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Cookie’s Fortune 1999 123movies

Cookie’s Fortune 1999 123movies

Welcome to Holly Springs... home of murder, mayhem and catfish enchiladas.Mar. 24, 1999118 Min.
Your rating: 0
6 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Cookie’s Fortune 1999 123movies, Full Movie Online – Cookie’s Fortune unfolds over an eventful Easter weekend in the small town of Holly Springs, Mississippi. The town residents are peaceful, kind folk — with the exception of Camille Dixon — a pushy theatre director with an incredibly shy younger sister, Cora, whose estranged daughter Emma has just returned to town. On the heels of her latest play, Camille is shocked to discover that her Aunt Jewel Mae “Cookie” Orcutt has committed suicide. Terrified at the thought of how this will tarnish the family name, she eats the suicide note to make it look like a burglary. This set-up leads the police to one main suspect, Willis Richland, who also happens to be Cookie’s best friend. Although the rest of the town is convinced Willis didn’t commit the crime, an outside investigator isn’t so sure. As Easter Sunday and opening night of the play arrive, the truth comes out, revealing more secrets than anyone could have possibly imagined..
Plot: Conflict arises in the small town of Holly Springs when an old woman’s death causes a variety of reactions among family and friends.
Smart Tags: #death #inheritance #dysfunctional_family #character_name_in_title #frame_up #scene_of_the_crime #amateur_theater #play #easter #friend #suicide #small_town #theater_director #suicide_note #old_woman #mississippi #fortune #secret #police #family_secret #mental_illness


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Ratings:

6.8/10 Votes: 13,414
86% | RottenTomatoes
70/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 139 Popularity: 8.02 | TMDB

Reviews:

An Underrated Altman Ensemble Piece
Robert Altman can be many things. He can be warped, sarcastic, biting — but he can also be affectionate and understanding. His best films often combine these characteristics with slippery perfection, especially when putting the satirical “The Player” or the balmy “Thieves Live Us” into consideration. I, however, prefer him when he’s gazing upon his characters with head-shaking fondness. Certainly, “Cookie’s Fortune” isn’t comprised of saintly characters — but unlike “Short Cuts” or “Nashville”, only a few of the players are wholeheartedly f-cked up, giving us less time to analyze potentially devilish psyches and more to relish the tight, almost familial bonds between the ever compelling characters. It’s one of his most impeccably entertaining films.

Set in a minuscule Southern town defined by colorful people, sweaty heat, and catfish, in that order, “Cookie’s Fortune” details the sudden death of Jewel Mae “Cookie” Orcutt (Patricia Neal), an elderly widow tired of living alone and tired of her mundane life. So without much thought, she grabs a gun out of her impressive arms closet, flops onto her bed, places a pillow over her face, and shoots herself in the head.

Her niece, Camille (Glenn Close), won’t have it. A wannabe playwright with a fondness for cranking up her every emotion by a few thousand notches, she is disgusted by her aunt’s carelessness: it will bring shame upon the family, and, most notably, it may even upstage her upcoming play. Consumed with dramatic audacity, she arrives at the scene and decides it would be best to make the suicide actually look like a murder: why not? She runs around the house pretending she’s a giallo fiend, breaking windows, stealing valuables, eventually running out the back and throwing the gun into some bushes like Joan Crawford might have during her 1950s-set film noir years. She persuades her dimwitted sister, Cora (Julianne Moore), to go along with the charade, not realizing that covering up a suicide isn’t just some cutesy thing mercurial nieces do for fun. It could lead to, you know, trouble.

Immediately, Cookie’s best friend and confidant, Willis (Charles S. Dutton), is locked up at the local sheriff’s office under suspicion, Cora’s estranged daughter, Emma (Liv Tyler), keeping him company while also utilizing the opportunity to have closet sex with her cop boyfriend (Chris O’Donnell) to pass the time. No one, including the men who arrested Willis in the first place, believe he’s the murderer — which casts further suspicion onto Cookie’s weirdo nieces.

But “Cookie’s Fortune” isn’t a conventional crime movie, preferring to use its titular figure’s sudden offing as a way of throwing the Mississippi set town off course and seeing how its residents handle the travesty. Anne Rapp’s screenplay always retains a certain sort of comic lushness that makes the intersecting situations ceaselessly delightful while also maintaining a sort of broad realism. These people certainly could exist — not all realism based films have to be dirt-on-the-ground miserable — and “Cookie’s Fortune” is all the more fun for it. Close is a bundle of laughs, delivering off-color lines like an unintentional comedy pro, Neal ensuring why Cookie was such a vital part of her town’s life. Dutton is one of Altman’s sweetest scene-stealers, and Tyler, in a terrific performance, is a consistent pleasure as a free-spirit that seasons the oft conservative setting of the film.

Most consider “Cookie’s Fortune” to be minor Altman, but I think it’s underrated Altman. He regularly goes deep with his films, finding ways to mirror the lives of his flawed characters with our own. But “Cookie’s Fortune” is such a delicacy because it’s breezy, amusing without any existential kinks. He sets scenes with a sort of nostalgic reverie, figuring that small town America isn’t all “Twin Peaks” and can still preserve the same sort of complicated magic of a ’70s era sitcom. We watch the characters converse wanting to be a part of their community, either because the friendships seem everlasting or because the disdainfulness is comical rather than harmful. Most would want to get out of the town “Cookie’s Fortune” sets itself in right away — not me. I’d like to hole up there for a while, collect my thoughts and have conversation about the good things in life instead of the high drama that shapes the metropolises of America. Lightweight Altman may not be everyone’s favorite, but I tend to prefer a grizzled filmmaker when he’s enjoying himself. So maybe “Cookie’s Fortune” is an accidental masterpiece — it’s an underrated moment in his lustrous career.

Review By: blakiepeterson Rating: 8 Date: 2015-07-23

Other Information:

Original Title Cookie’s Fortune
Release Date 1999-03-24
Release Year 1999

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 58 min (118 min)
Budget 10000000
Revenue 10920544
Status Released
Rated PG-13
Genre Comedy, Drama
Director Robert Altman
Writer Anne Rapp
Actors Glenn Close, Julianne Moore, Liv Tyler
Country United States
Awards 3 wins & 11 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera Panavision Cameras and Lenses
Laboratory Consolidated Film Industries (CFI), Hollywood (CA), USA
Film Length N/A
Negative Format 35 mm (Kodak)
Cinematographic Process Spherical
Printed Film Format 35 mm

Cookie’s Fortune 1999 123movies
Cookie’s Fortune 1999 123movies
Cookie’s Fortune 1999 123movies
Cookie’s Fortune 1999 123movies
Cookie’s Fortune 1999 123movies
Original title Cookie's Fortune
TMDb Rating 6.45 139 votes

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