Paul Blart: Mall Cop (DVD)

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Paul Blart: Mall Cop (DVD)

Paul Blart: Mall Cop is a 2009 American action comedy film starring Kevin James as the titular character Paul Blart. The film was directed by Steve Carr and written by James and Nick Bakay. The film tells a story of Blart, a single dad and bumbling mall security guard, who finds himself in the middle of a heist and the only one in position to rescue hostages.

Filming began in February 2008 with a majority of the shooting taking place at the Burlington Mall in Burlington, Massachusetts. Paul Blart: Mall Cop opened in the United States on January 16, 2009, and was distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing. The film was poorly received by critics but grossed $183.3 million worldwide against a production budget of $26 million. A sequel titled Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2 was released in 2015.


Plot

Paul Blart lives in West Orange, New Jersey with his teenage daughter Maya and his mother. Aspiring to join the New Jersey State Police, he trains at the police academy, but his hypoglycemia causes him to collapse before finishing the exam. Blart works as a security guard at the West Orange Pavilion Mall.

Blart patrols the mall on a Segway and begins training Veck Simms, a new hire who shows little interest in the job. Meanwhile, Blart becomes acquainted with Amy Anderson, a vendor of a new kiosk. Paul meets her one evening at a restaurant with other mall employees. Things initially go well, but when Blart participates in a nacho-eating contest with his friend Leon, the jalapeño peppers are too spicy for him and he chugs two glasses of margarita, mistaking it for lemonade. He gets drunk and makes a wild exit by falling through a window.

Two days later on the night of Black Friday, an organized gang of thugs disguised as Santa s Village employees begin a heist inside the mall. They take Amy and others inside a bank hostage, and Simms is revealed as the gang’s leader. The crew force the majority of shoppers to exit the mall and place motion sensors at each entrance to detect any attempt to enter or exit the building.

Blart is oblivious as he plays Rock Band before walking back into the mall to discover that it is nearly empty. He calls the police and plans to leave the mall, but he realizes that Amy is still inside and returns to the mall to look for her. A SWAT team arrives with commander James Kent at the helm. Kent, a former classmate and bully from Blart s childhood, takes control of the police units and orders Blart to let them handle the situation. Blart refuses and attempts a rescue. Vastly outnumbered, he takes a stand against Simms crew, improvising to take them down one by one. He discovers credit-card codes written in invisible ink on the burglars arms, realizing that their plans go beyond robbing the bank.

Maya, unaware of what is happening, shows up at the mall to bring Blart some food, but Simms henchmen seize her and add her to the hostages. Blart manages to subdue all of Simms accomplices and attempts to rescue the hostages by pulling them up into the air vent. The plan fails when Leon does not fit. Simms enters the room, capturing Blart and forcing him to give up the credit card codes recorded on his cell phone. Simms flees, taking Amy and Maya with him. As the SWAT team raids the mall, Blart borrows a display minivan with Kent, pursuing Simms to the airport, where he is attempting to escape to the Cayman Islands.

After a brief scuffle, Blart overpowers Simms and puts him in handcuffs. Moments later, however, Kent pulls his gun on Blart, revealing that he was working with Simms. Kent demands the phone containing the codes from Blart, who refuses and destroys the phone. Before Kent can retaliate by shooting Blart, Chief Brooks of the mall security team arrives and shoots Kent in the arm. Kent and Simms are arrested, and Amy and Maya are returned safely. For his bravery and assistance, Howard offers Blart a job with the New Jersey State Police. Blart declines, preferring to remain in mall security. Blart and Amy are eventually married in the mall, where they exchange vows on a set of black and white Segways.


Cast

  • Kevin James as Paul Blart
  • Jayma Mays as Amy Anderson
  • Keir O Donnell as Veck Simms
  • Bobby Cannavale as Commander James Kent
  • Adam Ferrara as Sergeant Howard
  • Peter Gerety as Chief Brooks
  • Stephen Rannazzisi as Stuart
  • Jamal Mixon as Leon
  • Adhir Kalyan as Pahud
  • Erick Avari as Vijay
  • Raini Rodriguez as Maya Blart
  • Shirley Knight as Margaret Blart
  • Allen Covert as Jerky security guy
  • Gary Valentine as Karaoke singer

Production

Production began in late February 2008 in Boston. Principal photography took place at the Burlington Mall in Burlington, Massachusetts after being denied a permit from Willowbrook Mall in Wayne, New Jersey. From late February until mid-April, the mall and its stores were decorated with Christmas decorations, and there was a large prop ball-pit in the main foyer of the mall near the Sears branch, and a Santa s Village at the opposite end near the Macy s branch where the mall usually puts its own Santa s Village. Interior filming took place mostly at night. Some of the aerial stunts, such as Blart being attacked in the scenic elevator, were performed at the South Shore Plaza in Braintree, MA, as the Burlington Mall s construction did not allow for some of these stunts.


