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Play trailer Round Numbers R 1992 1h 38m Romance Comedy Play Trailer Watchlist
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Tomatometer 0 Reviews 62% Popcornmeter 250+ Ratings
The wife (Kate Mulgrew) of "Big Al the Muffler King" (Marty Ingels) aims to fix his spokesmodel at a weight-loss health spa.

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member I think this movie has gotten a bum rap, even among fans of Kate Mulgrew. While it is inarguably a B-movie with a low budget feel, don't let that fool you! Amid Judith's (Kate Mulgrew's) Ally McBeal-style fantasizing (6 years before Ally McBeal hit the airwaves) and slapstick scenes of mistaken identity and discovery (or were they Shakespearean??), this movie tackles a number of serious issues, including breast cancer, our obsession with being thin and attractive at all costs, breast cancer as it relates to our culture's obsession with sex appeal, the value of relationships between women and what gets in the way of such relationships, and stereotypes that would have us believe that attractive women can't also be smart women (not to mention the reverse: that smart, professional women like Judith can't also be attractive). And, yes, it's also hilarious! <br><br> A previous reviewer noted that KM was oddly unconvincing as "a fat and ugly woman." This is in part because KM was NOT fat, or even slightly overweight, and no baggy shirt could make her look as if she was. But I think this casting actually adds another layer to the movie: Here is a skinny woman who thinks she's fat--and the other characters around her, most notably her female secretary/friend, never contradict her. Further, once she gets to the weight-loss "spa," the woman in charge tells her that she is unconscionably overweight and unattractive as well. My point is that what we have here is a very subtle commentary on how women internalize society's insistence that they are fat, ugly--imperfect--and buy into the constant bombardment of advertisers of various industries (like weight-loss programs) that insist they need to FIX themselves to be worthy human beings even when nothing is really wrong with them. I'm not sure that commentary was deliberate in the casting of a very petite Kate Mulgrew to play Judith, but either way it's there. What fun! Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 02/06/23 Full Review Audience Member Kate Mulgrew is brilliantly funny in this movie, though strangely unconvincing as a fat and ugly woman. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/14/23 Full Review Audience Member If you love Kate Mulgrew, watch this movie. If not, then it's probably not for you. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/08/23 Full Review Read all reviews
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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis The wife (Kate Mulgrew) of "Big Al the Muffler King" (Marty Ingels) aims to fix his spokesmodel at a weight-loss health spa.
Director
Nancy Zala
Rating
R
Genre
Romance, Comedy
Original Language
English
Runtime
1h 38m