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    I liked this enough that I didn't feel I'd wasted my money, but I
    didn't like it enough to urge anyone else to spend theirs seeing it.
    
    This is hardly a new idea.  Kirk Douglas plays an old man with a
    buttload of money.  Phil Hartman, Ed Begley Jr., and a gaggle of others
    play his surviving relatives, who spend their weekends kowtowing to him
    and doing each other down trying to line themselves up for when old age
    claims him.
    
    Olivia D'Abo plays the young girl who looks like she's in it for the
    money.
    
    Michael J. Fox is the once-and-future favorite, the son of the only
    relative sufficiently idealistic to not give a care about Kirk
    Douglas's money.
    
    It's what you might call light entertainment.  There are attempts to
    keep the audience guessing but unless you've never encountered this
    story in fiction or real life then you're not going to be surprised by
    much that happens in this movie.  There's nothing amazing or Academy
    Award by what goes on here.  Competently written, acted, directed. 
    Michael J. Fox's character actually goes through some evolution here,
    but it isn't really possible for someone who looks like he does to
    really be a bad guy in a vehicle like this.
    
    
    Two and a half stars out of five.  I can't think of anything in it that
    was actively awful, except maybe Phil Hartman's clothes, but that just
    enhanced his sliminess....
    
    DFW
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