Reception

Critical reception

On Rotten Tomatoes, Paul Blart: Mall Cop has an approval rating of 34% based on 117 reviews, with an average rating of 4.60/10. The website s critical consensus states Paul Blart: Mall Cop has some laughs, but its plot is flimsy and lacking in any sustained comic momentum. On Metacritic, the film has a score of 39 out of 100, based on review from 24 critics, indicating generally unfavorable reviews . Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade B on scale of A to F.

Peter Travers of Rolling Stone gave the film one star out of four, panning the concept and juvenile humor. Variety s Brian Lowry called it An almost shockingly amateurish one-note-joke comedy. James Berardinelli was also unimpressed by the juvenile tone, but praised the character of Paul Blart and a refreshing change from Adam Sandler s typical films calling it a passable choice for watching at home, when viewers tend to be less demanding. Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave it three stars out of four, praising the film s wholesome comedy. Nathan Rabin of The A.V. Club gave the film a grade C−, calling it a shamelessly sentimental comedy with a few crude gags thrown in arbitrarily which turns into a stale riff on Die Hard.

Box office

The film ranked #1 at the domestic box office with $9,791,368 from 3,144 theaters for an opening day average of $3,105. During the film s entire three-day opening weekend, the film remained at the top spot, grossing a total of $31,832,636, with a per screen average of $10,125, outgrossing its $26 million budget. It grossed $39,234,238 over the entire four-day MLK weekend, for a four-day average of $12,479. The film was the second best opening of all-time for the MLK weekend, behind 2008 s Cloverfield. The film stayed at number one in its second weekend, grossing another $21,623,182, dropping just 32%, and boosting the ten day income to $64,923,380. In its third weekend it dropped to second place with $13,872,751, a 36% decline from the last weekend, for an average of $4,327 from 3,206 theaters, bringing the seventeen day gross to $83,247,655. In its fourth weekend, it dropped to fifth place with $10,884,825, a drop of 22% from the last weekend, for an average of $3,435 from 3,169 theaters, and bringing the 24-day tally to $96,886,687. In its fifth weekend (President s Day weekend), it dropped to sixth place, making another $10,983,319 over the three-day span, actually increasing 1%, for an average of $3,704 from 2,965 theaters, and bringing the 31-day total to $109,787,819, having broken the $100 million mark on Friday February 13. Over the four-day President s Day weekend, it made $13,574,027 for an average of $4,578, and bringing the 32-day cume to $112,388,524. The film closed on Monday, May 25, 2009, with a final domestic gross of $146,336,178, with the three-day opening weekend making up 21.75% of the total gross (26.81% for the four-day opening weekend). The film had as of 2009 made $36,625,591 internationally, bringing the total worldwide gross to $183,293,131, against a modest $26 million budget.

Home media

Paul Blart: Mall Cop was released on DVD, Blu-ray, and UMD on May 19, 2009. The DVD sold 1,817,747 copies, making US $29,411,146 for the week of May 24, 2009, having only been out for six days, and it ranked No. 1 for DVD sales that week as well. For the week of May 31, 2009, it again made No. 1 on the US DVD Charts as it sold an additional 553,681 copies and making US $9,921,964 for a total of 2,834,826 units sold with earnings of US $46,676,902 as of November 1, 2009. As of November 1, 2009, when combined with box office results and total DVD sales, the film has grossed a total of US $227,126,523.


Sequel

Sony expressed interest in producing a sequel to the film in January 2009. In early 2014, it was confirmed that the studio was moving forward, and shooting began in April 2014. Andy Fickman was hired to direct the sequel, while Kevin James co-wrote the script with Nick Bakay and returned to star in the leading role. The sequel was called Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2 and released on April 17, 2015.


