
“He was on his way to the Dean's List, but he wound up on the hit list.”
After a film student gets his belongings stolen, he meets a mobster bearing a startling resemblance to a certain cinematic godfather. Soon, he finds himself caught up in a caper involving endangered species and fine dining.
Release Date: 7/20/1990
Runtime: 102 minutes
Languages: English
Director: Andrew Bergman
00Companies: TriStar Pictures
Countries: United States of America
John Chard
Fresh or Ripe? The Freshman is a sort of comedy drama sprinkled with self aware barbs at film analysis. It’s a great opportunity to see Marlon Brando relaxed and fully playing up the self-parody angle. Plot finds Matthew Broderick as Clark Kellog, a film student arriving in New York who through unfortunate circumstances ends up working for a man who is not too dissimilar from Don Corleone! Writer and director Andrew Bergman spoofs the Mafia via screwball scenarios and satirical scripting, though the latter is done to death and grows tiresome at the mid-point. Penelope Anne Miller and B.D. Wong get choice support roles and deliver the goods, in fact the casting across the board is spot on, and the tech credits are firmly in the plus column. It’s all pleasantly executed and moves along at a brisk pace, but a little less satire and more straight laced character comedy wouldn’t have gone amiss. 6/10
kevin2019
"The Freshman" is a very entertaining and satisfying film on every level when it could have been nothing more than a one joke, one dimensional novelity based upon the very appetising prospect not of a Komondo dragon banquet, but of watching Marlon Brando successfully reprising his Academy Award winning triumph as Don Vito Corleone purely for laughs this time around. Of course, this limited idea would have been absolutely exhausted in no time at all, so it is incredibly fortunate there is a solid story worth bothering about which is extremely well structured and enjoyably developed and humor which is especially worth relishing as Clark Kellogg (Matthew Broderick) inexorably finds himself sinking ever deeper into a life threatening quagmire.
Victor Ray

Marlon Brando
Carmine Sabatini, aka Jimmy The Toucan

Matthew Broderick
Clark Kellogg

Bruno Kirby
Victor Ray

Penelope Ann Miller
Tina Sabatini

Frank Whaley
Steve Bushak

Jon Polito
Chuck Greenwald

Kenneth Welsh
Dwight Armstrong

Richard Gant
Lloyd Simpson
Jefferson Mappin
Hunter

Maximilian Schell
Larry London

Paul Benedict
Arthur Fleeber

BD Wong
Edward
2002