Going Berserk Explained

Going Berserk
Director:David Steinberg
Producer:Claude Héroux
Cinematography:Bobby Byrne
Editing:Donn Cambern
Music:Tom Scott
Distributor:Universal Pictures
Runtime:84 minutes
Country:United States
Canada
Language:English
Gross:$234,950

Going Berserk is a 1983 American-Canadian comedy film starring John Candy, Joe Flaherty, and Eugene Levy and directed by David Steinberg.[1]

Plot

John Bourgignon is an amiable chauffeur and would-be drummer who is engaged to the daughter Nancy, of an extremely disapproving United States congressman Ed Reese. As the wedding date approaches, John's sleazy film-director friend, Sal DiPasquale, blackmails the senator into allowing him to record the ceremony. John has assorted misadventures, including being handcuffed to a dead man, running afoul of a motorcycle gang, and getting brainwashed by an aerobics cult that wants him to assassinate the congressman. The conditioning goes awry, causing John to behave like "a schmuck" and nearly ruin his engagement, but a second attempt appears to have the desired effect. At the wedding ceremony, John reveals he resisted the conditioning; the cultists are arrested, John more or less saves the day, and more or less lives happily ever after.

Reception

The New York Times review stated, "John Candy is easily the funniest thing in Going Berserk, an affably stupid comedy that's saddled with too much plot and that hasn't nearly enough energy to go with it."[2] Vulture Hound wrote, "Going Berserk co-written by Dana Olsen misses the mark with its bare minimum of plot to get us from scene to scene that reference films/tv shows you’d rather being watching than this movie."[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Going Berserk. TCM database. Turner Classic Movies. February 25, 2016.
  2. Web site: JOHN CANDY IN 'BERSERK'. Janet. Maslin. October 29, 1983. NYTimes.com.
  3. Web site: Going Berserk for Candy - Going Berserk (DVD Review). June 9, 2016.