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Housesitter Details

1992 DVD Certificate PG.gif
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 4790 members

A slick, smart vehicle for Steve Martin and Goldie Hawn, Housesitter offers an acceptably daffy premise and enough inventive business to sustain it through to the, not unexpected, happy ending. Architect Martin builds a dream home for his childhood sweetheart (Dana Delaney) only to be rejected when he proposes marriage. After a .. Read more

Starring Steve Martin, Goldie Hawn, Dana Delany, Julie Harris
Director Frank Oz
Genres Comedy, Romance

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Housesitter

A slick, smart vehicle for Steve Martin and Goldie Hawn, Housesitter offers an acceptably daffy premise and enough inventive business to sustain it through to the, not unexpected, happy ending. Architect Martin builds a dream home for his childhood sweetheart (Dana Delaney) only to be rejected when he proposes marriage. After a one-night stand, Hawn--a daffy waitress with a gift for making up improbable but convincing lies--moves into Martin's house and tells his parents (Donald Moffatt, Julie Harris) and the whole community that she is his surprise new wife. When he sees how this impresses Delaney, Martin goes along with the charade, encouraging wilder and wilder fictions and doing his best to join in so that he can rush through to a divorce and move on to the woman he has always wanted. Hawn has to recruit a couple of winos to pose as her parents and impress Martin's boss into giving him a promotion, but we glimpse her real misery at his eventual intention to toss her out of the make-believe world she has created because her own real background is so grim.

Its sit-com hi-jinx are manic enough not to be strangled by an inevitable dip in to sentiment towards the end, and Hawn, who always has to work hard, is better matched against the apparently effortless Martin than in their subsequent pairing in Out-of-Towners. Martin, often wasted in comparatively straight roles, has a few wild and crazy scenes as Hawn prompts him into joining her improvised fantasies. Director Frank Oz, a frequent Martin collaborator (Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Little Shop of Horrors, Bowfinger), is the model of a proper, competent, professional craftsman when he sets out to put a comedy together--but the film misses streaks of lunacy or cruelty that might have made it funnier and more affecting.

On the DVD: The disc offers a pristine widescreen non-anamorphic transfer, letterboxed to 1.85:1. There are no extra features to speak of, just text-based production notes, cast and director bios, plus a trailer and an assortment of language and subtitle options. --Kim Newman

Starring Steve Martin, Goldie Hawn, Dana Delany, Julie Harris, Donald Moffat, Peter MacNicol
Director Frank Oz
Studio UNIVERSAL PICTURES UK
Run time DVD: 1 hr 37 mins
Certificate DVD Certificate PG.gif
Genres Comedy, Romance
Language English
Dubbed French, German, Italian, Spanish
Subtitles Bulgarian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Hungarian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish
Released DVD: 14 Apr 2003
Production year: 1992
Format DVD
  • Critics' reviews (3) of Housesitter

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  • 3 stars out of 5

    Goldie Hawn is at her dippiest as waitress Gwen, who overturns the life of Steve Martin's staid architect Newton Davis in this likeable if somewhat silly romantic comedy. Davis is recovering from rejection by the love of his life (Dana Delany) when he meets Gwen, who decides to help his convalescence by moving into the dream house he has built but left empty after getting the elbow from his dream woman. When Gwen tells the neighbourhood that she's his new wife, the comic complications pile on, to generally amusing effect. Mark Stein's screenplay has all the elements that you would expect of a classic screwball comedy. It's the old loathers becoming lovers scenario — imagine Cary Grant being jilted by Carole Landis only to be swept off his feet by a madcap Katharine Hepburn and you get the basic idea. What makes this such a cosy watch is that we've seen Martin and Hawn play these kind of characters before. As he proved in Planes, Trains and Automobiles, Martin is a master when it comes to put-upon types whose initial frosty frustration gradually thaws into fond acceptance, while Hawn has been playing dizzy kooks since the heyday of Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In. Spouting increasingly fabulous fibs is one thing, but playing stooge is quite another and director Frank Oz is fortunate in having Julie Harris and Donald Moffat backing up the leads as Martin's uncomprehending but trusting parents. It's flawed but fun.

    • Radio Times
  • It's back to wacky mode for Hawn after her dismal adventures in Deceived. She plays waitress Gwen, whose modest means... read more on Time Out

    • Time Out
  • Most helpful member's review of Housesitter

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  • 6 out of 6 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    i luv steve martin

    i have loved this film since it first ccame out and id forgotten til i rented it. this film is steve martin at his best. it is classic comedy.

      • A customer from here
  • Most recent members' review of Housesitter

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  • 3 out of 3 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    Loved it!

    I'm not even that keen on Steve Martin but for a fun, lighthearted, entertaining film I couldn't better this! I still have a smile.

      • A customer from Cornwall, England
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Rating breakdown

4,790 Member ratings
  • 100
350
  • 90
251
  • 80
686
  • 70
768
  • 60
1,198
  • 50
606
  • 40
443
  • 30
205
  • 20
189
  • 10
94

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    • A slick, smart vehicle for Steve Martin and Goldie Hawn, Housesitter offers an acceptably daffy premise and enough inventive business to sustain it through to the, not unexpected, happy ending....