With Jack forced to pick and choose his words, communicating with others becomes difficult and full of misunderstandings. These misunderstandings cost him two book deals, his job, and his wife Caroline (Kerry Washington). She walks out on him when she thinks his sudden silence is due to him not loving her anymore. When he tries to explain the tree to her, she doesn’t believe him. Only Jack's assistant Aaron (Clark Duke) realizes he is telling the truth, and goes to Jack’s house to keep track of how many leaves remain. Jack then donates some of his money to charity, and drinks a lot of alcohol in the night, causing him to sing a lot, thus making the tree lose lots of leaves. Only when Aaron confronted him and tackled him to the ground does Jack stop speaking.
With his life falling apart and the tree running out of leaves, Jack confronts Dr. Sinja and asks how to end the curse. The guru tells him to make peace in all of his relationships. With just one branch of leaves left, Jack tries to reconcile with Caroline, but she remains hesitant. He visits his mother (Ruby Dee), who lives in an assisted-living center and has dementia. She tells Jack, who she thinks is Jack's late father Raymond, that she wishes Jack would stop being angry at his father for walking out on them when he was a kid. Jack, realizing that this is the relationship that needs the most mending, goes to visit his father's grave. Jack expends the last three leaves of the tree with the words, "I forgive you." With no leaves remaining, Jack suffers a heart attack in a storm and appears to have died. Jack's cellphone rings, and it is Aaron. Jack, who is still alive, answers his phone. Aaron tells him that the trees leaves have magically reappeared and Jack can now talk freely again.
Jack and Caroline get back together, with Jack buying the family-friendly house Caroline asked for earlier, and the tree is in their front yard. He doesn't get his job back (Aaron was promoted to Jack's old position), but he writes a book about his experience, called A Thousand Words, and gets Aaron to make the deal. Unfortunately for Aaron, his promotion caused him to be like Jack was, thus he gets his own smaller office tree.
CastEddie Murphy as Jack McCall
Clark Duke as Aaron
Cliff Curtis as Dr. Sinja
Kerry Washington as Caroline McCall
Steve Little as Co-Worker
Allison Janney as Samantha Davis
John Witherspoon as Blind Old Man
Jack McBrayer as Starbucks Coffee Employee
Kayla Blake as Emily
Lennie Loftin as Robert Gilmore
Ruby Dee as Annie McCall
Alain Chabat as Christian Léger de la Touffe
Ted Kennedy as Homeless Man
ProductionA Thousand Words was filmed in 2008 in Los Angeles, California and was supposed to be released in 2009, but was repeatedly delayed after being caught up in the separation of DreamWorks Pictures from Paramount Pictures andViacom. During an interview for Fred: The Movie, director Brian Robbins stated that the film would be released in 2011.Reshoots were done on the film early in 2011.
The film was then scheduled for a January 2012 release, but after Murphy was announced as the host of the 2012 Oscarceremony (he later stepped down), the film was given a date of March 23, 2012;this was later pushed to April 20, 2012 before being pushed up to its eventual release date of March 9, 2012
Release
Box office
The film earned $18,450,127 in North America, along with $3,594,150 in other countries, for a worldwide total of $22,044,277, less than half of its estimated production budget of $40 million.
Critical responseA Thousand Words was universally panned by critics. Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a rating of 0%, based 54 reviews, with an average rating of 3.2/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Dated jokes (A Thousand Words was shot in 2008) and removing Eddie Murphy's voice -- his greatest comedic asset -- dooms this painful mess from the start." The site also gave the film their "Moldy Tomato" award for the worst-reviewed film of 2012, and is one of the few films with a 0% on the site. On Metacritic, the film has a score of 26 out of 100, based on 18 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".
The Guardian commented that "Everyone, it seems, is united by A Thousand Words ' awfulness."
Plans for a British release date of June 8, 2012 were cancelled due to unidentified difficulties, and the film was instead released direct-to-DVD in the U.K. on July 16, 2012.
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