Trading Places

Trading Places

Theatrical poster for Trading Places
Directed by John Landis
Produced by George Folsey Jr.
Aaron Russo
Irwin Russo
Sam Williams
Written by Timothy Harris
Herschel Weingrod
Starring Dan Aykroyd
Eddie Murphy
Ralph Bellamy
Don Ameche
Denholm Elliott
and
Jamie Lee Curtis
Music by Elmer Bernstein
Cinematography Robert Paynter, BSC
Editing by Malcolm Campbell
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) United States:
June 8, 1983
Running time 118 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget $28,000,000 (estimate)
IMDb Allmovie

Trading Places is an Academy Award-nominated 1983 comedy film starring Eddie Murphy, Dan Aykroyd and Jamie Lee Curtis. It was directed by John Landis and written by Timothy Harris and Herschel Weingrod. It was produced by Aaron Russo.

Contents

Plot

Brothers Randolph and Mortimer Duke (Ralph Bellamy, Don Ameche), the heads of a large and successful commodities brokerage firm, hold opposing positions on the issue of “nature versus nurture.” Mortimer believes that a well-bred individual will be able to conquer whatever challenges are presented to him, while an ill-bred one will fail even if he is given many advantages over others. Randolph, on the other hand, thinks that the former will degenerate if stripped of his position, but the latter will become a changed man if given the proper chance. To settle the dispute, the Dukes decide to ruin a successful man’s life, allow a low-class man to take his place, and observe the results. They wager their “usual amount” on the outcome.

For the experiment, they choose Louis Winthorpe III (Dan Aykroyd), the manager of the firm’s Philadelphia office, and street hustler Billy Ray Valentine (Eddie Murphy). To destroy Winthorpe’s reputation, Duke operative Clarence Beeks (Paul Gleason) publicly frames him as a thief. Winthorpe is promptly arrested and fired from his job, and he soon learns that his bank accounts have been frozen and he has been locked out of his home. When his fiancé Penelope comes to post bail for him, a prostitute named Ophelia (Jamie Lee Curtis) kisses him and asks him to give her drugs, promising to do anything he wants her to do in return. Ophelia soon admits that someone paid her to act in this fashion, and later takes pity on him and allows him to stay at her apartment for the time being.

Valentine and Winthorpe had previously bumped into each other, leading to Valentine being arrested at Winthorpe’s insistence. He is soon bailed out by the Dukes, who claim to be running a program that provides assistance to underprivileged members of society. Installed in Winthorpe’s former position, the streetwise hustler soon learns to use his experience to predict the movement of futures contracts and thus make money for the firm. He is also given the use of Winthorpe’s house, which he initially opens up to the customers at his favorite bar for a party. Upon seeing this unsavory crowd run unchecked through the property, though, he condemns them all as freeloaders and throws them out. Winthorpe’s butler Coleman (Denholm Elliott) becomes friends with Valentine, who has already begun to act as a more upstanding person than he used to be.

The two test subjects come face to face during the firm’s Christmas party, which Winthorpe crashes in order to steal food and plant drugs in Valentine’s desk to get him fired. After Winthorpe flees the scene, the Dukes settle their wager in the washroom, with Mortimer conceding defeat to Randolph; the well-bred Winthorpe has degenerated into criminal behavior, while the ruffian Valentine has become a responsible and successful businessman. Mortimer pays the “usual amount” to Randolph: one dollar.

Valentine, who is hiding in one of the washroom stalls to smoke a joint, overhears this exchange and the brothers’ discussion of what to do with the two men: the Dukes plan to get rid of Valentine without giving Winthorpe his job back, since they are disgusted with the idea of either man being in charge of the office. Outraged at the thought of being manipulated over such a petty bet, Valentine follows Winthorpe back to Ophelia’s apartment.

Winthorpe attempts suicide twice, first with a pistol (which jams, but fires when he drops it) and then with an overdose of sleeping pills. He is taken back to his own house and nursed back to health, and Valentine, Ophelia, and Coleman tell him about the Dukes’ full scheme. Initially Winthorpe decides to get revenge by shooting the Dukes, but Valentine talks him out of this plan and suggests that breaking them financially would be far more effective. A television news report alerts them to Beeks’ involvement in transporting a report on orange crop forecasts; Ophelia recognizes him as the man who paid her to accost Winthorpe in jail. The group realizes that the Dukes are planning to buy a copy of that report from Beeks and use its information to help them corner the orange juice market.

Valentine learns of Beeks’ travel plans, and the four sneak aboard his train during a rowdy New Year’s Eve celebration. Beeks sees through their scheme when they try to switch his genuine report for a fake and attempts to eliminate them, but a gorilla being transported on the train knocks him out just in time. They strip a partygoer of his gorilla costume, put Beeks in it, and lock him and the gorilla in the same cage to get him out of the way. The fake report is delivered to the Dukes, who pay the agreed price without realizing that Beeks is gone.

Valentine and Winthorpe gather up as much money as they can, including the life savings of Ophelia (who has developed romantic feelings for Winthorpe) and Coleman, and set out to bring the Dukes down. On the commodities trading floor, they are able to short-sell orange juice futures and turn an enormous profit. At the same time, the Dukes – misled by the fake report – wind up losing so much money that their business and personal assets are immediately seized by the trading board. In the aftermath of the trading session, Valentine and Winthorpe reveal their own wager to the Dukes: whether or not they could get rich at the expense of the brothers. Valentine, the winner, collects a dollar from Winthorpe, and Randolph suffers a heart attack.

As the movie ends, a weary Beeks and the gorilla (who has fallen in love with him) are loaded onto a ship to be returned to Africa, while Valentine, Winthorpe, Ophelia, and Coleman enjoy a luxurious tropical vacation.

