It is about the normal dysfunctual family and then some. There is laughter, tears and it makes you think. I recommend it highly and feel sorry for those who just did not get the movie. It only made 8 million I heard. Pitty those who do no get to see it!
    choobieflowergirl

    Nice movie about a nice Jewish family

    All the actors did good work and were great to watch. The oldest Douglas did a real good job and there were moments that he sounded like he did in his youth. The Passover Seder brought back a lot of family memories for me. The relationships were very real and touching and I felt like I knew these people or was related to them. This movie was fun and moving and I really liked it and I think everyone enjoys this even if they are not Jewish.
    7flickershows

    A Bushel Of Douglas'

    I think the only person who's not a member of the Douglas clan in 'It Runs In The Family' is director Fred Schepisi. Okay, I exaggerate, but there are 3 generations PLAYING 3 generations (Kirk, Michael, and Cameron) and Kirk's ex-wife even plays his doting wife in the film. This is the first time that Kirk & Michael have worked together since the son's bit part in dad's '66 war drama 'Cast A Giant Shadow'. Young Cameron makes his film debut here and doesn't embarrass himself while acting with his world-famous elders. Bernadette Peters and Rory Culkin round out the headlining cast as the mother and youngest son of the Gromberg family.

    This picture received plenty of publicity in spring '03 because it was a rare on-screen appearance by movie god Kirk Douglas. He doesn't stray too far from his own reality as a stroke victim with a loving wife and a successful son. In the movie, the Grombergs are New York lawyers. It must have been an act of will not to make them movie producers or something filmic. The drama is actually mostly melodrama, some of which doesn't work. Mitchell (Kirk) has a complicated relationship with Alex (Michael), who has difficult relations with his own sons. Every character goes through romantic troubles of one kind or another (death of a beloved, first love, infidelity) and the movie deserves credit for managing to be cute, but not cloying. It even ends on the right note of non-finality, which I assume was a contribution by Schepisi (who's good at leaving some realistic loose ends in his films).

    Kirk probably comes off best here. He does a thing with pillows that just might bust your heart in two. Michael isn't stretching himself (although you can read the reverence for his dad in his eyes) and while Bernadette Peters & Rory Culkin do a nice job, they're merely providing low-key support to the Douglas gang. Kirk's still got it, even if he has to work extra hard to form sentences. The ferocity of 'The Bad And The Beautiful' isn't there anymore (hey, the guy is 88 this year, so the fact that he's working at all is amazing), but Kirk shows some funny facial expressions and double-takes. He's never anything less than compelling, which is the way it's always been in his career.

    'It Runs In The Family' was in & out of theatres in about 19 minutes last year, which is a shame. While I'm being generous to recommend it, I confess that I enjoyed myself and really grew to like what was going on in this flick. The humour is scatter-shot, but I like that they didn't camp it up and go for cheap gags. Perhaps Michael, Kirk & company have never had a strained relationship the way the Gromberg's do, but they play the pathos in Jesse Wigutow's script well enough to make you care. Am I being so nice because it's such a treat to see a feisty Kirk Douglas working again? Maybe, but I felt good about these characters, warts and all. Perhaps the Douglas' will do something else together and get Catherine Zeta-Jones to join in the fun.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Diana Douglas, Michael Douglas's real mother, plays the mother of his character and the wife of Kirk Douglas even though she had been divorced from Kirk for over 50 years. Kirk's second wife Anne Douglas, is not an actress.
    • Quotes

      Mitchell Gromberg: Alex, you're a much better father than I was.

      Alex Gromberg: Thank you. But you didn't exactly set the bar all that high.

    • Alternate versions
      C'est de famille (Quebec French Title)
    • Connections
      Featured in Kirk Douglas: Before I Forget (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      Who's Jon
      Written by Andy LiMaster

      Performed by Now It's Overhead

      Courtesy of Saddle Creek Records

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 5, 2003 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • MGM
    • Languages
      • English
      • Hebrew
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Family Business
    • Filming locations
      • Kinnelon, New Jersey, USA
    • Production companies
      • Buena Vista International
      • Family Films
      • Furthur Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $7,491,839
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $2,804,441
      • Apr 27, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $8,211,508
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 49 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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