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MOVIE REVIEW
The Pest'The Pest' Lives Up to Its Name
By KEVIN THOMAS, TIMES STAFF WRITER
Monday February 10, 1997
Leguizamo collaborated with screenwriter/co-producer David Bar Katz on this joyless would-be laugh riot in which he plays a frenetic Miami con man who becomes quite literally the target of a crazed German hunter (Jeffrey Jones, with a wavering accent) who wants Leguizamo's head for his trophy wall. Meanwhile, Leguizamo is on the run from the Scottish Mafia. You can only wish that one or the other of them had caught up with him long before the picture's 82 minutes were up. The Pest, 1997. PG-13, for crude sexual, scatological and ethnic humor. TriStar Pictures and the Bubble Factory present a Sheinberg Production. Director Paul Miller. Producers Sid Sheinberg, Jon Sheinberg and Bill Sheinberg. Executive producer Robert A. Papazian. Screenplay by David Bar Katz; story by Katz and John Leguizamo. Cinematographer Roy H. Wagner. Editors Ross Albert, David Rawlins. Costumes Tom McKinley. Music Kevin Kiner. Production designer Rodger E. Maus. Art director Suzette Ervin. Set designers Carole Lee Cole, Ray Markham. Set decorator Jim Duffy. Running time: 1 hour, 22 minutes. John Leguizamo as Pest. Jeffrey Jones as Gustav. Edoardo Ballerini as Himmel. Freddy Rodriguez as Ninja. To order a reprint of this article, please click here. |
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