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The Mask (1994 film)

Film by Chuck Russell From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Mask (1994 film)
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The Mask is a 1994 American superhero slapstick film directed by Chuck Russell, from a screenplay by Mike Werb, and based on a story by Michael Fallon and Mark Verheiden. It is the first film in the Mask franchise, based on the comic book series of the same name by John Arcudi and Doug Mahnke, in turn based on a concept by Mike Richardson, published by Dark Horse Comics. Starring Jim Carrey, Peter Riegert, Peter Greene, Amy Yasbeck, Richard Jeni, and Cameron Diaz, the film follows Stanley Ipkiss (Carrey), a hapless and timid bank teller who finds an enchanted mask that transforms him into the titular green-faced troublemaker who can cartoonishly alter himself and his surroundings at will.

Quick facts Directed by, Screenplay by ...

Principal photography began in Los Angeles on August 30, 1993, and concluded in October. The film marked the acting debut of Diaz, who was a model with no acting experience prior to filming, while Carrey, who was starring on the sketch comedy series In Living Color and had just wrapped filming on Ace Ventura: Pet Detective (1994), was virtually unknown at the time. Their casting lead to disputes from New Line Cinema executives who expressed concern that the film would be unsuccessful without well-established actors, but the studio ultimately relented following reassurance from Russell that Carrey and Diaz were the right choices.

The Mask was theatrically released in the United States on July 29, 1994, to critical acclaim, with particular praise for Carrey's performance. The film was also a major commercial success, grossing $352 million against its $18 million production budget, becoming the fourth-highest-grossing film of 1994. It also influenced the resurgence of swing music in the 1990s. Carrey was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy at the 52nd Golden Globe Awards and the film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects at the 67th Academy Awards. A sequel without the involvement of Carrey, Son of the Mask, was released in 2005.

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Plot

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In Edge City, insecure bank teller Stanley Ipkiss is frequently ridiculed by everyone except for his co-worker and best friend, Charlie Schumaker. Meanwhile, gangster Dorian Tyrell, whose boss Niko owns the Coco Bongo nightclub, plots to overthrow Niko. One day, Tyrell sends his singer-girlfriend, Tina Carlyle, into the bank to record its layout for an upcoming robbery. Stanley is attracted to Tina, and she seemingly reciprocates.

After being denied entrance to the Coco Bongo to watch Tina perform, Stanley's faulty loaner car breaks down during his drive home, leaving him stuck on the harbor's bridge. Attempting to rescue a humanoid figure in the waters, he finds a pile of garbage concealing a wooden mask. Upon returning to his apartment and donning the mask, he transforms into a green-faced trickster known as "The Mask", who can cartoonishly alter himself and his surroundings at will. With newfound confidence, Stanley indulges in a comical rampage through the city, humiliating several of his tormentors, including his temperamental landlady, Agnes Peenman, and the mechanics who gave him the faulty car. Meanwhile, Niko learns of Tyrell's plans and warns him to leave Edge City in one week or be killed.

The following day, Stanley encounters Detective Lieutenant Mitch Kellaway and newspaper reporter Peggy Brandt, who are investigating the Mask's activity. To obtain the funds necessary to attend Tina's performance, Stanley dons the mask and raids the bank, inadvertently foiling Tyrell's robbery. At the Coco Bongo, Stanley dances exuberantly with Tina, whom he kisses. Tyrell soon confronts him for disrupting the theft, and Stanley flees, leaving behind a scrap of cloth from his suit, which reverts into a piece of his pajamas. After arresting Tyrell and his henchman, Kellaway finds the piece of fabric and suspects Stanley's involvement.

Later, Stanley consults psychiatrist Arthur Neuman, who recently published a book called The Masks We Wear; he deduces that the mask may be a creation of Loki and its powers are only active at night. Neuman believes it is mythology, but he concludes that the Mask's personality is based on Stanley's repressed desires. That night, Stanley meets Tina at a local park as the Mask until they are interrupted by Kellaway, who attempts to capture him. Stanley flees with Peggy after he distracts the police with a mass performance of "Cuban Pete"; Peggy then reluctantly betrays him to Tyrell for a $50,000 bounty. After Tyrell becomes a bulky and malevolent being when he dons the mask, he has his henchmen force Stanley to reveal the location of the stolen money before turning him in to the police along with a green rubber mask.

