''Dennis the Menace'' (released in the United Kingdom initially as ''Dennis'' to avoid confusion with a then
identically named character) is a 1993 American
family comedy film based on the
Hank Ketcham comic strip
A comic strip is a sequence of drawings, often cartoons, arranged in interrelated panels to display brief humor or form a narrative, often serialized, with text in balloons and captions. Traditionally, throughout the 20th and into the 21st ...
of the same name. It was directed by
Nick Castle and written and coproduced by
John Hughes, and distributed by
Warner Bros. under their
Family Entertainment label. It concerns the misadventures of a mischievous child (
Mason Gamble) who wreaks havoc on his next door neighbor, George Wilson (
Walter Matthau
Walter Matthau (; born Walter John Matthow; October 1, 1920 – July 1, 2000) was an American actor, comedian and film director.
He is best known for his film roles in '' A Face in the Crowd'' (1957), ''King Creole'' (1958) and as a coach of a ...
), usually hangs out with his friends, Joey McDonald (Kellen Hathaway) and Margaret Wade (Amy Sakasitz), and is followed everywhere by his dog, Ruff. It also features a cameo appearance by
Jeannie Russell
Jeannie Russell (born Jeanne K. Russell; October 22, 1950) is an American actress best known for playing Dennis's playmate, Margaret Wade, in the television series '' Dennis the Menace'', which was based on the Hank Ketcham comic strip of the ...
, who played Dennis's friend "Margaret" on the original 1959 TV series.
Released on June 25, 1993, the film was a commercial success, grossing $117.2 million on a $35 million budget despite receiving negative reviews from critics. A
direct-to-video sequel called ''
Dennis the Menace Strikes Again
''Dennis the Menace Strikes Again'' (also known as: ''Dennis 2: Dennis Strikes Again'') is a 1998 American comedy film. It is the sequel to the 1993 theatrical feature '' Dennis the Menace'' and stars Don Rickles, Betty White, and Justin Cooper. ...
'' was later released in 1998 without the cast from this film. A second direct-to-video sequel called ''A Dennis the Menace Christmas'' was released in 2007 with a different cast from both this film and the second one.
Plot
Five-year-old Dennis Mitchell is a constant source of mischief, especially to his retired next door neighbor George Wilson. George pretends to be asleep to avoid Dennis, who mistakes this for illness and shoots an aspirin into George’s mouth with a slingshot. Dennis' parents, Henry and Alice, try to discipline him as they get ready for work, and leave him with his friend, Joey McDonald, at the home of their classmate Margaret Wade, whom they dislike. As the three children fix up an abandoned treehouse in the woods, itinerant criminal Switchblade Sam arrives in town.
Vacuuming up spilt paint in the garage, Dennis inadvertently shoots a glob of it onto George’s barbecue grill; tasting it, he suspects Dennis. The Mitchells leave Dennis with a teenage babysitter named Polly, who invites her boyfriend, Mickey, over. Sneaking outside, Dennis pranks them by
ringing the doorbell and hiding until Mickey tapes a thumbtack to it. George investigates the vacuum in the Mitchells' garage and accidentally shoots himself in the gonads with a golf ball. Hoping to confront the Mitchells, he pricks his thumb on the tack; mistaking him for the prankster, Polly and Mickey douse him with water and flour. Switchblade Sam commits a string of robberies throughout town, and is noticed by Chief Bennett.
Bringing the sleeping George an apology card, Dennis plays with his dentures, loses the two front teeth, and replaces them with
Chiclets just before he has his picture taken for the local newspaper. Henry and Alice both leave on business trips, but are unable to find anyone willing to babysit Dennis. George's wife, Martha, agrees to let him stay with them, happy to treat him as the child they never had. George is infuriated by slipping in Dennis' spilt bath water, and discovering Dennis has replaced his nasal spray with mouthwash and the latter with toilet cleanser. Dennis lets his dog, Ruff, inside the Wilsons’ house, leading George to mistake him for Martha in the dark living room. In the attic, Dennis' carelessness causes George to slip on mothballs and nearly crushes him with a canoe which contains the garden lanterns he's looking for.
