-And failed to deliver. Where Purple Rose of Cairo tried to recreate an RKO-ish romantic comedy and fails miserably, this film successfully re-creates the appropriate banter and look - And melds it into 1999.
Oblivious to the 90's world around him, "Johnny Twennies" lives de-facto as if he were smack in the middle of a Frank Capra film. Woody Allen failed to deliver the proper language in his attempt, succeeding only in capturing the imagery: This attempt by Adam Abraham and Gibson Frazier delivers the correct imagery, but also the correct verbiage.
Gibson Frazier as Johnny Twennies is a Cary-Grantish image- A Columnist that lives in a bubble of 1928, confounding those around him, and eventually bringing down crime boss "Mr. Pitt" with buffoonery and comedy.
Interjected into Twennie's rovings are bits of 20's Jazz, some of it written by Abraham and Frazier and quite authentic.
A highly enjoyable jaunt and worth viewing at least twice- A perfect period piece, that does not require period sets, cars, or costume- Except for what Twennies carries with him,