Condition

New

Publisher

Sony Pictures

Published Date

2009

Age Group

Adult

Rating MPA

Pg

Recording Studio

Sony Pictures

Format

DVD

Brand

Sony

Amazon ASIN

B001NPD9RM

UPC / EAN

043396256385

Year

2009

ReleaseDate

2009-01-16

RuntimeMins

91

RuntimeStr

1h 31min

Awards

Awards, 1 win & 3 nominations

Directors

Steve Carr

Writers

Kevin James, Nick Bakay

Stars

Kevin James, Keir O'Donnell, Jayma Mays

Produced by

Barry Bernardi, Duane A. Dahl, Gino Falsetto, Todd Garner, Jack Giarraputo, Kevin James, Adam Sandler, Jeff Sussman, Jason Taragan

Music by

Waddy Wachtel

Cinematography by

Russ T. Alsobrook

Film Editing by

Jeff Freeman

Casting By

Nicole Abellera, Jeanne McCarthy

Production Design by

Perry Andelin Blake

Art Direction by

Alan Au

Set Decoration by

Tracey A. Doyle

Costume Design by

Ellen Lutter

Makeup Department

Carla Antonino, Cheryl Daniels, Corina C. Duran-Rabichuk, Rob Fitz, Ed French, Maynard Matthews, Brenda McNally, Claudia Moriel, Jennie-kay Murphy, Jeremy O'Neail, Nichole Pleau, Victoria M. Porter, Joanna Raskin, L. Sher Williams, Marleen Alter

Production Management

Pamela Thur

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

David Eric Chapman, Mark S. Constance, Greg Guzik, Marty Eli Schwartz

Art Department

Aimee Butterfield, George Cawood, Christina Chandler, Gary Chandler, Danica Chipman, John Collins, Sarah Crall, Roger Danchik, Stephen DeBoer, Noah Dubreuil, Jeff Errico, Joe Gagnepain, Jennifer Gerbino, Johnny Healey, James D. Hurd, Deborah Kehs, Michael Krause, Vincent Lucido, John F. O'Neil, Cory Ouellette, Katie Packard, Katrina Parsons, Colby E. Peterson, John Pungitore, Shauna Sanchez, Robert Schleinig, Carly Serodio, Robert Smedley, Nathan Steele, Theodore Suchecki, Marc Vena, Paul Wilson

Sound Department

Deb Adair, Alfred Ainsworth Jr., Ryan Baker, Michael J. Benavente, Anita Cannella, William Freesh, Eric Harwood, Larry Hopkins, Amy Kane, Larry Kemp, Tricia Linklater, Howard London, David Obermeyer, Egor Panchenko, Kevin S. Parker, Jeremy Peirson, Joel Reidy, Greg ten Bosch, Elmo Weber, Tom Williams, Ulrika Akander

Special Effects by

Larry Dean Bivins, Ray Bivins, Tony Cooke, Gary Pilkinton, John Ruggieri, Kenneth Salter, Nicholas Tzikas

Visual Effects by

Brian G. Addie, Arin Artounian, David August, Riley Benard, Kristen Branan, Christian Brown, George Cawood, Josh Cole, Kent Demaine, Mike Diltz, Neil Safeer Ghaznavi, Chris John Jones, David Langtry, Geoff Leavitt, Darren MacKay, Chris Olivas, Harrison Rutherford, Andrew Schwartz, Richard Servello, Jonathan Winbush, Matt DiNardo, Patrick Mooney, Victor Tang

Stunts

Matt Berkoski, Bob Colletti, Jacob Dewitt, Mike Escamilla, Jeffrey Lee Gibson, Rosine 'Ace' Hatem, Randy Haynie, Steve Mack, Nicole Mayne, Michael McGuire, Chris O'Hara, Courtney Schwartz, Jason Shupe, Aaron Vexler, Anthony Vincent, Robert Houillion

Camera and Electrical Department

Alfred Ainsworth Jr., Robert Beinhocker, Adam D. Bouchard, Curtis Bradford, Paul Bulgin, Jan Burgess, Patrick Capone, Robert Clark, Trevor Cohen, Brian Corbett, Nathan Coscia, Peter D'Angelo, Tim Driscoll, Brian Dwiggins, Chris Engles, Jake Forster, Jason Garcia, Jeff Graham, Amanda Hannan, Terrence Hayes, Chris Henry, Mike Henry, Christian J. Hollyer, Casey Hotchkiss, Dan Hutchinson, John Joyce, John R. Kaplan, Nicholas Kay, Jonathan Kobs, Zachary K. Lazar, Damon Lemay, Paul C. McKenna, Clinton McMahon, Brandon J. Meadows, Symon Mink, James R. Mitchell, Paul Murphey, Phil Nason, Chris Nickerson, Gary M. Olitsky, Tracy Ouellette, Michael Peterson, Lance Rieck, Raul Riveros, Edwin Rubio, Rigney Sackley, Wayne Simpson, Carissa Spatcher, Craig Striano, Jeff Tanger, Aaron Tyburski, Wally Webber, Tim Wicks, Rick Beausoleil, Joe Christofori, Benny Smyth