George has been chosen to host his garden club's "Summer Floraganza", having spent almost forty years growing a rare orchid that will finally bloom that night. During the party, Dennis presses the garage door button (thinking it's a doorbell, repeating his earlier
ding-dong ditch prank), and it opens and upends the entire dessert table, and is angrily sent to his bedroom. While the Wilsons and their guests await the flower’s nocturnal display, Switchblade Sam robs the house, stealing George’s antique coin collection. Dennis, who heard the burglar and then discovers the emptied safe, alerts George, distracting everyone from the flower's brief blooming, and it dies afterward. Furious and unaware that he has been robbed, George coldly chastises Dennis, who flees to the woods in sadness and is caught by Switchblade Sam. Henry and Alice arrive home to learn he has disappeared, prompting a town-wide search, and even a guilt-ridden George sets out to find him after realizing that he was telling the truth about the robbery.
Switchblade Sam prepares to leave town with Dennis as an unsuspecting hostage. Showing him the proper way to tie him up, Dennis handcuffs him, loses the key, unintentionally bludgeons him, and sets him on fire. Just as Dennis discovers George’s stolen coins and realizes Switchblade Sam is a thief, Switchblade Sam attempts to stab him but is snared in a rope caught by a passing train. The next morning, Dennis returns home with the captured Switchblade Sam and George's recovered coins, to the relief of George and the entire neighborhood. Switchblade Sam is arrested, and Dennis naïvely returns his knife and he attempts to stab him with it, but Chief Bennett closes the police car door on his hand, causing him to drop the knife down a storm drain and wince in pain before being driven away.
Dennis and George make amends, and Alice mentions that she can bring Dennis to work with her as her office now has a day care center. George insists he would be happy to watch Dennis himself, just as Dennis accidentally flings a flaming marshmallow onto his forehead. During the closing credits, Dennis gets his mother's condescending coworker, Andrea, caught in the office copy machine.
Cast
*
Mason Gamble as
Dennis Mitchell
*
Walter Matthau
Walter Matthau (; born Walter John Matthow; October 1, 1920 – July 1, 2000) was an American actor, comedian and film director.
He is best known for his film roles in '' A Face in the Crowd'' (1957), ''King Creole'' (1958) and as a coach of a ...
as George Wilson
*
Joan Plowright as Martha Wilson
*
Christopher Lloyd as Switchblade Sam
*
Lea Thompson as Alice Mitchell
*
Robert Stanton as Henry Mitchell
* Amy Sakasitz as Margaret Wade
* Kellen Hathaway as Joey McDonald
*
Paul Winfield as Chief Bennett
*
Natasha Lyonne as Polly
*
Devin Ratray
Devin D. Ratray (born January 11, 1977) is an American actor. He is known for his role as Buzz McCallister in the ''Home Alone'' franchise, as well as the films ''Nebraska'', ''Blue Ruin'' and '' Kimi''. His television work includes '' The Tick' ...
as Mickey
* Hank Johnston as Gunther Beckman
*
Melinda Mullins as Andrea
*
Billie Bird as Edith Butterwell
*
Bill Erwin as Edward Little
*
Arnold Stang as Photographer
*
Ben Stein
Benjamin Jeremy Stein (born November 25, 1944) is an American writer, lawyer, actor, comedian, and commentator on political and economic issues. He began his career as a speechwriter for U.S. presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford before ente ...
as Boss (only cameo shot at meeting)
*
Jeannie Russell
Jeannie Russell (born Jeanne K. Russell; October 22, 1950) is an American actress best known for playing Dennis's playmate, Margaret Wade, in the television series '' Dennis the Menace'', which was based on the Hank Ketcham comic strip of the ...
as Neighbor
Production
Mason Gamble won the role of Dennis Mitchell after beating out a reported 20,000 other children who had auditioned for it.
The film premiered on June 25, 1993. It was known simply as ''Dennis'' in the United Kingdom in order to avoid confusion with an unrelated British comic strip, also called "
Dennis the Menace", which also debuted in 1951.
Music
The film's music was composed by veteran composer
Jerry Goldsmith, who was
John Hughes' first and only choice to write the score for it. The short-lived Big Screen Records label released an album of Goldsmith's score alongside the film in July 1993; La-La Land Records issued the complete score in April 2014 as part of their Expanded Archival Collection on
Warner Bros. titles.
