Surrender (1987 film)

This article is about the 1987 film. For other uses, see Surrender (disambiguation).
Surrender
Directed by Jerry Belson[1]
Produced by Alan Greisman
Aaron Spelling
Menahem Golan
Yoram Globus
Written by Jerry Belson
Starring
Music by Michel Colombier[2]
Cinematography Juan Ruiz Anchía[2]
Edited by Wendy Greene Bricmont
Distributed by Warner Bros. (USA)
Cannon Films (non-USA)
Release dates
October 9, 1987
Running time
94 minutes[2]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $15 million
Box office $5,711,976

Surrender is a 1987 American comedy film that was written and directed by Jerry Belson.[1] It stars Sally Field, Michael Caine, Steve Guttenberg, Peter Boyle and Iman. Caine, Field and Boyle previously collaborated together in Beyond the Poseidon Adventure.

Plot

Sean Stein is a successful novelist, but after two divorces and a palimony suit,[1] he now believes women only have loved him for his money. At a charity ball where armed thieves order guests to strip, he is bound nude to Daisy Morgan, a commercial artist.[1] He is immediately attracted to her.

Daisy is in a rather rocky relationship with Marty, a whiny, unstable lawyer who is afraid to make a commitment. Sean does not know she already has a well-off boyfriend, but he decides to play a little trick to win her. With the help of his lawyer, Jay Bass, he pretends to be a poor failure to see if Daisy will love him for himself. As their relationship develops, Sean ultimately decides to reveal his true self. But on that very day, Marty persuades Daisy that he is a changed man and that they should live together in his home. Sean is heartbroken.

On moving day, Daisy accidentally sees a newspaper clipping that reveals Sean's true identity. She demands an explanation, which she accepts, telling him she realized that he is who she truly loves. However, he wonders if she only decided this after reading the article about his success and seeing his Beverly Hills home. She lies.

They elope to Lake Tahoe to be married. On the way, Sean urges her to sign a prenuptial agreement. She thinks it "unromantic" but concedes. In a casino in Nevada, gambling by herself, Daisy then miraculously hits a jackpot on a slot machine, winning two million dollars.

Sean returns to say he has had a change of heart and requires no prenup. Now it is Daisy who wants to know when exactly he decided this. She admits lying to him before. Marty shows up and begs her to return to him. Sean says: "You can have her."

Back in Los Angeles, realizing she has made a mistake, Daisy rejects a proposal of marriage and pays off Marty for his trouble with some of her casino winnings.

A disturbed Sean spots a prostitute who robbed him. He decides to avenge himself against women in general by bringing the streetwalker to his home and robbing her. She turns out to be a transvestite. Daisy suddenly bursts in and wants to marry him again, throwing all of her remaining cash at him. The prostitute picks up his gun and sees the pile of cash, but generously says: "I'll only take cab fare."

Cast

Filming

Much of the film was shot in Stateline, Nevada in November 1986. This was Jackie Cooper's final film before his death in 2011.

Notes

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