When Tina visits Stanley at the station, he urges her to leave the city, but not before she thanks Stanley for showing her kindness and telling him that the mask was unnecessary. She attempts to flee, but Tyrell kidnaps and prepares her for the charity ball at the Coco Bongo, hosted by Niko and attended by the city's elite, including Mayor Mitchell Tilton. Upon arrival, the masked Tyrell murders Niko and prepares to destroy the club with a time bomb. Stanley's dog, Milo, helps his owner escape from his cell by retrieving the keys from the guard. Stanley sets out to stop Tyrell and takes Kellaway hostage to escape the police station.

After locking Kellaway in his car, Stanley enters the club and enlists Charlie's help, but he is quickly discovered and captured. Tina tricks Tyrell into removing the mask, which is recovered and donned by Milo, who battles through Tyrell's henchmen as he and Stanley fight each other. Stanley retrieves the mask, uses its powers to dispose of the bomb seconds before it detonates and defeat Tyrell by sending him down the drain of the club's ornamental fountain; the police arrive and arrest Tyrell's henchmen. Kellaway tries arresting Stanley again, but Tilton intervenes, implicating Tyrell as the Mask and praising Stanley as a hero.

The following day, Stanley, falsely exonerated and more secure, returns to the harbor bridge with Tina, Charlie and Milo. Tina discards the mask before she and Stanley kiss. Charlie tries to retrieve the mask, only for Milo to swim away with it.

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Cast

  • Jim Carrey as Stanley Ipkiss / The Mask, a down-on-his-luck bank employee who is mistreated and taken advantage of by people. Carrey commented that he characterized Stanley after his own father: "a nice guy, just trying to get by". When he wears the Mask of Loki, Stanley becomes the titular green-faced trickster, who can cartoonishly alter himself and his surroundings at will.
  • Peter Riegert as Lieutenant Mitch Kellaway, a slightly cynical police lieutenant bent on capturing the Mask
  • Peter Greene as Dorian Tyrell, a rogue mafia officer who desires to overthrow his superior Niko. When wearing the Mask, during which Tyrell is portrayed by Garret T. Sato and pro wrestler Jeep Swenson, he becomes a bulky and malevolent being who speaks in a deep demonic voice.
  • Amy Yasbeck as Peggy Brandt, a reporter looking for a scoop to get her out of the advice column
  • Richard Jeni as Charles "Charlie" Schumaker, Stanley's best friend. Charlie is amiable but can be selfish or irrational at times.
  • Orestes Matacena as Niko, a crime boss who is Tyrell's superior and the owner of the Coco Bongo
  • Tim Bagley and Johnny Williams as Irv and Burt Ripley, the car mechanics who overcharge Stanley and gave him a faulty loaner car
  • Nancy Fish as Agnes Peenman, Stanley's temperamental landlady
  • Reginald E. Cathey as Freeze, one of Tyrell's henchmen and a loyal friend of his
  • Jim Doughan as Detective Doyle, Kellaway's amiable, but slightly inept partner
  • Denis Forest as Sweet Eddy, one of Tyrell's henchmen
  • Cameron Diaz as Tina Carlyle, Tyrell's glamorous and beautiful girlfriend, who becomes attracted to Stanley. Tina is dissatisfied with Tyrell as a partner but does not defy him until Stanley has courted her.
    • Susan Boyd provides Tina's uncredited singing voice.
  • Blake Clark as Murray, Peggy's supervisor at the city's local newspaper
  • Christopher Darga as a paramedic
  • Joely Fisher as Maggie, a client who comes to buy concert tickets and blows Stanley off for her friend
  • Kevin Grevioux, Richard Montes and Daniel James Peterson as some of Tyrell's lesser henchmen
  • Howard Kay and Scott McElroy as Niko's bodyguards
  • Ivory Ocean as Mitchell Tilton, the mayor of Edge City who exercises good governance and has a tough stance against crime and corruption in the city.
  • Jeremy Roberts as Bobby, one of Tyrell's henchmen employed as the bouncer at the Coco Bongo and a friend of Charlie
  • Eamonn Roche as Mr. Dickey, Stanley and Charlie's supervisor at Edge City Bank
  • Benjamin J. Stein as Dr. Arthur Neuman, a psychiatrist who tells Stanley about the Mask's origins. He is also the author of the book The Masks We Wear, which deals with people portraying themselves differently on the outside to be accepted by others.
  • Nils Allen Stewart as Orlando, one of Tyrell's henchmen
  • Max as Milo, Stanley's Jack Russell Terrier. When wearing the Mask, Milo becomes quite aggressive and mischievous but is still friendly and loyal to his owner.[4][5]
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Production

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Development

In 1989, Mike Richardson and Todd Moyer, respectively the founder and Executive Vice President of Dark Horse Comics, first approached New Line Cinema about adapting the comic The Mask into a film, after having seen offers from other studios. The main character went through several transformations in different script treatments, and the project was stalled a couple of times.[6]