Additionally, three old-time pop hits were featured in the film: "
Don't Hang Up" by
The Orlons, "Whatcha Know Joe" by
Jo Stafford (from the 1963 album, ''
Getting Sentimental over Tommy Dorsey'') and "
A String of Pearls" by
Glenn Miller
Alton Glen Miller (March 1, 1904 – December 15, 1944) was an American big band founder, owner, conductor, composer, arranger, trombone player and recording artist before and during World War II, when he was an officer in the United States Arm ...
.
Reception
The film was a success at the box office. Against a $35 million budget, it grossed $51.3 million domestically and a further $66 million overseas to a total of $117.3 million worldwide, despite generally mixed reviews from film critics.
In Germany, it grossed more than $5 million from 800,000 admissions in its first 10 days and was number one at the box office for three weeks. On
Rotten Tomatoes, it has an approval rating of 27%, based on 26 reviews with an average rating of 3.9/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Walter Matthau does a nice job as Mr. Wilson, but ''Dennis the Menace'' follows the ''
Home Alone'' formula far too closely." On
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 49 out of 100, based on 25 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". Audiences polled by
CinemaScore
CinemaScore is a market research firm based in Las Vegas. It surveys film audiences to rate their viewing experiences with letter grades, reports the results, and forecasts box office receipts based on the data.
Background
Ed Mintz founded Ci ...
gave the film an average grade of "A-" on an A+ to F scale.
Vincent Canby, in what would become one of his final reviews for ''
The New York Times'', remarked that "this 'Dennis the Menace' isn't a comic strip, but then it's not really a movie, certainly not one in the same giddy league with the two '
Home
A home, or domicile, is a space used as a permanent or semi-permanent residence for one or many humans, and sometimes various companion animals. It is a fully or semi sheltered space and can have both interior and exterior aspects to it. H ...
Alone
ALONE is a charity organization in Ireland which was set-up to highlight the issues facing older people living alone. Founded in 1977 by Willie Bermingham, the charity seeks to help elderly people living on their own who may feel isolated and lone ...
' movies," adding that "Mr. Hughes and Mr. Castle try hard to recreate a kind of timeless, idealized comic strip atmosphere, but except for the performances of Lea Thompson and Robert Stanton, who play Henry and Alice, nobody in the movie seems in touch with the nature of the comedy" and that the film "simply looks bland, unrooted in any reality." Of the other performances, Canby stated that Gamble was "a handsome boy, but
hathe displays none of the spontaneity that initially made
Culkin">acaulayCulkin so refreshing".
A mixed review came from Peter Rainer of the ''
Los Angeles Times'', who praised Matthau's performance enormously, yet called the film "pretty tepid tomfoolery but
..not assaultive in the way that most kids’ films are nowadays":
Roger Ebert
Roger Joseph Ebert (; June 18, 1942 – April 4, 2013) was an American film critic, film historian, journalist, screenwriter, and author. He was a film critic for the ''Chicago Sun-Times'' from 1967 until his death in 2013. In 1975, Ebert beca ...
gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of four and wrote, "There's a lot to like in ''Dennis the Menace''. But Switchblade Sam prevents me from recommending it."
Mason Gamble received a
Razzie Award nomination for Worst New Star but also won "Best Youth Actor Leading Role in a Motion Picture: Comedy" at the
15th Youth in Film Awards
The 15th Youth in Film Awards ceremony (now known as the Young Artist Awards), presented by the Youth in Film Association, honored outstanding youth performers under the age of 21 in the fields of film, television and theatre for the 1992-1993 se ...
.
Video game
The film also spawned a platforming
video game for the
Amiga
Amiga is a family of personal computers introduced by Commodore in 1985. The original model is one of a number of mid-1980s computers with 16- or 32-bit processors, 256 KB or more of RAM, mouse-based GUIs, and significantly improved graphi ...
,
Super NES, and
Game Boy platforms. It included stages based on Mr. Wilsons' house, the great outdoors, and a
boiler room among others.
References
External links
*
*
*
*
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dennis The Menace (Film)
1993 films
1990s English-language films
1993 comedy films
1990s children's adventure films
1990s children's comedy films
American children's adventure films
American children's comedy films
American slapstick comedy films
Films about children
Films about pranks
Films based on American comics
Films based on comic strips
Films directed by Nick Castle
Films produced by John Hughes (filmmaker)
Films with screenplays by John Hughes (filmmaker)
Films scored by Jerry Goldsmith
Films shot in Chicago
Live-action films based on comics
Dennis the Menace (U.S. comics) films
Warner Bros. films
1990s American films