Explanation of climactic scene

See also: Short (finance)

With the authentic orange crop report indicating a good harvest of fresh oranges, frozen concentrated orange juice (FCOJ) would be less important to food producers and so would be likely to drop in price once traders heard the news. However, by way of a fraudulent report, the Duke brothers are led to believe that the orange harvest would be less successful, necessitating greater demand for stockpiled FCOJ in orange products in the coming year, thereby driving the price up. By capitalizing on this knowledge (and the Duke brothers' missteps) the protagonists are able to profit by manipulating the futures market as follows:

  • Unlike a conventional stock transaction, futures contracts can be sold even when the seller does not yet own any of the commodity. A contract to sell, for example, 15,000 pounds of FCOJ in April at $1.42 per pound, merely indicates the seller's obligation to deliver and the buyer's obligation to purchase the product at the specified price and time. It does not matter how or where the seller gets the product, as long as, one way or another, he is able to deliver it at that price at that time, even if it results in a sale at a loss to him.
  • In this case, Winthorpe and Valentine first sell FCOJ futures at $1.42 per pound, a price inflated by the Dukes themselves. (The Duke Brothers' buying leads other traders to believe that the Dukes are trying to corner the market, causing a buying frenzy.) Then, when the price falls — first as a result of Winthorpe and Valentine's eager selling, then to a much greater degree upon the release of the real crop report indicating a good harvest — Winthorpe and Valentine buy futures for prices between $.46 and $.29 per pound. Thus, for every futures contract they had previously sold at about $1.42, they buy another back (for resale to those who bought the expensive contracts from them previously) for only $.46 to $.29, resulting in a profit of $.96 to $1.13 per pound. In actual markets, price limits – "limit up" and "limit down" – protect the clearinghouse from defaults and would preclude such a drastic price jump.
  • Though it is not stated in the movie exactly how much they make, if they invested roughly $500,000 from a combination of Winthorpe/Valentine's investment, the Dukes' money from buying the fake report from Billy Ray posing as Clarence Beeks, and Coleman's and Ophelia's savings, they would have turned it into over $10 million. It is implied that they purchased additional futures on margin and made dozens (or hundreds) of millions more, since a lesser amount would not bankrupt the Dukes. The bribe money for Beeks that Valentine received may have been enough to leverage such a massive loss from the Dukes. An alternative explanation is that the Dukes, backed by the full resources of their firm, were able to commit to orange juice futures on a much larger scale than Valentine and Winthorpe. Thus, they stood to lose a great deal more money if their strategy backfired.
  • At the same time that Winthorpe/Valentine sell their futures contracts, the Duke brothers are rapidly purchasing them, even at high prices, because they incorrectly expect that the crop report (falsely suggesting a greater need for stockpiled orange juice) will create a demand at even higher prices, securing them a profit. When it turns out that the leaked report they were given was fraudulent and the true report is revealed, the price begins to plummet before they are able to sell off their contracts. This leaves them with an obligation to buy millions of pounds of FCOJ at a price more than a dollar per pound higher than they can sell them for, bankrupting them. The legality of Winthorpe/Valentine's actions can be questioned but commodities markets do not have insider trading laws as in the stock markets.

Cast

Production

Most of the movie was filmed on location in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Portions were set in New York City, at the World Trade Center and the New York Board of Trade exchange floor at 4 World Trade Center. Additionally, many of the interior office scenes of Duke and Duke were filmed within the historic rooms of the Park Avenue Armory.

The Police Station Scene where Dan Aykroyd is arraigned after his arrest takes place in the New York City Police Department’s 45th Precinct Police Station located at 2877 Barkley Ave in the Bronx. The brass capped metal fencing in front of the big desk is still polished every week. Additionally the room where Dan Aykroyd is ordered to undress while the police list his valuables is the room where the Police Officers from the 45th Precinct attend Roll Call. Some of the furniture used in this scene can still be found in the police station almost 30 years since filming.

The final scene was filmed in Saint Croix, in the United States Virgin Islands.

Rating

The film was rated R by the MPAA, for brief nude scenes when Jamie Lee Curtis takes off her top in front of Dan Aykroyd and when several topless women dance at the party held by Valentine. There was also some strong language used in the movie.

Television broadcasts

Some elements are added or removed from the film for television.

  • The only deleted scene, in which Clarence Beeks drugs a security guard and steals the crop report while Sunset Boulevard plays on television, was included in television versions.
  • Occasionally broadcasts of the film will edit out either the entire scene of Louis and Billy Ray walking into the WTC or simply edit Louis's statement about the WTC "In this building it's either kill or be killed" out of respect for the victims of the September 11, 2001 attacks. In its September 23, 2007 broadcast (and continuing broadcasts), however, Comedy Central left the remark in.
  • The original film has a scene where Billy Ray cleans out his desk of the drugs (planted by Louis, dressed as Santa Claus) but drops a hand-rolled marijuana cigarette into his coat pocket. Billy then finds an unoccupied stall in the men's washroom and consumes the drug. He is momentarily panicked when he realizes he cannot discreetly exhale the smoke, until he stands on the commode, blowing smoke into a vent in the ceiling. It is during this 'hiatus' that Billy overhears the true nature of the Dukes plan, as they discuss it in the washroom. The word "nigger" is used by Mortimer Duke in this scene.
  • Television broadcasts would also uses alternate takes, removing nudity from the film.

Awards

  • Curtis and Elliott received BAFTA awards for their roles.
  • The film was nominated for an Oscar for Best Original Score.

External links

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  • This page was last modified on 2 January 2009, at 20:58.

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