One unused Mask idea, according to Richardson, was to transform the story into one about a mask-maker who took faces off of corpses to put them on teens and turn them into zombies.[7]

Initially intended to become a new horror franchise, New Line Cinema offered the job of directing the film to Chuck Russell, who had previously worked on the A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise and the 1988 remake of The Blob.[8] Russell found the excessive violence of the comic off-putting, and decided that it wouldn't work in a film; instead, he proposed a more comical, family-friendly tone.[9]

Writing

Mike Werb says Chuck Russell tapped him after reading his script for a film adaptation of the Curious George books for Imagine. The two decided to turn The Mask into a wild romantic comedy.[10] Mike Werb wrote his first draft of The Mask in less than six weeks, and less than two months later, it was green-lit.[11]

According to Mark Verheiden, they had a first draft screenplay for a film version done back in 1990. Verheiden then wrote the second draft in early 1991, adding more humor, and that ended up being the only work he did on The Mask. Verheiden's revised draft included more instances of fourth wall breaking like "cameos" by critics Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert, and dark content such as excessive bloodshed and sexual assault. The characters Stanley, Kellaway, and Doyle carried into the final film; Stanley's girlfriend Kathleen (inspired by Kathy from the comics) evolved into Tina Carlyle while Scully and Vitelli became Dorian Tyrell and Niko, respectively.[12] After that, the film entered development hell.[13]

The dance sequence at Coco Bongo was inspired by the 1943 MGM animated short Red Hot Riding Hood.

Casting

In the early stages, various actors were suggested as possibilities for the lead role. Possible leads included Rick Moranis, Martin Short, and Robin Williams. New Line Cinema executive Mike DeLuca sent a tape of Jim Carrey performing a sketch from the comedy show In Living Color to Richardson, who noted Carrey's energy and highly expressive physicality. Director Chuck Russell had seen Carrey perform live at The Comedy Store and followed him on In Living Color and was keen to cast him in the film. Carrey was top of his list and the script had been rewritten for him, but Nicolas Cage and Matthew Broderick were also kept in consideration if he declined.[14] Producer Bob Engelman recalled Carrey had the flu during the filming:

Jim did things that, obviously when he became a superstar, he never would do. I remember one night when he was sick as a dog and he was throwing up and he said, "I can't do this." I said, "Look, Jim, they won't let us shut down. If we don't get this, we don't get this." We dragged him out of the trailer and he was a trooper and got it in there delivered and was fantastic. But those are the sort of things that would not have happened when Jim became the superstar that he became.[14]

Russell's first choice to play Tina had been Anna Nicole Smith; however, she backed out at the last minute to appear in Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult instead. A costume director he had worked with recommended Cameron Diaz and they got her to audition for the part. The character was originally written as a good girl who is actually bad but after Diaz was cast the part was rewritten to make her genuinely a good person. Mike Richardson said to Forbes that Diaz proved to be the right choice. "If you watch the film again, you'll notice scenes where Jim and Cameron are together. If you watch her face, oftentimes, Jim was doing something, and she would break out laughing the minute the scene ended".[14]

Visual effects

The Mask's visual effects were handled by Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) and Dream Quest Images. The sequences in the film which involved computer animation were supervised by ILM animation director Wes Takahashi.[15] Although many VFX scenes had to be cut for budget,[11] New Line invested more heavily on the special effects, as Jim Carrey was not yet an established star. Russell videotaped the rehearsals, then worked to design the effects out of Carrey's performance:

I insisted on working off Jim's face, on making the action organic to Jim's performance. No matter how good the effect is, if it's not coming out of character and story, it's not going to be effective ... The guys at ILM said they figured I saved about a million bucks once I got Jim, just on what he was able to do, versus what we intended to do originally.[16]

Makeup effects artist Greg Cannom wanted to bring out Carrey's exaggerated facial expressions through makeup.[17] Carrey's daily makeup sessions took four hours.[18] The costume included fake teeth meant to be used outside of dialogue scenes, but Carrey learned to wear them while talking to play the character more convincingly.[19]

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Reception

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Box office

The film was a box-office success, grossing $119 million domestically and $352 million worldwide,[3] becoming the second-highest grossing superhero movie at that time, behind Batman. In terms of global gross compared to budget, the film became the most profitable comic book movie of all time, and it remained so until 2019, when Joker surpassed it.[20]

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 80% based on reviews from 54 critics, with an average rating of 6.5/10. The site's consensus states, "It misses perhaps as often as it hits, but Jim Carrey's manic bombast, Cameron Diaz's blowsy appeal, and the film's overall cartoony bombast keep The Mask afloat."[21] Metacritic gave it a weighted average score of 56 out of 100 based on reviews from 12 critics.[22] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[23]

