Envy (film)

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Envy
Directed by Barry Levinson
Produced by Barry Levinson
Paula Weinstein
Written by Steve Adams
Starring Ben Stiller
Jack Black
Rachel Weisz
Amy Poehler
Christopher Walken
Music by Mark Mothersbaugh
Cinematography Tim Maurice Jones
Distributed by DreamWorks Pictures (USA)
Columbia Pictures (non-USA)
Release date(s) April 30, 2004 (originally 2003)
Running time 99 min.
Language English
Budget $40,000,000
IMDb profile

Envy is a 2004 comedy film, starring Ben Stiller and Jack Black and was directed by Barry Levinson. The film was poorly received by both critics and audiences in the U.S. The film had been stalled for some time, and it was only the success of School of Rock that prompted the distributors to release the film to theatres. Many scenes were cut out of the film due to bad test screenings, evidence of this can be viewed in the Envy trailers. Ving Rhames's role as a private investigator was also deleted from the film. Originally scheduled for release on May 30, 2003, it was finally released 11 months later on April 30, 2004. Filming of the movie took place in the summer of 2002.

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Tim and Nick (played by Stiller and Black) are best friends who are also neighbors and co-workers at 3M. Nick is constantly coming up with crazy ideas to get rich quick, and when he invents the Vapoorizer, a spray that instantly removes dog excrement, he actually succeeds.

As Nick's wealth continues to grow, so does Tim's jealousy, as he had initially scoffed at the idea and squandered an opportunity to invest $2,000 and become mega-rich himself. Nick is blissfully unaware of Tim's jealousy, and his generosity only serves to make Tim more envious of him.

Tim's jealousy reaches new levels after J-Man (played by Walken), a bizarre drifter, decides to become his adviser.

After a drunken night out, Tim accidentally kills his neighbor's beloved horse, Corkey, and straight away tries to hide the body so Nick does not find out.

With the help of J-Man, he succeeds in this, but his jealousy continues to grow, as does Tim's wife's anger - she blames him for them not being rich like their friends.

One night, Nick reveals that he is going to Rome for the release of vapoorizer there, and gives Tim the opportunity to now join him in a 50/50 partnership.

J-Man finds out that Tim is now rich, and immediately tries to gain from this, but fails. When Tim shoots another arrow off towards his house and strikes J-Man in the back.

At the end of the movie, Corkey is seen floating down a river behind a press conference, and the animal hospital must do tests on him to reveal how he died. It is found that the horse was actually poisoned - Corkey used to eat the apples off Tim's tree, and do his business there. They used vapoorizer to rid their yard of this, and this is what has killed Corky.

Straight away the Vapoorizer is pulled from the shelves in all stores, and Nick and Tim almost lose all their wealth and glory - until Tim comes up with an invention of his own - Pocket Flan, inspired by Nick and his family's love for the dessert.

Columbia Pictures and Castle Rock Entertainment had finally co-produced the film for the very first time since 1989. While, Dreamworks is the distributor for the US.

The film had been shot almost two years before its release, and was in danger of going straight-to-video in the US due to poor audience response during test screenings. It was only due to Jack Black's The School of Rock (2003) that it finally got a theatrical release. Nevertheless, the film performed poorly in US theaters, so much that it was released straight-to-video in Europe and Australia.

At the 2004 Cannes Film Festival, during a press conference for Shark Tale (2004), both Jack Black and Dreamworks' Jeffrey Katzenberg publicly apologized for Envy.

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