Romancing the Stone

Romancing the Stone(1984)

PG
03/30/1984 (US)Romance, Comedy, Action, Adventure1h 46m
6.8

"She's a girl from the big city. He's a reckless soldier of fortune. For a fabulous treasure, they share an adventure no one could imagine... or survive."

Overview

Though she can spin wild tales of passionate romance, novelist Joan Wilder has no life of her own. Then one day adventure comes her way in the form of a mysterious package. It turns out that the parcel is the ransom she'll need to free her abducted sister, so Joan flies to South America to hand it over. But she gets on the wrong bus and winds up hopelessly stranded in the jungle.

Robert Zemeckis

Director

Diane Thomas

Screenplay

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Part of the Romancing the Stone Collection

An action-adventure romantic comedy film series about the adventures of fictional romance novelist Joan Wilder and bird exporter Jack T. Colton.

Media

Romancing the Stone | #TBT Trailer | 20th Century FOX

Romancing the Stone | #TBT Trailer | 20th Century FOX

Trailer

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C
A review by CinemaSerf
6.0

Written on June 8, 2023

This film does make you realise just how good Harrison Ford was in "Indiana Jones" (also 1984) and how good Danny DeVito is in this - but as far as Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner go, well they are really pretty mediocre. He is "Jack", the dashing rogue who ends out helping slushy fiction writer "Joan" through the Colombian jungle in search of her kidnapped sister - something about a treasure map. This adventure takes for ever to get going, but once it does it offers us a colourful and entertaining enough series of set-piece escapades with a beat-heavy synthesised score that works hard to compensate for some really inane dialogue from both. Kidnapper DeVito ("Ralph") amiably steals the scenes he features in, as the story builds to a suitably perilous - and predictable - denouement with big creepy insects, a waterfall, car chases - and everyone gets wet a lot. You get the drift. It's fine to pass an afternoon and there is some chemistry between the two, but it's all a bit of a pale imitation now and the comedic elements have not aged very well either.