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Awards
Golden Globe Best Motion Picture - Drama 1989 · Winner
Academy Award Directing 1989 · Winner
Golden Globe Best Performance By an Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama 1989 · Winner
Internationale Filmfestspiele Berlin Golden Bear 1989 · Winner
Academy Award Actor in a Leading Role 1989 · Winner
Academy Award Writing (Screenplay Written Directly 1989 · Winner
Academy Award Best Picture 1989 · Winner
British Academy of Film & Television Arts Editing 1989 · Nominated
Amandaprisen Best Foreign Film 1989 · Nominated
Academy Award Music (Original Score) 1989 · Nominated
Academy Award Film Editing 1989 · Nominated
British Academy of Film & Television Arts Actor in a Leading Role 1989 · Nominated
Academy Award Cinematography 1989 · Nominated
Golden Globe Best Director - Motion Picture 1989 · Nominated
Golden Globe Best Screenplay - Motion Picture 1989 · Nominated
British Academy of Film & Television Arts Original Screenplay 1989 · Nominated
Academy Award Art Direction 1989 · Nominated
Best Film. 1988 Winner KCFCC Award. Best Actor. Dustin Hoffman. 1988 Winner KCFCC Award. Best Supporting Actor. Tom Cruise. Tied with Dean Stockwell for Married to the Mob (1988) and Martin Landau for Tucker: The Man and His Dream (1988). 1988 Winner KCFCC Award.
- Overview
- Production notes and credits
- Cast
- Academy Award nominations (* denotes win)
Rain Man, American dramatic film, released in 1988 and starring Tom Cruise and Dustin Hoffman, that was a hit with both critics and audiences and won four Academy Awards, including that for best picture, as well as two Golden Globe Awards, including that for best drama.
In Los Angeles, Charlie Babbit (Cruise), a driven salesman, learns that a shipment of four Lamborghini sports cars, which are to be delivered to the customers to whom he has sold them, are being held up in port because they do not meet U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) emissions standards. Charlie nonetheless heads out for a weekend trip with his coworker and girlfriend, Susanna (Valeria Golino). On the road, he receives a phone call telling him that his estranged father has died in Cincinnati, Ohio. He and Susanna fly there to attend the funeral. He finds that his father has left him only a 1949 Buick Roadmaster (which Charlie had driven without permission when he was 16 years old, an escapade that resulted in his spending two nights in jail and in his estrangement from his father) and some rosebushes and that the rest of the $3 million estate has been bequeathed to an unnamed trustee.
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The trustee proves to be the director of the Walbrook Institute, a facility for the care of the developmentally disabled, and the money is earmarked for the care of Raymond, an elder brother of whose existence Charlie was previously unaware. Charlie and Susanna go to Walbrook to meet both Dr. Bruner (Gerald R. Molen) and Raymond (Hoffman). Raymond is an autistic savant, and Dr. Bruner spends some time explaining Raymond’s abilities and limitations to Charlie. Charlie takes Raymond out of the facility without permission, and the two brothers and Susanna spend the night in a motel room. When Raymond becomes agitated, however, Charlie is angered and speaks harshly to him. Because of this, and because Charlie declares that his plan is to hold on to Raymond until Dr. Bruner agrees to give Charlie half the money in the trust, Susanna leaves Charlie.
Charlie tries to board a plane to Los Angeles with Raymond, but Raymond refuses to fly, so they set out to drive to Los Angeles in the Roadmaster. After Raymond witnesses an accident on the highway, it becomes necessary to use only back roads for the journey. Along the way, Charlie learns to accommodate Raymond’s need for adherence to an invariable routine—such as maintaining strict mealtimes and watching the television shows The People’s Court and Jeopardy every day. He also finds out that when he was a baby, Raymond inadvertently scalded him while trying to give him a bath and that the event resulted in Raymond’s being sent to live at Walbrook. In addition, he learns that his early childhood memories of an imaginary friend called Rain Man were in fact memories of Raymond.
•Studios: United Artists, The Guber-Peters Company, Star Partners II Limited, and Mirage Entertainment
•Director: Barry Levinson
•Writers: Barry Morrow and Ronald Bass
•Music: Hans Zimmer
•Tom Cruise (Charlie Babbit)
•Dustin Hoffman (Raymond Babbit)
•Valeria Golino (Susanna)
•Gerald R. Molen (Dr. Bruner)
•Picture*
•Lead actor* (Dustin Hoffman)
•Art direction
•Cinematography
•Direction*
•Editing
- Pat Bauer
Rain Man is a 1988 American road comedy-drama film directed by Barry Levinson and written by Barry Morrow and Ronald Bass.It tells the story of abrasive, selfish, young wheeler-dealer Charlie Babbitt (), who discovers that his estranged father has died and bequeathed virtually all of his multimillion-dollar estate to his other son, Raymond (Dustin Hoffman), an autistic savant of whose ...
- December 16, 1988
- Mark Johnson
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Dec 16, 1988 · Rain Man: Directed by Barry Levinson. With Dustin Hoffman, Tom Cruise, Valeria Golino, Gerald R. Molen. After a selfish L.A. yuppie learns his estranged father left a fortune to an autistic-savant brother in Ohio that he didn't know existed, he absconds with his brother and sets out across the country, hoping to gain a larger inheritance.
- (535K)
- Drama
- Barry Levinson
- 1988-12-16
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