User Reviews (5)

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  • David (Robert Petkoff) decides to leave medical school. As he explains, he had been studying to preserve lives without knowing why life is worth saving. As he is walking back home, he runs into a bevy of women who throw themselves at him. One wants him to help her write a movie, another has a mysterious box she wants him to keep for her, and so forth. After these encounters, David continues on through a journey of elevators, cows, wills, Central Park, and overnight guests. How does a story untangle itself?

    This is an offbeat film with a capacity to charm and produce chuckles. Petkoff smiles throughout the strange happenings surrounding him and Calista Flockhart is engaging in a smaller role as the love interest. The setting in NYC is always a welcome one, too, while the costumes are well conceived. Fans of the routine romcom will delight in this atypical variation of the norm. Others who seek an independent film with a bit of pizazz may want to take a chance with this one, too.
  • thin senseless plot, poor acting, minimal inter-actor chemistry, and unfortunately timed and ill-written comedic lines. The script is quirky but ultimately unsuccessful. This movie suffered from either being not realistic enough, or not absurd enough... a step in either direction would have been an improvement.
  • A young man (Robert Petkoff) impulsively quits medical school and immediately finds himself involved with a number of attractive women, all of whom want strange things from him (like holding onto a box for weeks and never looking inside it).

    Along the way he meets up with various eccentric characters, the most fun being the late, great Peter Boyle's charming homeless man/ex-cowboy.

    This is the kind of whimsical film that might have found more acceptance if it had been made in France and shown with subtitles. We seem to have more patience for foreign films that trade in smiles and light-hearted ,slightly absurd romantic tangles, with sexually aggressive, quirky and lovable women who may be inscrutable, but who are no less endearing for being so.

    This is not a film that will change your life, but it is one you may very well enjoy.
  • This one surprised me! From moment one, the great music, the scenery, and as the film progressed, each supporting character made this a treasure I've watched often at home. I have never seen a film with such a rich supporting cast that was given so much screen time. Each one of them is captivating and well played: Peter Boyle, Olympia Dukakis, Dina Merrill are names you know, but the many others were extremely well chosen and directed.

    Lead actor Robert Petkof is charming as the likable everyman going thru the comical plot, and his love interest Callisto Flockhart is beguiling!

    Altogether, this film is well done, the script is perfectly fun, and the director did a marvelous putting it together. A real unexpected treat!
  • I watched Milk and Money one lazy Sunday afternoon. During the entire film, I kept telling myself I had other things to do -- but I just couldn't turn it off. Milk and Money is offbeat and quirky, but cute and rather humorous throughout. Calista Flockhart is beguiling. Denise Faye is extremely sexy -- and Dina Merrill is a legendary supporting actress. Together, they are the primary women surrounding the main character, David. Milk and Money is not worth the ticket price at a movie theatre, but I would watch again on another lazy Sunday afternoon.