Mortdecai -
A dishonorable art dealer who operates in the grey market, buying low, selling high, and occasionally fencing stolen masterpieces.
was widely panned by critics and failed significantly at the box office. Mortdecai movie review & film summary review: - Roger Ebert
Mortdecai refers to the fictional character Sir Charles Mortdecai — an eccentric British art dealer and occasional rogue featured in Kyril Bonfiglioli’s novels (notably the “Mortdecai” trilogy). The character inspired film and TV adaptations and is known for wit, misadventure, and involvement with stolen or dubious artworks.
A highly groomed, controversial moustache that serves as a recurring plot point and source of marital friction. The Partners: mortdecai
is an action-comedy that blends slapstick humor with a high-society art heist. Despite a star-studded cast, it was a notable box office disappointment, grossing roughly $47.3 million against a $60 million budget.
With a production budget of $60 million, the film grossed a mere worldwide, making it a significant box office bomb. It opened at a dismal #9 in its domestic box office debut, earning just $4.1 million in its first weekend, and plans for a Mortdecai franchise were quickly shelved. The film was a low point in a string of quirky, big-budget flops for Johnny Depp, who would later find critical acclaim with Black Mass later in the same year.
[Stolen Goya Painting] | (Enrypted Nazi Gold Code) | +-------------+-------------+ | | [MI6 Protection] [International Terrorists] 4. Re-evaluating Mortdecai: A Cult Legacy A dishonorable art dealer who operates in the
Long before he became a caricature on movie posters, was the anti-hero creation of Kyril Bonfiglioli, an eccentric art dealer, soldier, and editor. Debuting in the 1973 novel Don't Point That Thing at Me , Charlie is a wealthy, aristocratic, and thoroughly amoral art dealer.
A obsessed with fine wine, tailored suits, and immaculate grooming.
Directed by , the film reimagines the books as a high-energy, slapstick heist. The character inspired film and TV adaptations and
: Charlie Mortdecai (Johnny Depp) is a nearly bankrupt art dealer hired by MI5 Agent Martland (Ewan McGregor) to recover a stolen Goya painting rumored to contain the code to a lost Nazi bank account. Johnny Depp
The plot of the film loosely adapts elements from the first novel, Don't Point That Thing at Me . The story follows Charlie Mortdecai, an aristocratic but broke art dealer who is approached by MI5 (in the form of his old rival, Martland) to track down a stolen Goya painting that contains a secret code to a massive fortune of hidden Nazi gold. Accompanied by his loyal manservant Jock, Mortdecai finds himself in a desperate race against a host of international criminals, Russian thugs, a shifty Los Angeles billionaire (Jeff Goldblum), and his own massive debts.