On the television program At the Movies, Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert gave the film "two thumbs up".[citation needed] In his column, Ebert, who was underwhelmed by his performance in Ace Ventura, thought Carrey found "a perfect vehicle" in The Mask. He also praised the art design and called Diaz "a true discovery".[17] Siskel, who had a similar dislike for Ace Ventura, praised Carrey's performance in The Mask by stating that he was "better used as an ingredient instead of as the plot". He also commended Diaz's performance, and he overall called the film "the latest example of technique overriding the written word in an American film".[24]

Accolades

The film was nominated for Best Visual Effects at the 67th Academy Awards.[25] The film was also nominated for Best Fantasy Film, Best Costumes and Best Make-up at the Saturn Awards. Carrey was nominated for a Golden Globe, but also a Razzie Award (for "Worst New Star").[26]

Year-end lists

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Home media

The film was released on VHS and Laserdisc on January 18, 1995, and on DVD on March 26, 1997. The VHS version included the Space Ghost Coast to Coast episode "The Mask", which features interviews with Jim Carrey and Chuck Russell. The DVD presented a non-anamorphic Widescreen transfer. It was eventually released as a special edition in 2005 with an anamorphic transfer. It was later released on Blu-ray Disc on December 9, 2008.[29] It was the most rented title in the UK for the year 1995 with 3.8 million rentals.[30]

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Music

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Soundtrack

Quick facts Soundtrack album by Various artists, Released ...

Swing music featured prominently in the film, and Royal Crown Revue made an on-screen cameo, which in turn influenced the swing revival later in the decade.[31][32]

The Mask: Music From the Motion Picture was released on July 26, 1994, on Chaos Records through Sony Music Entertainment. It features music from: Xscape, Tony! Toni! Toné!, Vanessa Williams, Harry Connick Jr., Carrey himself and more. The songs "Cuban Pete" and "Hey Pachuco" were also used for the trailer of the 1997 Disney film Flubber.

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Score

The record labels TriStar Music and Epic Soundtrax released an orchestral score soundtrack to The Mask after the original soundtrack's release. The score was composed and conducted by Randy Edelman, performed by the Irish Film Orchestra, and recorded at Windmill Lane Studios Ireland.[34]

  1. Opening – The Origin of the Mask
  2. Tina
  3. Carnival
  4. Transformation
  5. Tango In The Park
  6. Lovebirds
  7. Out of the Line of Fire
  8. A Dark Night
  9. The Man Behind the Mask
  10. Dorian Gets a New Face
  11. Looking for a Way Out
  12. The Search
  13. Forked Tongue
  14. Milo to the Rescue
  15. The Mask Is Back
  16. Finale
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Other media

Animated series

An animated television series, titled The Mask: Animated Series, made over 54 episodes from 1995 to 1997, with Rob Paulsen as Stanley Ipkiss and his alter ego, the Mask, and Neil Ross as Kellaway. Ben Stein reprised his role as Dr Neuman. Though based on the film and making some minor references to its events, it is set in an alternate continuity where Ipkiss keeps the mask, Tina Carlyle is absent, and the mask works during daytime. Its final episode was a crossover with another Jim Carrey character, Ace Ventura. This would later continue in an episode of the Ace Ventura: Pet Detective cartoon series.

Video game

A video game based on the movie, also titled The Mask, was released for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System by Black Pearl Software.

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Sequels

Son of the Mask

After the success of the original, a sequel film was planned, with magazine Nintendo Power offering readers a chance, via sweepstakes, to win a cameo role in the film.[35] Carrey eventually bailed on the project, forcing Nintendo Power to give the winner of the contest the equivalent cash value of the cameo role instead.[36] A sequel, Son of the Mask, featuring neither Carrey nor Diaz, instead featuring Jamie Kennedy and Alan Cumming, was eventually released in 2005. It was a critical and commercial failure upon release, and the franchise was put on hold indefinitely.

Possible third film

On the possibility of a sequel to the 1994 film with Carrey reprising the role of Stanley Ipkiss and Diaz as Tina Carlyle, Mike Richardson said in a 2014 interview: "We've been talking about reviving The Mask, both in film and in comics. We've had a couple of false starts".[37] In December 2024, Carrey revealed that he was still interested in portraying the Mask in a sequel depending on the idea used.[38] In January 2025, Diaz also expressed interest in returning "if Jim's on board".[39]

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See also

Notes

  1. Credited as New Line Productions during the opening sequence.

References

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