Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dec 20, 1996 · If you look in the windshield it is apparent that there is only one person in the car, the stunt driver. Quotes [Russell Kramer's made-up words to "Hail to the Chief."]

    • (16K)
    • Adventure, Comedy
    • Peter Segal
    • 1996-12-20
  2. Scenes were filmed along the Broad River where it flows into Lake Lure in Rutherford County, Dillsboro, along the Great Smoky Mountains Railroad; Waynesville, where a giant clown sign crashes through their windshield as they try to flee and where they find the baby in the stolen car is in Marshall, North Carolina; and in Asheville, at the ...

  3. Theatrical Release: December 20, 1996 (USA)Video Release: June 17, 1997 (USA)Starring: Jack Lemmon, James Garner, Dan Aykroyd, John Heard, Wilford Brimley, E...

    • 33 sec
    • 521
    • TV Spot Movie Fan
  4. The vehicle is part of the movie: Vehicle used a lot by a main character or for a long time: Vehicle used by a character or in a car chase: Minor action vehicle or used in only a short scene: Background vehicle: Unknown vehicle role: Seen only in preview/trailer: Seen only in deleted scenes: Seen only in an alternative ending: Seen only in an ...

  5. Republican ex-president Russell Kramer (JACK LEMMON) and Democratic ex-president Matt Douglass (JAMES GARNER) have never gotten along. While Kramer peddles his image to keep his name in the spotlight, Douglass has a reputation for being a ladies man. But when a government scandal intends to take out both of them, the two must work together to ...

  6. Dec 20, 1996 · Garner, a ladies' man, is vaguely Clintonian. Aykroyd is not really presidential at all, but his vice president, played by John Heard, is aimed squarely at Dan Quayle. Advertisement. Given this premise, “My Fellow Americans” could have been hard-edged political satire, but that's not what anybody connected with the film had in mind.

  7. Dec 20, 1996 · Two on-the-lam former Presidents of the United States. Framed in a scandal by the current President and pursued by armed agents, the two squabbling political foes plunge into a desperately frantic search for the evidence that will establish their innocence. E. Jack Kaplan. Screenplay, Story. Richard Chapman.

  1. People also search for