The Real McCoy | |
Director: | Russell Mulcahy |
Music: | Brad Fiedel |
Cinematography: | Denis Crossan |
Editing: | Peter Honess |
Studio: | Bregman/Baer Productions, inc. |
Distributor: | Universal Pictures (USA & Canada) Capella International (International) |
Runtime: | 105 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Budget: | $24 million |
Gross: | $6,484,246 |
The Real McCoy is a 1993 American heist crime film, directed by Russell Mulcahy and starring Kim Basinger, Val Kilmer and Terence Stamp.[1]
Karen McCoy is released from prison with nothing but the clothes on her back. Before being incarcerated, Karen was the bank robber of her time but now she wishes for nothing more than to settle down and start a new life.
Unfortunately, between a dirty parole officer, old business partners and an idiot ex-husband, McCoy will have to do the unthinkable to save her son and new heartthrob J.T.: another bank job.
The Real McCoy grossed $6,484,246 in the United States, with no international showings.In its first weekend the film grossed $2,705,425, which was 41.7% of the film's total earnings.[2]
The film earned negative reviews from critics. The Real McCoy holds an 22% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 18 reviews, with an average rating of 4.13/10.[3] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave it 2 stars, saying, "... "The Real McCoy" took me back to... heist movies where a bank vault was subjected to high-tech manipulations by athletic super-crooks... those same scenes apparently took the film's authors back to the very same sources, since "The Real McCoy" recycles the same devices, not quite as well as the originals."[4]