Brewster's Millions Comments

  • Francis 2023-09-23 14:02:03

    The richest man in Xihong City is adapted from this...

  • Bennie 2023-08-05 01:54:40

    There is no good resource, the subtitle level of the version I watched is too bad! iQIYI has resources! The accountant looks so coquettish! There is a sexual attraction! The male protagonist's performance is rough, and the plot is very rough. It would be nice to add more content about the American election during the election. The rules are not as detailed as those of the richest man in Xihong City, and there are many loopholes. You can buy a lot of stamps and send them out! The feelings...

  • Aric 2023-08-02 19:40:00

    I watched it for 40 minutes and didn’t watch it anymore. The noisy temperament and exaggerated performance are really in the same line as domestic comedies. I searched for the title and found that there are already 9 versions of this film, and the time span is from 1921 to 2020. 100 years on! The United States, Hong Kong and mainland have been filmed, really ivy...

  • Aniyah 2023-07-22 09:34:53

    It turns out that the richest man in Xihong City copied this. No wonder at the time, I felt that there were many plots that did not conform to the Chinese character and the way capital operates. Many bridge segments are almost identical. There is still a lack of creativity in the new era, and it has been missing for more than 30...

  • Clementine 2023-07-18 07:15:11

    One of the many versions~ The featured plot is the election part. The high-quality plot is the dialogue between friends and friends accompanied by the music "Friendship is forever" at the end... The general framework and laughing points are basically the...

  • Austin 2023-07-18 06:10:24

    The original version of "The Richest Man in Xihong City" has a weaker sense of comedy, but has a political satire about the election, the reversal of the ending, and being with the heroine is more like mutual...

  • Abigale 2023-07-15 22:40:48

    A very interesting movie. Many plots in Tomato are basically copied from here. Except for the difference in the second half, the whole movie cannot be said to be very good, but it is definitely not...

  • Buddy 2023-07-09 18:37:05

    The rhythm of the movie is relatively anxious, a little too fast, which leads to the end of many laughing points without unfolding. In this way, the localization of "The Richest Man in Xihong City" is quite successful. The campaign part and the slogan are really ironic, and they are a...

  • Maximillian 2023-07-04 14:10:22

    Different from "The Richest Man in Xihong City"! But as far as the protagonist is concerned, Shen Teng's comedy talent is absolutely...

  • Garnet 2023-07-03 17:26:20

    This is a movie worth watching, now it's worthless to remake that...

Extended Reading

Brewster's Millions quotes

  • Monty Brewster: Gentlemen, do you think I'm a lowlife?

    Tailor: Oh no, Mr. Brewster. Not with these clothes.

  • Rupert Horn: [speaking to Monty in his recorded will] Brewster? Greetings from the grave! Don't look so surprised. Did you know your great-grandfather was a honky? My old man married twice. One wife, white, produced me. One wife, black, produced your grandmother. Checkered family you might say. I've outlived them all Brewster, except you. They tell me you're my only living relative and I have to say, I'm disappointed. Look at you! what have you made of yourself? A failed baseball pitcher. I believe in being honest, Brewster. No bullshit. I'm stuck with you. But... we're gonna have some fun...

    [starts laughing only to be overtaken by terrible coughing for a moment before calming down]

    Rupert Horn: Let me tell ya a little story, Brewster. When I was seven years old, my daddy caught me smoking a cigar. Locked me in a broom closet for two days and two nights with nothing more than a box of cigars and a book of matches. No food, Brewster. No water, just those god damn cigars. Wouldn't let me out till I finished every last one of them. Taught me one HELL of a lesson! I'm gonna do to you what my daddy did to me. I'm gonna teach you to HATE spending money. I'm gonna make you so sick of spending money that the mere sight of it will make you wanna throw up!

    [pause]

    Rupert Horn: So, here's my proposition: you have thirty days in which to spend thirty million bucks. If you can do it, you get three hundred million!

    Monty Brewster: [more to himself] There's gotta be a catch.

    Rupert Horn: Of course there's a catch! You have to spend the thirty million, but after thirty days you're not allowed to own any assets. No houses, no cars, no jewelry. Nothing but the clothes on your back! Now, you can hire anybody you want, but you have to get value for their services. You can donate five percent to charity and you can gamble another five percent away, but you can't give this money away, and that includes buying the Hope Diamond for some bimbo as a birthday present.

    [pauses for a beat]

    Rupert Horn: oh, I know what you're thinking, you'll buy yourself a dozen Picassos and use them for firewood, right?

    Monty Brewster: [nods his head somewhat, still stunned]

    Rupert Horn: Wrong! You must not destroy what is inherently valuable, that's instant disqualification. Oh, I almost forgot. You're not allowed to tell anybody WHY you have to spend this money.

    Monty Brewster: But why can't I tell my friends?

    Rupert Horn: Because I don't want anybody helping out! Nobody helped me out in that closet with those cigars! I never had any friends. So, Brewster what do you think? You got the balls for it?

    [pause]

    Rupert Horn: I doubt it. That's why I put a special wimp clause in my will. You can have a million dollars right now and forget the whole thing. Or you can go for the big one, Brewster. The three hundred million. But if you fail, you don't get didley!