Ernest Goes to Jail

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Ernest Goes to Jail
Ernest goes to jail poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by John Cherry
Written byCharlie Cohen
Produced byMartin Erlichman
Starring
Cinematography Peter Stein
Edited by Sharyn L. Ross
Music byBruce Arntson
Kirby Shelstad
Production
companies
Distributed by Buena Vista Pictures Distribution
Release date
  • April 6, 1990 (1990-04-06)
Running time
81 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$9 million [1]
Box office$25 million

Ernest Goes to Jail is a 1990 American comedy film directed by John Cherry and starring Jim Varney. It is the fourth film to feature the character Ernest P. Worrell, and the third film in the Ernest series. It was shot in Nashville and Tennessee State Prison. Unlike the other Ernest films, this film features Varney in a dual role because in addition to portraying Ernest, he also portrays Ernest's evil doppelgänger, Mr. Felix Nash, a crime boss and convicted felon on death row.

Contents

Plot

Ernest P. Worrell is employed as a night janitor at the Howard Country Bank & Trust where his friends and neighbors, Chuck and Bobby, work as security guards. While trying to use a floor polisher, Ernest makes an enormous mess that results in him being electrocuted with strange results. His body becomes magnetized and while trying to escape the various objects attracted to him, he goes into the vault but a pair of safety deposit boxes knock him out just as the effect wears off.

The next morning, co-worker Charlotte Sparrow, whom Ernest is smitten with, asks him out to “just dinner” to discuss Ernest's desire to move up and become a clerk. However, this goal is hampered by his knuckleheaded antics and the ire earned from bank president, Oscar Pendlesmythe. Meanwhile, at the Dracup Penitentiary, convict Rubin Bartlett kills a fellow prisoner and seeks help from Mr. Nash, a convicted bank robber and death row inmate. Unable to offer anything in return, Rubin goes on trial. At the same time, Ernest receives a summons to perform jury duty on the same trial. In the courtroom, Rubin notices Ernest has an uncanny resemblance to Nash. In league with Bartlett and Nash, the defense makes a successful motion for the jury to see the scene of the crime so the switch can be made.

Nash and his silent yet hulking henchman, Lyle, make the switch. Nash coerces the jury to acquit Rubin while Ernest, unknowingly at first, takes Nash's place. Upon realizing his predicament, Ernest makes a series of unsuccessful attempts to escape the prison while also trying to keep up the ruse that he is Nash out of fear of reprisal. At the same time, Nash is planning to rob the bank but gets distracted trying to keep a suspicious Bobby and his smooth, un-Ernest like demeanor from exposing him.

In prison, Ernest is taken to be executed via the electric chair. Having given up on escaping and trying to convince the warden of his identity, Ernest makes a final speech and is electrocuted. The massive voltage puts him in a kind of trance and he becomes magnetized again — only this time, he can zap bolts of electricity from his fingers. He uses this power to comically subdue the guards and blast a hole in the main gate. Rubin attempts to stop him but Lyle, speaking up for the first time, steps in and knocks him out. He tells Ernest to flee so he can stop Nash and save his friends. He also rejects Ernest's request to come with him, saying his place is in the prison but that he will miss him. Ernest escapes and after a changing out of his prison uniform, races to the bank with his dog, Rimshot.

Nash has set up an explosive and handcuffed Chuck to the vault. Charlotte arrives, after an earlier encounter with Nash at Ernest's home that went bad, and is taken hostage as well. Just as Ernest arrives, so do the prison officials. Bobby appears and almost gains the upper hand over Nash but fails. An electrified security cage that Chuck and Bobby installed also fails as Ernest and Nash fight. Nash throws Ernest against the cage and is electrocuted again. This time, his body is electromagnetically polarized allowing him to levitate erratically. Ernest uses the floor polisher against Nash, dragging him up along the ceiling, resulting in him being dropped out cold. With seconds left on the explosive timer, Ernest heroically grabs it and flies up and out of the bank to a safe distance, but it explodes in the night sky. Everyone is devastated that Ernest may have been killed but Nash recovers and holds the group at gunpoint. Before he can use Charlotte as a hostage, Ernest's charred body lands on Nash. He poignantly claims: “I came. I saw. I got blowed up.” before fainting.

Cast

Production

Principal photography took place in Nashville from September 25 until November 15, 1989. [2] A former manufacturing plant in Nashville was converted into a 100,000-square-foot studio by the production designer. This is where the sets were built for, Howard County Bank & Trust, two three-story jail cell tiers, an electrocution room, and Ernest's house. Scenes were shot at the Tennessee State Prison for three days. [2]

Reception

Critical response

Caryn James, reviewing the film in The New York Times , commented that "Ernest Goes to Jail so resembles a high-spirited cartoon that it is likely to be more amusing to children and less painfully obnoxious for parents than its predecessors." She considered the film's heavy focus on slapstick humor and comedic interactions with inanimate objects to be the biggest improvement, saying that while the film is not particularly inventive with this sort of humor, it would appeal to its young target audience more. [3] Writing for the Sun-Sentinel , Roger Hurlburt agreed that Ernest Goes to Jail is a major improvement over the first two Ernest films, due to Ernest's comic mishaps being tied into a solid storyline, but cautioned that it is still a highly uneven work. He elaborated that "Undeniably, Varney is an adroit physical comedian with a flair for making faces, contorting his lean body and evoking a sensation of the heebie-jeebies at appropriate moments.", resulting in a number of inventive laughs, but that in the more dialogue-heavy scenes the characters become dull. [4] In contradiction to Hurlburt, Ty Burr of Entertainment Weekly said that the use of a full plotline in Ernest Goes to Jail makes it a worse film than the previous two Ernest installments, arguing that the Ernest character is best used in short gags and could never become a sympathetic hero. He gave the film a D. [5]

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes , 11% of 9 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 3.6/10. [6]

Box office

The film debuted in third place during its opening weekend, earning $6,143,372. [7] [8] Its total gross was $25,029,569. [9]

Home media

Earnest Goes to Jail was released on Laserdisc [10] and VHS in January 1991. The film was released on Blu-ray for the first time on March 29, 2011, in a single disc Double Feature set along with Ernest Goes to Camp.

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References

  1. Kalafut, Kathy (April 13, 1990). "Ernest's transition from TV to film". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved December 31, 2022.
  2. 1 2 "Ernest Goes to Jail (1990)". American Film Institute . Retrieved December 31, 2022.
  3. James, Caryn (April 7, 1990). "Review/Film;Ernest Again, Invulnerable To Life's Inanimate Objects". The New York Times . Retrieved February 14, 2023.
  4. Hurlburt, Roger (April 6, 1990). "Latest `Ernest` A Breakout From Previous Ventures". Sun-Sentinel . Retrieved February 14, 2023.
  5. Burr, Ty (December 21, 1990). "Ernest Goes to Jail". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved February 15, 2023.
  6. "Ernest Goes to Jail". Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved December 31, 2022.
  7. "'Turtles' Take: $50.9 Million in Two Weeks : Box office: The kids movie featuring the wise-cracking quartet of terrapins is close to setting a record for an independent film". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved June 5, 2012.
  8. "Weekend Box Office Results for April 6–8, 1990". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved April 1, 2008.
  9. "Ernest Goes to Jail (1990)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved April 1, 2008.
  10. "Ernest Goes to Jail LDDB Entry". LDDB. March 6, 2009. Retrieved November 17, 2019.