Casting Department

Joanne Bloom, Matt Bouldry, Angela Peri, Carolyn Pickman, Bryan Ryan, Leslie Woo

Costume and Wardrobe Department

Laurie Bramhall, Laurie Buehler, Hillary Derby, Caroline Errington, Patrick Guzzo, Bettina Hastie, Alyson MacInnis, Joanna Murphy

Editorial Department

Zahida Bacchus, Jason Gourson, Jim Passon, John Persichetti, J.J. Titone, Reed Whorton, Reza Amidi, Benjamin Sutor, Darin Wooldridge

Location Management

Charles Harrington, Jennifer Haskell, Marilyn McCallman, Lucas Nalepinski, Joe Piasecki, Kai Quinlan

Music Department

Bryan Bonwell, Michael Dilbeck, Stuart Grusin, Bryon Rickerson, Steven Scott Smalley, James Thatcher, Gina Zimmitti

Script and Continuity Department

Ronit Ravich-Boss

Transportation Department

Mark Callaghan, Jon Campagna, Teresa Haney, William O'Brien

Additional Crew

Dane Benton, Daryl Blonder, Ewan Bourne, Brooke Bowden, Jenna Byrnes, Stephanie Charbonneau, John Currie, Apolonia Davalos, Kristi Decisero, Joseph Dizon, Kenneth Donaldson, J.D. Donaruma, James Ferrera, Mario Garcia, Jennifer Gjulameti, Chad Goyette, Daniel Guire, Jason Habelow, Jill Habelow, Lucy Herrera, Lori Hornung, Allison Hurney, Dawn Jeffory, Kimmie Johnson, Jacob Kane, Winter Lauzon, Paul LeVasseur, Jeffery Mannarini, Carrie Mitchum, C.B. Mullen, Brian E. Murphy, Matt Newcomb, Dave O'Halloran, Christine K. O'Malley, Checo Pacheco, Matthew E. Pado, Paul Pawlowski, Jennifer Perkins, Crystal Marie Perry, Eric C. Pike, Herb Polack, Erik Proveaux, Allan Rafael, Carlin Reagan, K.C. Roballo, Jared Rosen, Arestia Rosenberg, Vincenzo Rotondo, Trevor Rubatzky, Eric Ryan, Janine Schiro, David Steinwachs, Jeremy Svenson, Jeremy Tate, Kristie Thompson, Trish Vengoechea, Jovanna Vitiello, Anne Marie Wilson, Eli Wolstan, Josh Woolf, Chad Yavarow, Gale Hansen, Nate Oldham, Chuck Slavin, Matt Soule

Thanks

Carl Randall

Genres

Action, Comedy, Crime

Companies

Columbia Pictures, Relativity Media, Happy Madison Productions

Countries

USA

Languages

English

ContentRating

PG

ImDbRating

5.2

ImDb Rating Votes

110714

Metacritic Rating

39

Short Description

Paul Blart: Mall Cop is a 2009 American action comedy film starring Kevin James as the titular character Paul Blart. The film was directed by Steve Carr and written by James and Nick Bakay. The film tells a story of Blart, a single dad and bumbling mall security guard, who finds himself in the middle of a heist and the only one in position to rescue hostages.

Filming began in February 2008 with a majority of the shooting taking place at the Burlington Mall in Burlington, Massachusetts. Paul Blart: Mall Cop opened in the United States on January 16, 2009, and was distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing. The film was poorly received by critics but grossed $183.3 million worldwide against a production budget of $26 million. A sequel titled Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2 was released in 2015.

Box Office Budget

$26,000,000 (estimated)

Box Office Opening Weekend USA

$31,832,636

Box Office Gross USA

$146,336,178

Box Office Cumulative Worldwide Gross

$183,348,429

Keywords

Mall cop,reference to scooby doo,single father,die hard scenario,comic violence